Britain accused of Israel nuclear cover-up (AP) Updated: 2005-12-10 09:39
Two British lawmakers have accused the government of a cover-up for refusing
to admit that Britain helped launch Israel's nuclear program in 1959 by secretly
selling the Jewish state a batch of heavy water �� a key ingredient in producing
weapons-grade materials.
The British Broadcasting Corp. first reported the allegations �� contained in
previously classified documents �� in August, but Foreign Office Minister Kim
Howells swiftly denied the claims to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Howells' account "simply flies in the face of the known facts, now that we
have access to previously classified documents," Menzies Campbell, a lawmaker
and foreign affairs spokesman from the small centrist Liberal Democrat party,
told the BBC's Newsnight program late Friday.
Jeremy Corbyn, a lawmaker from the governing Labor Party who wants a
committee of lawmakers to investigate, told the program that Howell's statement
is "simply untrue."
"Right back to the late 1950s we were a party to the transfer of nuclear
technology to Israel," he said. "We were party to the development of a nuclear
facility in Israel that could and has been used for the manufacture of nuclear
weapons."
According to previously classified papers, the 20 tons of heavy water were
part of a consignment that Britain bought from Norway but later decided was
surplus to requirements.
The documents show how officials presented the transaction as a straight sale
from Norway to Israel. The documents reveal, however, that the heavy water was
transported from a British port in Israeli ships in two shipments, half in June
1959 and half a year later.
The revelation is potentially embarrassing for the British government at a
time when London is heavily engaged with its European Union partners in trying
to persuade Iran �� a nation hostile to Israel �� to give up its nuclear
ambitions.
There was no immediate comment from the Foreign Office.
Heavy water is used both as a reactor coolant and as a moderator in the
process of turning natural uranium into weapons-grade plutonium.
Israel has always refused to confirm reports that it has a nuclear arsenal
consisting of several hundred warheads.
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