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- <text id=91TT2766>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: Who Else Will Have the Bomb?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 42
- Who Else Will Have the Bomb?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>It may soon be brandished by a whole new class of Third World
- regimes, thanks to China and other suppliers. The prospects
- for stopping them are not high.
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Ron Ben-Yishai/Jerusalem,
- Farah Nayeri/Paris and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Whatever happens to the nuclear weapons in the
- disintegrating Soviet Union, the old nightmare of uncontrolled
- atomic proliferation is moving measurably closer to reality--and it would not be dispelled even by an arrangement to destroy
- many of the Soviet nukes and keep the rest under responsible
- control. The Bomb may soon be brandished by a whole new class
- of countries--Third World regimes far more radical and
- unpredictable than any of the eight present members of the
- nuclear club.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, it is already possible to set up a crude, if
- debatable, timetable. North Korea might have deliverable nuclear
- weapons sometime in late 1993, in five years at the outside.
- Iran could have the Bomb in six or seven years, and possibly so
- could Algeria, according to pessimistic Middle East experts.
- Optimists think the latter two might require 10 years or never
- manage to develop nukes at all. But there is at least a
- possibility that all three will be nuclear-armed by the year
- 2000. Throw in the chances that Libya might be working on the
- Bomb--and Western experts believe it is--that China will
- continue its unrestrained sales of nuclear technology to the
- Middle East, and add to these cooperation among the nuclear
- wannabes, and the prospects get exceedingly scary.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, none of this is inevitable. It is conceivable
- that international pressure will cause some of the would-be
- nuclear powers to abandon their weapons programs, as Brazil,
- Argentina and South Africa appear to be doing. But that course
- is slow and uncertain: intelligence data on the suspects is
- inconclusive and open to sharp disagreement, not only about how
- far they are from developing usable weapons but even about how
- determinedly they are trying.
- </p>
- <p> That consideration is not necessarily reassuring. In 1990
- experts were sure that Iraq would need five to 10 more years to
- develop a nuclear arsenal. United Nations inspectors have since
- concluded that when the gulf war began last January, Saddam
- Hussein was as little as a year away from being able to deliver
- a crude nuclear bomb. U.S. and International Atomic Energy
- Agency (IAEA) analysts think the war brought Saddam's program
- to a rude halt. But inspectors are not at all certain they have
- yet found all the equipment and material Iraq may have hidden
- away, and thus that they have eliminated the chance that Baghdad
- might resume a bomb-building program if it can ever get out from
- under intrusive international surveillance. Analysts are haunted
- by the thought that they might be just as badly misreading the
- data on other fledgling weapons programs. The U.S. is worried
- enough that in September it set up a special Nonproliferation
- Center at CIA headquarters, with 100 employees--more than had
- been working on the issue throughout the government--to
- coordinate and intensify collection and analysis of
- intelligence.
- </p>
- <p> A rundown on what U.S. and allied intelligence sources
- already know or suspect:
- </p>
- <p> NORTH KOREA. Satellite pictures show that in 1987 the
- country completed a 30-MW reactor. That is too big for research--such reactors generally run 10 MW or less--and too small
- for electric-power production, which generally requires a
- reactor producing 200 MW or more. Besides, the satellite
- pictures show no electric generators or power lines alongside
- the reactor to carry off the electricity. So the reactor appears
- designed to do what bombmakers need: begin the process of
- producing plutonium for use in weapons. Satellite photos also
- show another and bigger (50-to-200-MW) reactor under
- construction; analysts think it will come on stream next year.
- A plutonium-reprocessing plant also is nearing completion. Fuel,
- of course, is not enough to make a weapon; it must then be
- shaped into an explosive device. A recent defector says North
- Korea has built an underground nuclear weapons design or
- research facility to construct deliverable bombs. They can be
- dropped from airplanes; but if the aggressor has only a few
- bombs and the potential victim has any kind of air defense, the
- bombers could easily be shot down before hitting their target.
- Missile warheads are the preferred method for delivering a
- devastating blow--and North Korea produces missiles that can
- carry nukes, not just for its own use but also for export. As
- part of the round robin among the secret developers, North Korea
- early this year sold to Syria (which may have a fledgling
- nuclear-weapons program of its own) a batch of Scuds; they carry
- bigger warheads than the missiles Saddam Hussein launched
- against Israel and Saudi Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> Altogether, the evidence seems convincing that North Korea
- is closer to developing usable nuclear weapons than any other
- country that does not already have them. Nor will the West
- necessarily know when North Korea, or any other country, has
- successfully built any weapons. In days of old, the telltale
- sign was a test blast. But now, says Daniel Leshem, an Israeli
- proliferation expert at Tel Aviv University's Jaffee Center for
- Strategic Studies, computer simulation would enable a nuclear
- newcomer to be "quite confident the Bomb will be effective when
- needed" without actually detonating one.
- </p>
- <p> IRAN. Facing stalemate or defeat in the war with Iraq,
- Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1987 personally authorized a
- full-scale renewal of a nuclear-bomb program that the Shah had
- begun. The program has survived both the end of the Iran-Iraq
- war and Khomeini's death; Tehran hardly even bothers to hide its
- intentions anymore. On Oct. 25, Sayed Ataollah Mohajerani, an
- Iranian Vice President, told an Islamic conference in Tehran,
- "Since Israel continues to possess nuclear weapons, we, the
- Muslims, must cooperate to produce an atom bomb, regardless of
- U.N. attempts to prevent proliferation."
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, Iran's program resembles that of its archfoe,
- Saddam Hussein. Like Iraq, Iran is carrying on its bomb program
- in small facilities, allegedly for peaceful research, that
- until recently escaped international attention. Also like
- Saddam, according to the most detailed accounts from nearby
- intelligence sources, Iran is trying a number of different
- methods to produce bomb fuel, which is strictly controlled on
- the world market. It has agreed to buy a small
- plutonium-producing reactor from China and is negotiating
- another such deal with India. At the same time, it is
- experimenting with three processes, including a highly
- sophisticated laser technique for enriching uranium to weapons
- grade (U-235, the readily fissionable isotope, constitutes less
- than 1% of freshly mined uranium; that must be increased to at
- least 80% for explosive purposes). Iran already has one
- enrichment plant, thought to employ the centrifuge method, at
- Mualem Kilaya, and may have another in Karaj, north of Tehran.
- It bought a calutron, which also enriches uranium, from the
- Chinese, but has not yet installed the device.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. analysts think Tehran would need at least a decade to
- wield the Bomb, even assuming all-out help from China. "China
- has taken over from France as the world's greatest proliferator
- of nuclear technology," says Kenneth Timmerman, author of a book
- on the Iraqi nuclear program. Beijing is recklessly peddling
- nuclear equipment and expertise to just about any nation
- willing and able to pay cash. If China can be persuaded or
- coerced to cut back, American intelligence officials believe,
- Iran will not be able to develop an explosible bomb in the
- foreseeable future.
- </p>
- <p> But some Middle East experts take a darker view. They hear
- reports that in addition to help from China, Iran is getting
- "hot cells"--heavily shielded compartments in which highly
- radioactive material can be handled by remote control--from
- Argentina. And though American experts believe Tehran's Chinese
- calutron will produce medical isotopes, Iran might be able to
- modify the design and reproduce from its own resources more, and
- bigger, calutrons to turn out bomb fuel. In the pessimists'
- view, Tehran could be producing nuclear weapons in six or seven
- years.
- </p>
- <p> ALGERIA. When Algeria signed a contract three years ago to
- have China build a 15-MW reactor, U.S. analysts showed little
- concern. They thought it would be, as advertised, a research
- facility. But early this year, U.S. satellites spotted
- antiaircraft defenses that had mystifyingly been set up in the
- middle of the Algerian desert. A closer look turned up signs of
- construction of a nearly complete nuclear reactor; vegetation
- planted around it in a characteristically Chinese pattern
- provided a strong clue as to who was building it. From the size
- of the cooling towers, the reactor appeared to be of 50-to-60-MW
- capacity. Experts such as Leonard Spector of the Carnegie
- Endowment for International Peace say a reactor that size has
- only one function: to produce plutonium for bomb fuel. Also, as
- in the case of North Korea, there were no power lines or
- electrical generating equipment at the site.
- </p>
- <p> Outside experts are still unsure what the size of the
- reactor is. The argument about what Algeria is up to may not be
- settled even if the country signs the 1968 Nuclear
- Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) and opens its facilities to
- inspection by the IAEA. It might, for example, show the
- inspectors a reactor that really did have only a 15-MW capacity--but could be fairly quickly expanded to 50-60 MW. In any
- case, what worries Western officials is not just that Algeria
- may develop a bomb for itself but that it may be helping others
- build nuclear weapons faster. U.S. intelligence has picked up
- rumors that some Iraqi nuclear scientists are working in Algeria
- and that Baghdad has provided Algiers with hard-to-get nuclear
- technology.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect that such cooperation will broaden into a
- nuclear mutual-aid society haunts Israeli experts in particular.
- Leshem believes that "an international Mafia aimed at getting
- the Bomb for every member" already exists and is swapping
- technology and training. The buyers would include Iran, Algeria
- and to some extent Libya. China is the leading seller, and North
- Korea is playing both roles.
- </p>
- <p> So far U.S. and allied efforts to contain proliferation
- have focused heavily on getting nations to open their
- facilities to inspection by the IAEA. But Iraq's success in
- reaching the brink of nuclear-weapons production with a
- clandestine program while allowing IAEA inspectors to visit its
- few declared facilities has demonstrated the futility of that.
- The agency has a theoretical right to poke into suspected but
- unadmitted nuclear installations but has never exercised it.
- Even if the agency did--and there is much talk about making
- that easier--and caught a country clandestinely making
- A-bombs, there is no provision in the NPT for any penalties
- against the offender: the matter would go to the U.N. Security
- Council.
- </p>
- <p> The essential question is whether the U.S. and its friends
- can put enough pressure on the suspected bomb builders and
- suppliers to get them to stop. Prospects are not entirely dim.
- Japan, for instance, has warned North Korea that it will not get
- any of the Japanese trade and investment its nose-diving
- economy desperately needs until it drops its nuclear-weapons
- program. North Korea has promised to open up to IAEA inspection
- if a companion inspection proves there are no American nuclear
- weapons in South Korea. If North Korea does allow inspections,
- U.S. officials have evidence that they believe will force the
- IAEA to demand to see all of Pyongyang's major nuclear
- facilities--but that still would not guarantee that bomb
- building would end.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. and British efforts to persuade China to stop its
- promiscuous peddling of nuclear assistance have so far hit a
- brick wall. When Secretary of State James Baker visited Beijing
- last month, China promised to at last sign the nonproliferation
- treaty before April 1992. Yet it has refused to promise that it
- will stop anything it is now doing. But some U.S. politicians
- think a credible threat by Washington to do away with favorable
- tariff treatment for Chinese goods might be effective. The
- theory is that China would lose more money because of lower
- exports to the U.S. than it would gain through further nuclear
- sales. Democratic Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware goes so far
- as to say that "we must, in extremis, be prepared to use force
- to stop dangerous dictators from obtaining nuclear weapons"--which apparently means bombing North Korea if all else fails.
- </p>
- <p> That may be extreme, but all other measures are fully
- justified. Until recently, nonproliferation efforts achieved
- considerable success. Membership in the nuclear club has held
- steady for about a decade (Pakistan entered but South Africa
- dropped out); such nations as Taiwan and South Korea, in
- addition to Brazil and Argentina, ended once flourishing nuclear
- programs; France, Germany and Argentina became much more
- discriminating in the kind of nuclear technology they would
- approve for sale and to whom. But all this progress could be
- easily reversed. The thought of North Korea's Stalinist regime
- brandishing atom bombs, for instance, could easily frighten
- Japan and South Korea into developing their own nukes. It would
- be a terrible irony if the early 21st century revived a dread
- that the end of the cold war in the 20th had seemed to put to
- rest: the fear that almost any local or regional conflict could
- set off an escalating nuclear war.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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