TEN MORE NATIONS MAY HAVE NUCLEAR ARMS ON THE DRAWING BOARD -- IF NOT IN HAND

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00806R000200820002-7
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 3, 2010
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
June 6, 1985
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OPEN SOURCE
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/03: CIA-RDP9O-00806ROO0200820002-7 tP',. ^1 E APPEARED I CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR ON PAaE6 June 1985 'Ten more nations may have nucI7 arms on tirie drawing board if not in hand By John K. Cooley Companies in France, Switzerland, lgium, and Special to The Chnstian Science Monitor West Germany all have reportedly helped Pakistan work London As the United States, the Soviet Union, China, Britain, and France build up their existing nu- clear arsenals, about 10 other countries are ap- proaching or achieving the capability to make - and deliver - home-grown nuclear weapons. This is the conclusion of a six-month investiga- tion by ABC News, which discloses new prolif- eration of nuclear-weapons capability in- Latin America. South Asia; and the Middle East.. - . President Kenned_pred_icted in 1963 that by. the end of the 1970s "15 to 20 to 25 nations" might have the bomb. This was never realized because the 1968 Non- Proliferation Treaty and safeguards of the Inter- national Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have Whelped many states decide that "they would be better off without nuclear weapons," says David Price, an analyst at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, an arms control foundation. . But Leonard S. Spector, a leading US expert on nonproliferation, wrote in, the, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in, January, "Although no new nation tested a first nuclear device during 1984 . all of the threshold countries appear to have taken steps, in some case significant, toward de- veloping or expanding nuclear weapons capa- bilities." Mr. Spector, author of "Nuclear Proliferation Today" included in the category of "threshold countries" Pakistan, India, Israel, Argentina, Brazil, Iraq, Libya, and South Africa. Investigation in and about the threshold na- tions disclosed new information, some of which is highly frustrating for the ' Reagan administra- tion's anti-proliferation hopes and disappointing for the IAEA safeguards system. Today's greatest proliferation danger may lie in South Asia, according to experts in Vienna and Stockholm. India's Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi told a reporter toward keeping the promise of the late Prime Minister Zulfikar All Bhutto to "make an Islamic bomb, even if we have to eat grass to do it." An engineer in Freiburg, West Germany, recently con- victed and fined for illegal exports of sensitive nuclear equipment, allegedly helped Pakistan acquire a uranium hexafluoride plant, an important link in enriching ura- inium 235 to the high degree needed for weapons. French firms and Belgium's Belgonucleaire earlier provided assistance for the Pinstech reprocessing plant, near Islamabad, Pakistan. It produces plutonium which will soon be enough for two bombs a year. In Kahuta, Pakistan, an enrichment plant is reportedly in operation, and diplomats and newsmen have in past years been beaten up for getting too close to it. Munir Ahmed Khan, chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, at first declined to discuss Kahuta with this writer. Later he told ABC that "we are (carrying out research and development in enrichment using the centrifuge process." Centrifuges are normally used to separate uranium 235 from less fissionable iso- topes of uranium. Highly enriched uranium 235 can be used in nuclear weapons. British experts and US intelligence sources have__ re- ported that FZ~mtan has been combing uro fr shaped-steel pates. These t over a two steel emi- spheres enclosing the nuclear explosive, somewhat We the sections of a soccer ball. Western intelligence eves China provided a bomb des to Pakistan. This was one factor ate the administration and ngress to delay an agreement or nuclear- wer reactors that Presioent. Reagan im in Pa-mi last April. In a esign, a conventional explosive is placed between hemispheres and plates, causing the implosion that produces a nuclear blast. Last June, Nazir Ahmed Vaid, a Pakistani, was ar- rested in the US and later deported after trying to buy 50 krytrons, devices that can be used to trigger nuclear weapons. - Israel recently admitted it had imported about 80 1 krytrons but said they were used for nonnuclear explo- sions. An American' is being.prosecuted in Los Angeles for allegedly smuggling the krytrons to Israel. It is widely assumed that Israel's frequnt statement that it "will not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons into the Mideast" thinly masks a considerable Israeli nu- clear arsenal ready for instant assembly. - k--Carl Duckett~ a former de u director at the Central Intelligence A said in 1981 that the CIA eRHas that eaRgns-grade - uranium more than 200 unds, enough for four bombs) allegedly went to Israe m a firm called NUMEC in Apollo, aIsrael extracts ura- nium from its phosphates and is believed by specs s to import u can uranium as well: Israeli-developed techniques, su h as laser separation of uranium isotopes, ob I,ol:o.,o.i hu rho egyn CT bcialiCts earlier this year, "If we [had) wanted to make bombs in (these 11 years" since India's test of what it referred to as a "peaceful" nuclear device on May 18, 1974, "we could have." Mr. Gandhi said India has not taken such a step. But in recent press interviews, he has said that India is con- sidering how to respond to the possibility that Pakistan I has a nuclear weapon. US government experts see no evidence that India has produced any more "devices" since 1974. They do be- 1lieve, however, that through its safeguarded and unsafeguarded network of advanced nuclear installa- tions, India has increased its capability to produce i enough weapons-grade plutonium to soon produce 10 nu- clear bombs a year. STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/03: CIA-RDP9O-00806ROO0200820002-7