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SPIEGEL: How Israel Destroyed Syria's Al Kibar Nuclear Reactor
In September 2007, Israeli fighter jets destroyed a mysterious complex in the Syrian desert. The incident could have led to war, but it was hushed up by all sides. Was it a nuclear plant and who gave the orders for the strike?

The mighty Euphrates river is the subject of the prophecies in the Bible's Book of Revelation, where it is written that the river will be the scene of the battle of Armageddon: "The sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up to prepare the way for the kings from the East."

Today, time seems to stand still along the river. The turquoise waters of the Euphrates flow slowly through the northern Syrian provincial city Deir el-Zor, whose name translates as "monastery in the forest." Farmers till the fields, and vendors sell camel's hair blankets, cardamom and coriander in the city's bazaars. Occasionally archaeologists visit the region to excavate the remains of ancient cities in the surrounding area, a place where many peoples have left their mark -- the Parthians and the Sassanids, the Romans and the Jews, the Ottomans and the French, who were assigned the mandate for Syria by the League of Nations and who only withdrew their troops in 1946. Deir el-Zor is the last outpost before the vast, empty desert, a lifeless place of jagged mountains and inaccessible valleys that begins not far from the town center.

by nanne (zwaerdenmaecker@gmail.com) on Mon Nov 2nd, 2009 at 01:31:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It still doesn't answer the question that puzzles me, namely where are the pictures of the destroyed building? They say
There, then-CIA Director Michael Hayden showed him images that the Israelis had obtained from the Syrian computer in London (much to the outrage of officials in Tel Aviv, incidentally, as it provided insights into Mossad sources).
Providing aerial pictures taken just after the raid (the Israelis must have wanted to know whether the raid succeeded) would have revealed much less sensitive informatio about their methods, and there would have been no doubt that the pictures were really from the site. These would presumably be quite informative to trained experts. The only pictures I've ever seen are from over a month later, after the Syrians had cleaned up the site.

While I've no idea what was actually going on, in the absence of such pictures, the rest seems consistent with the possibility that the Israelis had good reason to believe the Syrians were building a reactor - but that they were wrong.

by gk (g k quattro due due sette "at" gmail.com) on Mon Nov 2nd, 2009 at 04:18:14 PM EST
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