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Russian: Georgia Uranium Was
Weapons-Grade
Associated Press by Jim Heintz
January 26, 2007
(For personal use only)
MOSCOW (AP) -- A top official at a Russian state scientific
institute confirmed Friday that Georgia had sent Russia a sample of uranium
allegedly seized in a sting operation and that it was weapons-grade, Russian
news agencies reported.
However, Igor Shkabura, deputy director of the Bochvar Inorganic Materials
Institute, said the size of the sample provided by Georgia was too small to
determine its origin, the RIA-Novosti and ITAR-Tass news agencies said.
Shkabura's statement was the first public comment by a named Russian official to
claims by Georgia that it arrested and jailed a Russian man last year for trying
to sell weapons-grade uranium to an agent posing as a rich foreign buyer.
The reports that emerged Wednesday, confirmed by U.S. officials, raised renewed
concern about security at Russia's array of nuclear facilities. Shkabura said
the uranium sent by Georgia ''could be used for military productions, including
nuclear weapons,'' according to ITAR-Tass.
The reports aggravated already-high tensions between Russia and Georgia. The two
countries have been at odds for years over the status of South Ossetia and
Abkhazia, two renegade regions of Georgia that seek either independence or
absorption into Russia.
Georgian officials say their agent made contact with the man selling contraband
uranium in South Ossetia, which is widely seen as a regional epicenter for
smuggling.
The Georgian Foreign Ministry late Thursday issued a statement saying the
uranium sting highlighted the need for international observer missions in the
two regions, a proposal that Tbilisi has been pushing in recent months.
Russia has peacekeeper contingents in both regions, which have been under the
control of unrecognized separatist governments since fighting ended in the
mid-1990s.
The ministry statement said ''Georgia is far from politicizing these
questions.''
But Abkhazia's separatist foreign minister Sergei Shamba denounced the Georgian
statement as ''an attempt to compromise our republic and present it as a region
that threatens peace and stability,'' the Interfax news agency reported.