Skip to content

Burmese junta ‘is developing a nuclear threat’

June 7, 2010

From The Independant

Burma is trying to develop nuclear weapons, according to exiled
journalists who claim to have uncovered evidence of a nascent missile
programme.


Reporters working for the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), a respected
dissident radio station that broadcasts into South-east Asia out of
Oslo, say they have collected files and photographs which suggest that
the country’s ruling junta is mining and experimenting with uranium
with the aim of one day creating a bomb.

If the evidence is substantiated, it could have severe implications
for how the international community deals with the Burmese regime, one
of the world’s most reviled and isolated military dictatorships. The
allegations prompted US senator Jim Webb to cancel an impending trip
to Burma.

The bulk of the evidence comes from Sai Thein Win, a major in the
Burmese army who was trained in missile technology in Burma and Russia
and has since defected. Sai Thein Win claims to have worked in a
series of secret facilities near the town of Myaing, 100km west of
Mandalay, where he was ordered to make prototype components for
missile and nuclear programmes. He also claims a further nuclear
facility is located at Thabeikkyin, a town north of Mandalay that he
visited on numerous occasions.

If Burma’s alleged nuclear ambitions are substantiated, it will
inevitably raise questions as to whether the junta is receiving help
from rogue nations such as North Korea. Last week, a leaked UN report
obtained by the Associated Press accused Pyongyang of defying UN
sanctions by using front companies to export nuclear and missile
technology to Iran, Syria and Burma. U.S. State Department spokesman
P.J. Crowley said Washington has “been concerned about Burma’s
relationship with North Korea.”

The full details of DVB’s investigations are due to be released on the
internet tomorrow, accompanied by a documentary which will air on Al
Jazeera in Europe and ABC in the US. Khin Maung Win, deputy director
of DBV, told The Independent yesterday: “We have been investigating
Burma’s nuclear aspirations for the past five years, but Sai Thein
Win’s evidence has been vital in proving that the intent to build a
nuclear bomb is there, even if they are a long way off producing one.”

Sai Thein Win began sending DVB photographs of Burma’s secret
facilities in November 2009 and continued to do so until early
February when he fled the country. He is now in hiding.

Bertil Lintner, a Burma analyst based in Chiang Mai, Thailand, said
obtaining such evidence from a high-level defector was very rare.
“It’s certainly some of the most extraordinary evidence I’ve ever seen
coming out of Burma,” he said, adding that Sai Thein Win’s revelations
were akin to Mordechai Vanunu’s exposure of Israel’s nuclear weapons
programme in 1986.

According to Sai Thein Win, a specialist “nuclear battalion” has been
created by Burma’s rulers to begin experimenting with nuclear
materials and long-range missile production.

He claims to have worked with precision machinery imported from
Singapore and Germany that the Burmese government bought for
“educational and vocational training”, but was in fact used for
uranium enrichment, and to produce parts for warheads.

DVB say they have had their evidence verified by two specialists:
Robert Kelley, a former intelligence officer at Los Alamos and
ex-weapons inspector with the International Atomic Energy Agency, and
Geoff Forden, a military researcher at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.

Mr Kelley, who co-authored DVB’s report, said he believed that Sai
Thein Win’s evidence showed that Burma has “no conceivable use for
this for anything other than a nuclear weapons programme”.

To read an executive summary of the dossier click here

No comments yet

Leave a comment