The Syria-North Korea 'connection'
By Jonathan Marcus
Nearly two weeks on from Israel's incursion into Syrian airspace, the
mystery surrounding the operation shows little sign of disappearing.
Press reports suggest strongly that the Israeli jets destroyed a
facility near Syria's border with Turkey.

All sorts of details of the operation have "leaked" out, but still
the precise nature of the "target" remains unclear.
By far the strongest theory though suggests a North Korean nuclear
connection - a linkage which the North Korean authorities have
strenuously denied.
The story put about by largely unnamed US sources and backed up by
the former US ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, is that
North Korea - under international pressure to scale down its own nuclear
weapons programme - has recently transferred equipment or technology to
Syria.
And it is this equipment - possibly at a fledgling research centre -
that the Israelis hit.
'Political agenda'
All sorts of questions remain. Experts on North Korea's nuclear
programme are highly sceptical about the alleged technology transfer.
Joseph Cirincione, director for nuclear policy at the
Washington-based Center for American Progress, a liberal think-tank, has
gone so far as to describe the story as "nonsense".
Selective leaks are being used to play up the Syria-North Korea
connection, he writes on the online site of the journal Foreign Policy.
"This appears to be the work of a small group of officials leaking
cherry-picked, unvetted 'intelligence' to key reporters in order to
promote a pre-existing political agenda. If this sounds like the run-up
to the war with Iraq, then it should," he writes.
Gary Samore of the Council on Foreign Relations, another leading
North Korea nuclear expert, was less dismissive when I spoke to him, but
equally sceptical.
"I know that the Israelis have been worried for some time that the
Syrians were eager to get nuclear technology from North Korea," he said.
"The North Koreans are looking to liquidate at least part of their
enrichment programme, and perhaps want to offload the centrifuges and so
on that they obtained from Pakistan."
So the Syrians might be "dabbling" with enrichment technology, but
this would not represent "a near-term threat", Mr Samore says.
"There are North Koreans in Syria in connection with missile
technology," he said, but on the nuclear front "we just don't know".
One thing he saw as strange, however, was the possible location of
the "target" that the Israelis may have hit.
This seems to have been very close to the border with Turkey - an odd
place for a potential nuclear research establishment.
Scepticism needed
Of course much of the controversy - given the fact that the Syrians
and the Israelis have said very little (which is instructive in itself)
- centres on the nature of the messengers, the shadowy leakers in
Washington.
Only one of them, Andrew Semmel, a senior non-proliferation official,
has gone on the record, and then there is the involvement of the
controversial Mr Bolton. Critics suggest that at least some of these
people have a strong desire to derail the Bush administration's current
negotiations with Pyongyang.
For whatever reason, the latest round of the six-party nuclear talks
involving the two Koreas has been postponed at the last minute,
apparently at the North Koreans' request.
But as Mr Samore pointed out: "Just because John Bolton is using this
for political purposes doesn't mean that it is not true."
This episode once again highlights the problems for the media in
dealing with this kind of story, problems that were exemplified - one
has to admit in retrospect- by the run-up to the invasion of Iraq.
Journalists need copy. But they also have to weigh up what they are
told. Official sources cannot simply be discounted.
But on the other hand, a sufficient degree of scepticism needs to be
deployed. And just sometimes, that mighty media machine has to admit
that it just does not know.
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