More details are emerging about the Libyan decision to renounce its nuclear ambitions. The Washington Post reports:
U.S. and British intelligence services discovered in late September that a freighter bound for Libya was hauling thousands of parts for centrifuges, a key component for producing nuclear weapons, senior U.S. officials said yesterday. Officials said the interception of the cargo, worth tens of millions of dollars, was a factor in pressuring Libya to give up its deadliest weapons programs….
The Bush administration believes the intelligence coup accelerated Libya’s cooperation. Although secret talks on Libya’s programs for producing weapons of mass destruction had begun about six months earlier, Moammar Gaddafi’s government had not yet given a date for U.S. and British intelligence to visit weapons-development sites. After the interdiction, U.S. and British inspectors were in Libya within two weeks, U.S. officials said….
The operation, details of which were reported yesterday in the Wall Street Journal, was the first interdiction under the new Proliferation Security Initiative, an agreement among 11 countries to stop and search planes and ships suspected of carrying banned weapons or missile technology. Seizure of the cargo proves the initiative’s importance as a new tool in tracking and curtailing the spread of weapons technology, U.S. officials said.
“It’s clearly a success for the proliferation initiative, but it’s also an allied success, especially for the Germans and Italians,” a senior administration official said. He described the German government and the shipping company as “extremely cooperative.”
The Proliferation Security Initiative was created in the wake of North Korea’s unwillingness to abandon its nuclear weapons program — click here for more background.
This kind of success is often overlooked when the administration is ritually and repeatedly blasted for pursuing a gratuitously unilateral foreign policy. In fact, a look at the record suggests that since the September 11th attacks, the Bush approach has been more multilateral than is commonly acknowledged.
Let’s hope this perception is corrected in 2004.
UPDATE: More on this theme from Colin Powell in today’s New York Times (posted by Daniel Drezner).