ARABS-UN - Feb. 20 - Libya Had Diverse Nuclear Weapons Programme.
Libya secretly assembled a wide range of nuclear materials,
technology, expertise and weapons design and had produced a small amount
of plutonium plutonium (pl tō`nēəm), radioactive chemical element; symbol Pu; at. no. 94; mass no. of most stable isotope 244; m.p. 641°C;; b.p. 3,232°C;; sp. gr. 19. as part of a nuclear weapons programme, says a confidential
report by IAEA IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency. Dir-Gen Mohamed ElBaradei Mohamed ElBaradei (Arabic: محمد البرادعي, transliteration: . It will be discussed by IAEA
board members next week. The report reveals Libyan efforts to develop
nuclear weapons began in the 1980s, but stopped after 1992, when an
unnamed foreign expert involved in the programme left Libya. The
programme was relaunched in 1997 when new foreign suppliers were found
(assumed to be Pakistan). Libya's early efforts to develop its
programme began with exports of uranium ore concentrate to an unnamed
nuclear weapons state in 1985. This was then transferred back to Libya
in the form of uranium compounds that could be used in the uranium
enrichment process. One of the uranium compounds it received was UF6, a
low enriched uranium Enriched uranium is a sample of uranium in which the percent composition of uranium-235 has been increased through the process of isotope separation. Natural uranium is 99.284% 238U isotope, with 235U only constituting about 0.711 % of its weight. gas better known as uranium hexafluoride Uranium hexafluoride (UF6), referred to as "hex" in industry, is a compound used in the uranium enrichment process that produces fuel for nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons. (essential
in the enrichment process necessary to build nuclear weapons). Libyan
officials told the IAEA they had imported and stored the gas as recently
as February 2001. Libya's reliance on imports of uranium
hexafluoride was a big weakness in its production process which it had
tried and failed to overcome, the report states. However, the report
says Libyan scientists at the Tajura nuclear research reactor Research reactors are nuclear reactors that serve primarily as a neutron source. They are also called non-power reactors, in contrast to power reactors that are used for electricity production, heat generation, or submarine propulsion. had
succeeded in extracting small quantities of plutonium from uranium,
which could then have been used as the explosive element in a nuclear
weapon. The report goes on to say that in 1997 Libya began to gather the
parts needed to build centrifuges to enrich uranium. It began to
assemble a group of nine centrifuges - called a "cascade" - in
2000. Its first successful test of a centrifuge centrifuge (sĕn`trəfy j), device using centrifugal force to separate two or more substances of different density, e.g., two liquids or a liquid and a solid. was in October 2000, and
three cascades had been assembled by April 2002. However, the cascades
were then disassembled and moved for security reasons, and have remained
packed in boxes ever since, the report says. Components for 10,000 more
sophisticated centrifuges began to arrive in Libya in December 2002.
Evidence that Libya intended to diminish steadily its reliance on
foreign suppliers is detailed in the IAEA report, and also in a
Malaysian police report into the alleged role of Malaysian companies This is a list of companies from Malaysia. The list is not in whatsoever way comprehensive. - AirAsia
- AmBank
- Astro (satellite TV)
- Berjaya Group
- Boustead
- BSA Manufacturing
- Bursa Malaysia (previously Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange, KLSE)
- Celcom
in
the provision of nuclear-related equipment to Libya, which was published
on Feb. 20. The IAEA report identifies a site at Janzour, where a
precision workshop was located, which it says was intended "to
establish a domestic production capability". The Malaysian report
identifies a site called the "Project Machine Shop 1001",
which, the report states, "was a project to set up a workshop in
Libya to make centrifuge components which could not be obtained from
outside Libya".
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