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Israel Agrees to Inspections of Atomic Monitoring Stations
Sep 24 2004
Ha'aretz
By Yossi Melman, Ha'aretz Correspondent
Israel signed an agreement Thursday that allows experts from the
commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO)
to carry
out inspections
and collect data at nuclear monitoring stations in Israeli territory.
The agreement
is a follow-up to the more general CTBTO treaty that Israel signed in September
1996. Like the United States and 10 other countries, including Egypt,
Israel has not ratified that treaty. Thursday's agreement has no connection
to the nuclear research facility in Dimona, which remains off-limits to international
inspection.
The agreement was signed by the director-general of the Israel Atomic Energy
Commission, Gideon Frank, and the executive secretary of the CTBTO, Wolfgang
Hoffmann, at a ceremony at the organization's headquarters in Vienna.
Two International Monitoring System facilities - out of a total of 300 around
the world - have been set up in Israel, and the data they collect will be sent
to the CTBTO's headquarters. The data is meant to reveal incidents of nuclear
testing, be they underground or in the atmosphere. The monitoring stations
also collect seismic and environmental data that can be used for other scientific
research on natural and climatic phenomena.
An international conference
on a nuclear-free Middle East is scheduled to take place in January 2005,
under the auspices of the International Atomic
Energy Agency. The purpose of the conference is primarily academic. Israel
has, however, threatened to boycott the gathering if a resolution proposed
by the Arab world on "the threat posed by Israel's nuclear capabilities," materializes
this week at a gathering of the IAEA.
In the past, the proposed resolution was removed from the agenda following
American pressure.
If the proposed resolution
is retracted, Israel will put its name to a more general document calling
for "efforts of the IAEA to implement nuclear
inspections in the Middle East."
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