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Weapons of Mass Destruction: Where's the Proof?
by Maria Tomchick
The Bush administration is still groping for reasons to launch a war that
will make sense to the American public. Tony Blair's "dossier" won't do the
job.
The dossier, entitled "Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction," is full of
qualifiers: "if," "probably," "possibly," "might be," "could," "suspected,"
and "may be." The hard evidence is lacking.
Two things stands out. First of all, a surprising amount of the data in the
report is from the pre-Gulf War era--over 12 years ago. A lot has happened
since then. Bombing during the Gulf War destroyed much of Iraq's
infrastructure, including its missile sites. Since 1998, US and British
warplanes have been flying bombing sorties over Iraq, selectively bombing
suspected military targets for over four years. Yet no one in the US press
has asked the key question: if the US and Britain have been bombing Iraq
since 1998, how could Iraq rebuild its missile sites, chemical weapons
plants, and nuclear capability without them becoming targets of US bombs?
Neither the Bush administration nor the Blair dossier answers this
question.
The second thing that stands out in the dossier is that, when it mentions
the UNSCOM weapons inspections from 1991 to 1998, it reminds us of how
effective they were. Particularly in the early years, from 1991-1995,
UNSCOM was busy: they dismantled Iraq's nuclear weapons program, destroyed
most (if not all) of its chemical munitions, and exposed its highly
secret--albeit tiny and fledgling--bioweapons program (which, the Blair
report admits, was probably destroyed by Iraq in secret to prevent its
exposure). By 1996, UNSCOM was running out of work and was relegated to
poring through boring Iraqi government documents--a testament to its own
success. The Blair report reads like an outright endorsement for
inspections.
Unsurprisingly, the dossier contains no new information other than vague
assertions that Iraq has reconstituted its weapons of mass destruction at a
handful of sites around the country. It does, however, make some statements
that have been seized upon by the Bush administration and the US press as
arguments for why Iraq is a danger to the US. Those include:
Iraq purchased uranium from Africa. There is only one source for
enriched uranium in Africa: South Africa. Currently all of South Africa's
weapons grade material is under the oversight of the International Atomic
Energy Agency, the same UN commission that oversaw the dismantling of
Iraq's nuclear weapons program in the early 1990s and has been monitoring
every since. As recently as earlier this year, Iraq was continuing to make
regular reports to the IAEA on the status of its former nuclear facilities.
There are other sources for uranium in Africa. The Congo, Niger, Botswana,
and Gabon all mine uranium oxide. But that ore must be refined before it
can be used in a nuclear weapon. In spite of reports about special aluminum
tubes, Iraq has not been able to get its hands on any equipment to refine
its own ore, because the sanctions have prevented it. Even if Iraq could
get the equipment, it would take between five and eight years for them to
make enough material to fit in one nuclear warhead.
The Blair report doesn't specify when Iraq bought uranium from
Africa for its weapons. The former apartheid government of South Africa--an
ally of the Reagen administration--sold enriched uranium to Iraq in 1989.
If this is what the Blair report is referring to, then it's misleading.
That material was destroyed by UNSCOM.
Iraq's missile technology. Iraq has no long-range missiles, although
the Blair report shows a grainy satellite photo of a suspected missile site
under construction. Iraq's missile sites were bombed in 1991 during the
Gulf War and again in 1998, and have been targeted by US and British planes
regularly since then. So why haven't they bombed the suspected site shown
in the Blair report?
During the 1990s, UNSCOM dismantled 48 of Iraq's remaining SCUD missiles,
14 warheads, 6 mobile launchers, 28 fixed launch pads, 32 suspected launch
pads under construction, and huge amounts of support equipment.
Conservative political analysts and pentagon spokespeople estimate that, if
Iraq has any SCUDs left, they number less than 10. And remember how
accurate those SCUDs were during the Gulf War?
Mobile bioweapons labs. Clearly the Blair government is relying on
our ignorance of how Third World countries operate. In the US and Europe,
we're used to electricity at the flick of a switch, clean water from the
kitchen faucet, high-speed rail, and well-paved superhighways traveled by
giant, refrigerated trucks.
In Iraq, it's another story. Electricity is a function of where you
live--if it's inside Baghdad, you might have it most of the time. Clean
water is elusive; contaminated water still kills thousands of people every
year, particularly among the very young and the very old. After the Gulf
War, a decade of sanctions, and four years of US and British bombing, there
are few well-paved roads.
Bio-weapons laboratories need a constant supply of electricity, sterile
water, refrigeration, heat, nutrients, glassware, special air filters,
sophisticated equipment, hundreds (if not thousands) of trained personnel,
and buildings constructed with rooms that have multiple doors and barriers
to the outside to maintain adequate bio-containment. Nobody slings around
glass slides and petri dishes full of anthrax cultures in the back of a
truck that's trying to dodge potholes on a dirt track while US fighter
bombers are screaming overhead. It's simply nonsense.
Iraq's chemical weapons.When the Blair report was released and
passed around to the members of the UN Security Council, they read it,
scratched their heads, and exclaimed: "this contains nothing new!" And then
they threw it away. Why? Because the only real threat it describes is
Iraq's chemical weapons capacity, which is still modest compared to many
nations around the world.
Without a missile system, Iraq's aging canisters of sarin gas can only be
used within Iraq itself, inside artillery shells and sprayers. Short-range
chemical weapons are highly risky to deploy; they can only be used when the
weather conditions are just right--or else gas can drift back onto Iraqi
troops or a nearby civilian population.
If anything, Iraq's short-range chemical weapons capability is a very, very
good argument against going to war and invading Iraq.
In spite of the Blair report, there's proof that Iraq is not restocking its
chemical weapons. Within 2 hours of the Blair dossier being released to the
press, British journalists from The Guardian and The Independent were able
to inspect two sites of their own choosing from the report. The Iraqi
government gave them full, unfettered access.
The first site was al-Qa'qa, which the Blair report claims is making
phosgene for chemical weapons. The journalists found that al-Qa'qa is a
plant for making explosives for Iraq's conventional weapons. Phosgene is
produced as a by-product of making explosives, but the liquid phosgene was
being pumped into tanks for storage and much of it was actually leaking
from a pipe all over the ground. There's no money to repair the broken
pipe.
The second site was the Amariyah Sera and Vaccine Institute, supposedly a
bioweapons storage facility, according to the Blair report. Journalists
described it as follows: "The entrance to the Amariyah plant, a smaller
scale operation with a staff of 140, has no military guards, as might have
been expected of a place storing biological weapons. It is rundown, its
laboratories near empty, and the staff, in dirty white lab gowns, looked
bored. Rubbish was piled high outside, especially empty bottles."
No chemical weapons and no bioweapons in sight--only leaky pipes and empty
vaccine bottles.
The "Presidential Palaces.". Both the Blair dossier and the Bush
administration cite the "Presidential Palaces" as possible locations for
weapons of mass destruction. From all this posturing, you'd think that no
one outside of Iraq has ever been inside one of these sites. UNSCOM,
however, visited the Presidential sites on March 25 through April 4, 1998.
The sites contained no weaponry; they were mostly composed of housing for
Republican Guardsmen and their families and government office buildings.
Hans Blix, the current head of the new weapons inspection team, has said
that he doesn't expect to find any weapons or labs on these sites; instead,
he'll be looking for classified government documents with information on
weapons programs, and not the weaponry itself.
Links to Al Qaeda. The Blair report's biggest omission is its lack
of any evidence that Iraq supports terrorist groups. Al Qaeda is not
mentioned at all, but that's not surprising, given that even the Bush
administration can't produce details of a link. In fact, Iraq has fewer
ties to groups on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations
than either Syria or Iran. And one of the groups supposedly linked to Iraq
is the National Council of Resistance of Iran--a group that's supported by
several members of Congress. The NCRI recently held a press conference two
blocks from the White House.
As for high-level Al Qaeda operatives residing in Iraq, US intelligence
sources agree that these men are hiding in northern areas of Iraq not under
Saddam's control (remember the northern "no-fly" zone, set up to prevent
Saddam's troops from fighting Iraqi Kurds?). The assertion by Condoleeza
Rice that senior Al Qaeda members have visited Baghdad refers to only one
guy: Abu Musab Zarqawi, a Jordanian who passed through Baghdad two months
ago, and who had no contact with the Iraqi government or military.
The Bush administration's push for war is not based on fact. Rumsfeld,
Cheney, and Rice's reliance on the Blair report to make the case for war is
either a measure of how mediocre our own intelligence services are or, more
likely, an indication of how divided the Pentagon and US intelligence
agencies are over the wisdom of this war. If it's the former, then we can
expect war without reason or resolution, regardless of what the UN or
Congress decides. But if it's the latter, then there's still hope that the
hawks can be stopped by either a vote in Congress against granting Bush the
war powers he craves or a vote against the US's draft resolution in the UN
Security Council.
We can, and should, lobby for both. Call your Senators and Representatives.
Some of the many sources for this article:
"Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction; The Assessment of the British
Government," from the BBC website, www.bbc.co.uk, it can also be found at
www.pm.gov.uk, www.fco.gov.uk, and www.mod.uk; "S Africa denies Iraq
nuclear link," Alistair Leithead, BBC news online, 9/26/02; "African gangs
offer route to uranium," James Astill and Rory Carroll, The Guardian,
9/25/02; "Blair's dossier assessed," Paul Reynolds, BBC news online,
9/24/02; "Iraq Faces Obstacles in Making Nuclear Weapon," John J. Fialka
and Greg Jaffe, Wall Street Journal, 9/10/02, A10; "Iraq takes journalists
on tour to expose Blair 'lies'," Kim Sengupta, The Independent, 9/25/02;
"Suspect plants open their doors; Iraqis arrange tour of factories named in
report," Ewen MacAskill, The Guardian, 9/25/02; "Iraqi palaces are
stumbling blocks for inspectors," David Usborne, The Independent (London),
9/27/02; "Swede Inspector: Iraq Arms Experts Probably Spied," Reuters,
10/4/02; and "More passion than proof against Iraq?" Calvin Howard,
Associated Press, reprinted in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 9/28/02,
A4.
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