U.S. intelligence officials on Thursday were showing members
of Congress a videotape and other evidence supporting their
case that Syria was building a nuclear reactor with North
Korean assistance before it was bombed by Israeli planes last
year. Intelligence officials who have seen the evidence consider
it "extremely compelling," a US official said, adding
that it was gleaned from a variety of sources, not just Israeli
intelligence.
Syria has denied the administration's allegations, and the
videotape apparently was just a collection of still photos
from inside the facility.
The administration's presentation represents a renewal of
claims about an alleged Syrian nuclear weapons program which
were widely reported in the mainstream media last fall, following
the Israeli bombing. Those allegations were never substantiated,
and although new evidence appears to have been added to strengthen
the case, skepticism remains strong.
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Political commentator Steve Clemons suggests that "[Vice
President] Cheney's minions are pushing Congress to sponge
up Israeli intelligence assessments about purported Syria-North
Korea cooperation on a now destroyed, alleged nuclear site.
There are many who doubt Israel's assessments in the U.S.
intelligence community. A consensus has built that North Korea
and Syria were cooperating on some machine tool operation
to retrofit increasingly sophisticated short range missiles
with new capacity, perhaps air burst capacity that could potentially
deliver biological or chemical agents."
Last September, RAW STORY's Larisa Alexandrovna was the first
to report that the Syrians had been engaged in attempting
to add chemical warheads to their stock of "older generation"
North Korean missiles and quoted former CIA counterterrorism
chief Vincent Cannistraro as saying that the building which
was bombed was "absolutely not a nuclear weapons facility."
In a follow-up article, Alexandrovna added that several of
her sources saw Dick Cheney's hand behind behind the leak
of stories about a Syria nuclear program, stories which were
not supported by the intelligence community. According to
one official, "We don't have any independent intelligence
that it was a nuclear facility -- only the assertions by the
Israelis and some ambiguous satellite photography from them
that shows a building, which the Syrians admitted was a military
facility.”
Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of
State Colin Powell, also told Alexandrovna, " I do not
believe that the real story, if it is ever known, will have
anything at all to do with nuclear weapons." Veteran
investigative journalist Seymour Hersh has expressed skepticism
towards the story as well.
The pattern of selective leaks, which appears to be typical
of Cheney's operations, is as apparent with the new evidence
as it was last fall. Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-NY), chairman of
the House Foreign Affairs Middle East subcommittee, accuses
the Bush administration of "bizarre behavior" in
giving information to reporters who lack security clearances
while restricting what it presents to Congress. "This
is the selective control of information that led us to war
in Iraq," Ackerman stated.
The renewal of claims about the Syrian facility come as the
Bush administration is pressuring North Korea to acknowledge
its alleged nuclear proliferation as part of a disarmament
agreement reached last year. However, Steve Clemons points
out that Vice President Dick Cheney appears to be trying to
build a case against Syria, as well.
"A source reported to me yesterday that in the last
two weeks, Cheney held forth at a meeting on Iraq WMDs and
insisted that they were real and still out there," Clemons
reveals. "Cheney believes that Syria has them -- and
has been watching closely intelligence streams from a secret
'black SIGINT base' that the US has placed in the mountains
near the intersection of the Syrian, Turkish, and Iraqi borders."