April 2003
Nuclear
Revelations Show Need for Resuming International Control of the Tuwaitha
Site
The Institute for Science and International Security,
April 11, 2003
By David Albright and Corey Hinderstein
Original address: http://www.isis-online.org/publications/iraq/tuwaitha_april2003.html
[Posted 17/04/2003]
Media reports have stated that specialized seals
have been broken on a stock of nuclear material stored at the Tuwaitha
nuclear research center at a site called Location C. The seals are in
place to ensure that any tampering with the material would be detected.
A key issue is what happened in the days between
the abandonment of the site by the Iraqi guards and the arrival of US
troops and the imposition of adequate security. Has some of the nuclear
material been taken? Some of this material is highly radioactive and
poses a health and safety risk to anyone mishandling it. All the material
could be useful for terrorists or other nations intent on making nuclear
weapons or radiological dispersal devices.
Tuwaitha was Iraq's primary civilian nuclear research
site prior to the first Gulf War in 1991. It was also the location of
numerous secret, nuclear weapons-related activities that International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Action Team inspectors discovered when they
conducted Security Council-mandated inspections in Iraq after that war.
One result of those inspections was to remove Iraq's stock of weapons-usable
material, such as highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium. Some
material that could not be used directly for nuclear weapons, including
natural uranium and low-enriched uranium, was left in Iraq but placed
under IAEA seals and near-constant monitoring. This material was still
monitored by the IAEA during the absence of UN Security Council-mandated
inspections in Iraq between 1998 and 2002. The IAEA used the legal authority
of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) to gain access to this
material at least once a year.
The IAEA should immediately go to Location C and
ensure that all the nuclear material is accounted for and is properly
safeguarded. There is a precedent for the IAEA to conduct inspections
during war. In June 1999, the IAEA conducted its first wartime inspections
at the Vinca nuclear site in the former Yugoslavia. Just as in the Yugoslavia
case, the IAEA has a responsibility to inspect the nuclear material
under safeguards in Iraq. The United States and Britain, as the occupying
parties of Iraq, should allow the IAEA immediate access to Tuwaitha.
This case demonstrates the confusion that can be
caused by inaccurate reporting by individuals without a firm technical
understanding of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). In addition, it
highlights that the United States military needs help in its efforts
regarding WMD. The military has placed an appropriate priority on locating
and containing any secret WMD activity in Iraq, but they are not prepared
to conduct safeguards activities. Indeed, they should not be expected
to do so. The IAEA has the experience and the responsibility to carry
out the task of determining the status of the nuclear material at Tuwaitha,
even during times of conflict.
See also (in french): Les
Etats-Unis protègent le site nucléaire irakien de Tuwaitha
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