CNN THE WORLD TODAY
December 10, 1999; Friday
Nuclear Scientist Wen Ho Lee Accused of Endangering U.S. National Security
BYLINE: Joie Chen, Pierre Thomas, Jamie McIntyre
JOIE CHEN, CNN ANCHOR: The FBI today arrested former Los Alamos nuclear
scientist Wen Ho Lee. His detainment follows months of discussion inside the
Justice Department about whether to seek
an indictment.
Justice correspondent Pierre Thomas tonight with the story.
PIERRE THOMAS, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Former Los Alamos nuclear
scientist Wen Ho Lee now stands accused of putting U.S. national security at
serious risk.
JOHN KELLY, U.S.
ATTORNEY: Wen Ho Lee has denied the United States its exclusive dominion and
control over some of this country's most important and sensitive nuclear
secrets.
THOMAS: FBI agents arrested Lee at his home, charging him with illegal transfer
of nuclear weapons codes. Lee's arrest came after
a federal grand jury in New Mexico issued a sweeping 59-count indictment. It
accuses Lee of downloading volumes of nuclear weapons design and testing
simulation data from a secure computer to a non- secure computer. What's more,
the government says Lee
placed the information on 10 computer tapes, and that Lee cannot account for
seven of those tapes.
Lee was not charged with spying, but nuclear experts say its a security breach
of extraordinary proportion.
GARY MILHOLLIN, ARMS CONTROL ANALYST: This loss compromises the most secret
information the
United States has; that is how we design, and test and have confidence in our
nuclear warheads, how they work, how they function.
THOMAS: Lee has repeatedly denied wrongdoing, claiming he made copies in case
of a computer crash.
WEN HO LEE: I'm innocent.
THOMAS: His attorneys vowed to fight. They
point out that in other cases where classified information has been mishandled
or lost, the suspects were not prosecuted. In a statement, Lee's attorneys said
the Justice case was
"groundless," and they say there is no evidence Lee has given the information to anyone and
no evidence that classified tapes were taken from Lee's lab.
In addition, Lee's defenders say he was targeted solely because he's
Asian-American.
The investigation of Lee grew out allegations of Chinese nuclear espionage,
specifically the potential loss of W-88 nuclear warhead technology. But the
FBI has been unable to link Lee to those allegations, and has since expanded
the investigation beyond
Lee.
(on camera) FBI sources tell the CNN what Lee has now been indicted for
represents a potentially far more damaging loss.
Pierre Thomas, CNN, Washington
CHEN: Just what was on the computer tapes prosecutors say are missing? No one
will
say specifically, but officials have made it clear that the potential for
damage is very serious.
More from CNN military affairs correspondent Jamie McIntyre tonight.
JAMIE MCINTYRE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Prosecutors seeking to convict
fired atomic scientist Wen Ho
Lee of mishandling classified material say information he downloaded onto a
missing computer tape included design secrets to a wide range of U.S. nuclear
weapons.
U.S. investigators suspect Lee may have passed those secrets to China, but
don't have the proof. Nevertheless, some experts believe the
potential damage to U.S. national security is enormous.
FRANK GAFFNEY, CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY: I have a feeling that if the Chinese
have the benefit of what a man like Wen Ho Lee knew, it would it would
represent a huge advance in their ability to modernize with great efficiency
their
strategic nuclear arsenal.
MCINTYRE: Currently, China has only 20 missiles with the range to hit the
United States, and only a single submarine capable of carrying nuclear
missiles. But according to a Pentagon report released earlier this year, China
is developing a new ballistic- missile
submarine to carry longer-range missiles armed with smaller, American-style
multiple warheads. The U.S. suspects, but can't prove, it is all being done
much faster and cheaper thanks to stolen American know-how.
The copied Los Alamos computer files also contained data
about U.S. nuclear testing, which in theory could help China develop the
ability to test nuclear weapons through complex computer models. For instance,
in court documents, prosecutors charge Lee copied the complete source code for
a primary weapon design, a
blueprint that would allow a computer to simulate the actions of the bomb.
JOHN PIKE, FEDERATION OF AMERICAN SCIENTISTS: This data would mainly confirm what they
probably already knew. It would give them the opportunity to check their own
data, to check their own calculations, to basically confirm that they were on
the right track.
MCINTYRE (on camera): There is
still a debate among experts about how much China's nuclear program have been
accelerated by stolen U.S. nuclear secrets. Experts say, however, if China did
end up with the missing computer tapes, it could at the very least save them
some time and money.
Jamie McIntyre, CNN, the
Pentagon.
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