Libya Timeline:
Key events in the lead up to and the aftermath of the Iraq war
December
1988: Libyan
terrorists bomb PanAm flight 103 over
April
1999: U.N.
suspends sanctions after Libya extradites
the two Lockerbie suspects to Scottish custody in the
Mid-level
U.S. State Department representatives begin a secret dialogue with Libyan
officials.
October
2001: U.S. begins a series of public negotiations with
March
2003: Talks
continue;
January-June
2003: According
to the C.I.A., Libya develops
its nuclear infrastructure, including discussions with Russia on cooperation at the
July
2003: Libyan
leader Muammar Qaddafi announces that
August
2003: Qaddafi offers to allow international inspections of industrial
sites in search of
biological and chemical weapons.
September
2003: U.N.
Security Council votes to lift sanctions; U.S. and
October
2003: Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is quoted as saying Libya is
working with North Korea and
U.S. and Britain intercept
a German-owned freighter carrying thousands of centrifuge parts to
December
2003:
U.S. and Britain announce
that Libya's decision to
disarm is a result of nine months of negotiations, during which
International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) visits four Libyan nuclear sites and assesses that the nuclear
program is still years away from being able to produce a bomb. The IAEA sees
no full-scale uranium enrichment facility (only a
pilot unit) or enriched uranium.
January
2004: U.S. officials reportedly confirm that Libya's centrifuge design originated in
It
is agreed that U.S. and
British experts will oversee destruction and removal of nuclear components
in Libya, and IAEA teams
will certify
U.S., British and U.N. inspectors reportedly reveal
that
U.S. and
February
2004: Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
(OPCW) begins inspections of Libyan chemical weapons.
IAEA
details history of
Malaysian
investigators report that the Khan network shipped partly enriched uranium,
as well as designs and technology for making a
nuclear bomb, to
U.S. eases sanctions against
Libya tells the IAEA it wants to retain at least
three
nuclear facilities, including a uranium conversion plant that the
March
2004: OPCW receives a compete declaration that discloses a chemical
weapons production facility at Rabta that produced 23 metric tons of mustard
gas, two storage
facilities and 2.9 million pounds of precursor materials that could
be used to produce sarin nerve gas.
OPCW
completes inventory of
The
last 500 tons of material from Libya's nuclear program is shipped to the
Libya signs the
Additional Protocol to its IAEA Safeguards agreement.
Libya sends 16 kilograms of uranium reactor fuel
enriched
to 80% U-235 from Tajura back to
U.S. says the Khan network received $100 million
for the
technology sold to
