30th April 2003
Weapons of Mass Destruction
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by Imad Khadduri -- Source: www.YellowTimes.org
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Mirage of Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction
In late August 2002, I listened with trepidation to
President Bush's burgeoning false allegations about Iraq's nuclear military
capability. Even then, one could discern that the sustained use of
misinformation to support the invasion of Iraq showed that the President's
claims were not based on any facts. I, having worked with Iraq's nuclear
program for thirty years, reacted with a series of articles expounding on
the fact that Iraq had ceased its nuclear weapons program at the start of
the 1991 war. I refuted the claims and evidence most famously, or
infamously, branded by Secretary of State Colin Powell to the Security
Council in February 2003 in which Powell argued that Iraq had rejuvenated
its nuclear weapons program after the Gulf War.
With heightened apprehension, I listened to Vice President Dick Cheney's
claim on MSNBC that the U.S. does not accept the results of the
International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) extensive inspections nor its
failure to find any evidence of a rejuvenated Iraqi nuclear weapons program.
The IAEA explicitly exposed the fact that a uranium procurement document
provided by British and American intelligence as a piece of evidence proving
Iraq's nuclear weapon capability was, in fact, a planted forgery. Cheney
provocatively claimed, on the day before Bush's 48 hours ultimatum to invade
Iraq, that U.S. intelligence had proof otherwise. My last retort to that
incredible plain lie was that some bogus evidence might be planted once U.S.
forces were on the ground in Iraq.
Bombing to waste, yet again, the main Nuclear Research Center at Tuwaitha,
and foolishly allowing American soldiers to break IAEA protective seals and
opening Tuwaitha's radioactive burial mound for looters who then
contaminated themselves and their families, the Americans have yet to
produce their "evidence" of a nuclear weapons program in Iraq. Why is Cheney
now silent about Iraq's nuclear weapons program? With U.S. troops in control
of Iraq, this information cannot be a "national security" issue anymore.
In addition to the non-existent nuclear weapons program, two developments in
the past two months have convinced me that, since 1991-1992, Iraq did not
rejuvenate its chemical or biological weapons programs, either.
The first development was a Newsweek story on March 03, 2003 unveiling,
after eight years of suppression, the transcript of Hussain Kamel's
debriefing by officials from the IAEA and the U.N. inspection team known as
UNSCOM; this debriefing took place after Kamel defected to Jordan in 1995.
In it, he affirmed that Iraq had indeed destroyed its entire stockpile of
chemical and biological weapons and banned missiles after the Gulf War. All
that remained were "hidden blueprints, computer disks, microfiches." The
weapons were destroyed secretly, in order to hide their existence from
inspectors, in the hopes of someday resuming production after inspections
had finished. According to John Barry, who broke the story, the CIA and MI6
were told the same account and "a military aide who defected with Kamel ...
backed Kamel's assertions about the destruction of WMD stocks." But these
statements were "hushed up by the U.N. inspectors" in order to "bluff Saddam
into disclosing still more."
On February 26, 2003, a complete copy of Hussain Kamel's transcript -- an
internal UNSCOM / IAEA document stamped "sensitive" -- was obtained by Glen
Rangwala, the Cambridge University analyst who in early February revealed
that Tony Blair's "intelligence dossier" was plagiarized from a student
thesis. This transcript can be seen at http://www.fair.org/press-
releases/kamel.pdf.
On page 7 of the transcript, an UNSCOM Russian expert, with the name of
Smidovich, asked the direct question: "Were weapons and agents destroyed?"
"Nothing remained," was Kamel's reply.
Smidovich insisted: "Was it before or after inspections started?"
Hussain Kamel replied: "After visits of inspection teams."
Smidovich insisted: "We could not find any traces of destruction."
Hussain Kamel reiterated: "Yes, it was done before you came in. The place
they buried them was found by you."
Smidovich recollected: "Is this the place north of Baghdad where they were
buried?"
Hussain Kamel replied: "It was in the month you came in. Destruction of
warheads started but I could not remember the details."
Tellingly, Iraq, in January 2003, collected and provided access to UNSCOM to
more than twenty personnel who actually participated in the events of the
above revelation. UNSCOM then carried out further extensive excavations at
that site.
Hussain Kamel also had a few remarks on the bottom of page 5 on the habitual
liar, Khidhir Hamza, who kept claiming throughout the nineties, on CNN and
FOX as well as to Congressional Committees, that Iraq was on the verge of
producing nuclear bombs. His accusations continued up until March 2003 when
he suddenly quieted down and headed for Kuwait to receive his new post in
the new "Iraqi" government.
The revelation of Hussain Kamel's detailed confession, by itself, did not
induce me to endorse his assertion bluntly or publicly, though it was
illuminating and historically authentic. Previously we had heard of his
confession, but not of its contents.
It was the second event, which took place two weeks ago, which convinced me
of the futility of finding weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
Amer Al Saadi, the chemical engineer and a senior scientific consultant to
the Iraqi government, was the first prominent personality to surrender to
the American forces after his German wife interceded with a German TV
station to arrange for his surrender. For the past decade, he had been a
polished, dignified and assured spokesman. He participated in the biological
weapons program since its start in the early eighties. I knew him personally
and had great admiration for his scientific integrity. In a ten-minute
interview with German TV, Al Saadi asserted that: "I was always telling the
truth. Iraq does not have chemical and biological weapons of mass
destruction. I have nothing to hide. Time will bear me out."
Indeed, time is bearing him out to the chagrin of Bush and Blair. The
American and British hopes of finding any WMDs in Iraq, not planted by them,
are vanishing mirages.
Bush, Blair and their senior officials lied to their people, knowingly, and
waged a criminal invasion in lieu of this reason. Is this the democracy
model for a "liberated" Iraq?
[Imad Khadduri has a MSc in Physics from the University of Michigan (United
States) and a PhD in Nuclear Reactor Technology from the University of
Birmingham (United Kingdom). Khadduri worked with the Iraqi Atomic Energy
Commission from 1968 until 1998. He was able to leave Iraq in late 1998 with
his family. He now teaches and works as a network administrator in Toronto,
Canada. He has been interviewed by the United Nations, the International
Atomic Energy Agency, FOX, the Toronto Star, Reuters, and various other news
agencies in regards to his knowledge of the Iraqi nuclear program. This
article was originally printed in YellowTimes.org]