Intel: No. Korea Helped Syria Develop Nuclear Program

Officials will reveal formerly classified intelligence they say shows the links.

ByABC News
April 23, 2008, 6:07 PM

WASHINGTON, April 23, 2008— -- U.S. intelligence officials plan to reveal previously classified information today showing how Syria worked with North Korea on a nuclear weapons program for more than a decade, and that intelligence agencies had been aware of these ties for years, ABC News has learned.

In an extraordinary move, officials will show photographic images shot inside a suspected nuclear reactor in Syria, U.S. officials told ABC News.

The release of the images is highly unusual because it will reveal that somebody most likely the Israelis had a spy on the ground at the Syrian nuclear facility.

Intelligence officials plan to brief key congressional committees and members of the media Thursday, the officials said.

The briefing will include a video presentation comparing images shot inside the Syrian reactor with images shot inside North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear reactor. The two facilities are strikingly similar, according to U.S. officials familiar with the intelligence.

The suspected reactor was secretly destroyed September 2007 in a covert Israeli military operation. Until now, neither the Israeli nor the U.S. government has acknowledged any of this.

Although the intelligence will show that Syria was secretly developing a nuclear reactor, officials believe the Syrians were several years away from developing nuclear weapons. There is no evidence that they had developed a reprocessing facility to turn the fuel from the reactor into plutonium, a necessary step to create fuel for a nuclear weapon.

Furthermore, the reactor itself was still not complete when the Israelis destroyed it last September.

Thursday's presentation will also show that, in the months since the Israeli air strikes, the Syrians have gone to great lengths to cover up their activities, removing all the debris and constructing a benign, non-nuclear facility on top of the area where the reactor once stood, officials said.