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  • Georgia: Uranium case underscores nuke safety fears

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Jan 28 2007

    GEORGIA: URANIUM CASE UNDERSCORES NUKE SAFETY FEARS
    Claire Bigg 1/28/07
    A EurasiaNet Partner Post from RFE/RL


    Moscow and Tbilisi have traded harsh words after Georgia revealed it
    had arrested a Russian man last year trying to sell weapons-grade
    uranium.

    The incident marks a new low in already strained Russian-Georgian
    relations and raises fresh fears worldwide that some of Russia's huge
    nuclear stockpiles could fall into terrorist hands.

    Last February in Tbilisi, a Georgian undercover agent, aided by the
    CIA, posed as a rich foreign buyer interested in purchasing
    weapons-grade uranium for a Muslim man from "a serious organization."

    The mission: seize Oleg Khinsagov, a Russian man trying to sell a
    small amount of highly enriched uranium, and confiscate his
    merchandise.

    The operation was a success and Khinsagov was sentenced to 8 and 1/2
    years in prison.

    Although the purity of the uranium seized is ideal for making nuclear
    weapons, the quantity is too small. A nuclear bomb requires at least
    15 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.

    Both the trial and the incident itself were kept secret until
    Thursday (January 26), when Georgian Interior Minister Vano
    Merabishvili, who was visiting Washington this week, revealed the
    case in comments published by U.S. media.

    Reasons For Disclosure

    So why is Tbilisi making the incident public now, almost one year
    after it occurred?

    Nikoloz Rurua, the deputy chairman of the Georgian parliament's
    Committee for Defense and Security, told RFE/RL's Georgian Service
    that there had been "a request by our American colleagues -- not to
    publicize this information due to certain considerations related to
    the operation."

    "I cannot say more about this. It was their request, and we complied
    with it. This applied to a particular period of time, which has now
    passed, and we -- the country on whose soil this legal violation took
    place -- naturally made this information public," Rurua said.

    Georgian Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili, however, had a
    different story. He said he was revealing the case out of frustration
    with Russia's lack of cooperation in the investigation that followed
    the arrest.

    According to him, Russia hampered Georgia's attempts to determine
    whether Khinsagov had access to larger quantities of uranium, as he
    had boasted prior to his detention.

    New Russia-Georgia Spat

    Russian authorities confirmed the arrest, but struck back by saying
    Georgia prevented Russia from identifying the substance's country of
    origin by presenting a sample too small to work with. He accused
    Georgia of failing to provide a larger sample despite repeated
    requests.

    The Khinsagov case has also revived tensions over Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia, the two Georgian separatist republics backed by Moscow.

    Merabishvili said the Russian smuggler came to Georgia's attention
    during an investigation into what he called extensive smuggling
    networks in and around the breakaway border regions.

    The incident has once again prompted calls in Georgia for
    international observer missions in both regions, a proposal that
    Tbilisi has been pushing in past months.

    "Any uncontrolled territory represents dangers not only for the
    country within which this territory lies, but for the international
    community as a whole,'' deputy Rurua said. "We believe this is a
    crucial reason for the international community to take the resolution
    of problems in the Tskhinvali region and in Abkhazia seriously."

    Nuclear Safety Fears

    The international community, however, seems more concerned about how
    100 grams of nuclear-bomb grade uranium fell into the hands of a
    50-year-old Russian trader, who specialized in fish and sausages.

    Speaking today at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
    International Atomic Energy Agency chief Muhammad el-Baradei
    reiterated the urgency of joining forces in preventing rogue states
    from obtaining material for nuclear weapons.

    The incident is reminiscent of a similar case in 2003, when Georgian
    border guards caught an Armenian man with about 170 grams of highly
    enriched uranium. According to Georgia, the man said the uranium came
    from the Siberian city of Novosibirsk, home to a major nuclear
    complex.

    A number of experts say Khinsagov, too, is likely to have obtained
    uranium in Russia, where a nuclear black market emerged from the
    chaos that followed the 1991 Soviet collapse.

    Efforts To Be Safe

    But Ivan Safranchuk, who heads the Moscow office of the U.S.-based
    Center for Defense Information, says getting hold of highly enriched
    uranium in Russia is not that easy.

    "Over the past nine years, serious efforts have been made to improve
    the system of physical protection and security of nuclear facilities,
    both military and civilian. So in my opinion, obtaining nuclear
    substances in Russia is extremely difficult. Today, if I were a
    terrorist seeking nuclear substances, I would go to Pakistan, not
    Russia," Safranchuk says.

    Former Soviet countries have indeed taken steps towards boosting
    nuclear security, often financed by the West.

    Russia, in particular, says it is actively cooperating with other
    nations, including the United States, to combat nuclear
    proliferation.

    But Vladimir Chuprov, the chief nuclear expert at Greenpeace's
    Russian office, says security at Russian nuclear facilities remains
    deplorable.

    "In Russia, the physical defense and security of radioactive material
    doesn't meet the required standards. In 2002, a group of Greenpeace
    activists, together with journalists and a State Duma deputy, entered
    without difficulties the territory of the national stockpile of
    wasted nuclear fuel, climbed on the roof of the stockpile's building
    complex, shot photographs and videos, and quietly left. Nine months
    later, the Federal Security Service repeated the same experience.
    Nothing had changed," Chuprov says.

    According to Chuprov, poor working conditions and rampant corruption
    in Russia's post-Soviet nuclear sector continue to provide a fertile
    breeding ground for nuclear contraband.

    The Khinsagov case is likely to put the state of Russia's sprawling
    nuclear stockpiles back into the spotlight once again.
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