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Analysis : Middle
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What happened to Iraqs "weapons of mass destruction"?
By Patrick Martin
22 April 2003
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Tens of thousands of liters of anthrax. Thousands of liters
of botulinium toxin. Hundreds of tons of mustard gas. Tons of
nerve gas. Illegally extended missiles and hundreds of bombs and
artillery shells to deliver these deadly toxins. Mobile bio-weapons
labs. Even secret facilities for the development of nuclear weapons.
All these and more were alleged by the Bush administration during
the months of diplomatic posturing leading up to its attack on
Iraq.
US troops went into battle heavily laden with defensive gear
to protect them from attacks using chemical and biological weapons.
The Bush administration and the US media harped on the likelihood
that Iraqs military would use weapons of mass destruction.
There were repeated claims that Saddam Hussein had issued orders
to his commanders, authorizing them to use chemical weapons once
US forces neared Baghdad. The Pentagon even invented a namethe
red line, dutifully parroted by the mediato
signify the location 50 miles south of the Iraqi capital where
such attacks could be expected. The invasion force crossed the
red line, but no such attacks took place.
Every few days, as the conquest of Iraq progressed, there were
new reports in the US media, breathlessly announcing new discoveries
of suspected Iraqi chemical and biological weapons
at various locations, including claims that initial tests by military
patrols had found nerve agents like sarin and tabun, as well as
mustard gas. None of these discoveries could be confirmed in follow-up
tests at US laboratories. It later emerged that the military patrols
do not have the necessary equipment to distinguish nerve gases
from pesticides that would be commonplace in the high-intensity
agriculture of the Mesopotamian flood plain.
There have been occasional discoveries of stockpiles of gas
masks and other protective gear, which the Pentagon and the US
media have sought to utilize as prooffor lack
of anything elsethat Iraqi forces were preparing to use
chemical weapons against the US invasion. This argument assumes,
of course, that this equipment was not in readiness against a
possible US use of chemical weapons.
Moreover, in most cases the protective gear dates back to the
mid-1980s, the period when both Iraq and Iran were employing chemical
weapons in the course of their eight-year-long war. One huge bunker
in downtown Baghdad, for instance, discovered April 11 underneath
the grounds of the Presidential Palace, included stockpiles of
equipment dating from 1987 and 1988, the last two years of the
Iran-Iraq War.
It is now more than a month since the US assault began, and
American military forces have gained control of virtually every
square mile of Iraqs territory. Not a single biological
or chemical weapon has been found, nor any site which shows signs
of recent manufacture, use or even disposal. Despite intensive
searches, and despite incessant Bush administration claims before
the war that thousands of suspected weapons sites were under surveillance
by US intelligence agencies, the results are, in round figures,
zero.
The political implications are clear: the claim of chemical
and biological weapons was a hoax, deliberately concocted by the
Bush administration to conceal its predatory aims in the invasion
of a country with the worlds second largest oil reserves.
Especially in Europe, critics of the US invasion have already
begun to make this argument, both against the US government and
against British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Iraqi scientists deny accusations
Compounding the failure to find any weapons stockpile are declarations
by leading Iraqi weapons scientists, now in US custody, that Iraqs
previous chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs were
dismantled after the 1991 Persian Gulf War, during the regime
of UNSCOM inspections.
In the run-up to war, President Bush and other US officials
had demanded that Iraqi scientists be removed from their country
and interrogated by UN officials in secret, claiming that otherwise
they would be too frightened of retaliation by Saddam Hussein
to speak freely. Now that the Hussein regime is gone, however,
these scientists have continued to declare that the US claims
of weapons of mass destruction are lies.
The top science adviser to Saddam Hussein, Lt. Gen. Amir Saadi,
turned himself over to US forces in Baghdad April 12, after negotiating
his own surrender through the German television network ZDF, which
filmed the event. Saadi was the principal liaison with UN weapons
inspectors after the resumption of inspections last November.
He told ZDF that Iraq no longer possessed any weapons of mass
destruction, declaring, I was telling the truth, always
telling the truth, never told anything but the truth, and time
will bear me out, you will see.
Saadi made no attempt to flee Baghdad after US military forces
occupied the Iraqi capital. He turned himself in as soon as the
US Central Command announced publicly that he had been placed
on a detention list. A US intelligence official crowed over Saadis
surrender, telling the Los Angeles Times April 14, He
knows where the stuff is, and he knows the names of the major
players connected with the program. But Saadi has apparently
maintained his denials despite being a US prisoner.
Shortly after Saadis detention, the principal architect
of Iraqs nuclear weapons program, Jafar Jafar, surrendered
to the government of a Mideast country which made him available
to US officials. Press reports again cited US intelligence sources
declaring that Jafar would have detailed knowledge of the location
of stockpiles of banned weapons, as well as how they had been
produced.
Former UN weapons inspector David Albright, now president of
the Institute for Science and International Security, told the
Washington Post that Saadi and Jafar know, between
the two of them, everything about the countrys nuclear,
biological, chemical and missile programs. But no such revelations
emerged, and Albright himself told the press that he was now skeptical
of US claims of a huge Iraqi arsenal of weapons of mass destruction.
I will feel taken, he said, because they asserted
these things with such assurance.
A third top scientist, Emad Husayn Abdullah Ani, formerly in
charge of Iraqi efforts to manufacture VX nerve gas, turned himself
in to American authorities on April 18. Again, there have been
no revelations of secret programs or huge stockpiles.
Damage control, bribes and coercion
Concerned over the potential political backlash, both at home
and abroad, if the claim of weapons of mass destruction is exposed
as a fraud, the Bush administration is moving both to manage public
expectations and manufacture evidence.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld declared in television
interviews, and in an appearance before Pentagon employees April
17, that the former regime in Iraq had hidden or destroyed the
evidence of its illegal weapons programs. I dont think
well discover anything, myself, he said. I think
what will happen is well discover people who will tell us
where to go find it. It is not like a treasure hunt, where you
just run around looking everywhere, hoping you find something.
I just dont think thats going to happen.
The administration has openly rebuffed suggestions that it
readmit UN weapons inspectors into Iraqi territory. A 1,000-strong
US inspection force, consisting of military and intelligence personnel,
is being mobilized, but the Bush administration wants nothing
to do with UN inspectors who could not be depended on to find
exactly what Washington demands, even though these inspectors
presumably have the greatest experience in searching Iraqi sites.
Rumsfeld also announced last week that the US would pay rewards
to those Iraqi scientists providing information about weapons
of mass destruction, while threatening dire consequences for those
who continue to defy the Bush administration. The Los Angeles
Times reported April 20, Iraqi scientists who dont
cooperate may be taken to a detention facility for interrogation
and ultimately could be charged with war crimes.
In other words, the Bush administration, which in search of
a pretext for war claimed to want to protect Iraqi scientists
from repression and retaliation, is now using threats of imprisonment,
trial and even execution to browbeat these same scientists into
parroting a script composed in Washington.
See Also:
Washington caught in weapons
of mass destruction lies
New Iraq sanctions debate bares US-European tensions
21 April 2003]
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