<< Col. Spertzel believes many of those programs continued up until the war.
In a Jan. 27 interview Col. Spertzel told WORLD that, despite Mr. Kay's
recent statements, he has seen nothing in the work of the Iraq Survey
Group-or from his own sources-to render his 2002 assessment obsolete: "There
is ample evidence of continuing programs and no reason to believe that they
would instantly disappear." >>

http://www.worldmag.com/world/issue/02-07-04/international_1.asp

World Magazine
February 7, 2004
Volume 19
Number 5

WMD-gate?
IRAQ: In the scandal over missing weapons of mass destruction, did George
Bush lie?
By Mindy Belz

It will take more than David Kay saying it ain't so. But for some, it will
be enough.

The head of postwar weapons inspections for Iraq used his Jan. 23
resignation as opportunity to air a pent-up grievance: Mr. Kay said of
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, "I don't think they exist."

"I'm personally convinced that there were not large stockpiles of newly
produced weapons of mass destruction," Mr. Kay said. "We don't find the
people, the documents, or the physical plants that you would expect to find
if the production was going on."

During interviews with The New York Times, The Sunday Telegraph, Reuters,
and others after his resignation, Mr. Kay said that Iraq "gradually reduced
stockpiles" of potential weapons of mass destruction and that by the
mid-1990s most stockpiles were eliminated. He blamed U.S. intelligence for
creating a false impression of Iraq's WMD capability.

If true, that assessment gives Democratic presidential candidates their own
arsenal against President Bush, who based the invasion of Iraq last year in
significant part on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction threat. And what
better way to nuke the president's reelection plans than using the words of
his own mass weapons czar. Expect Mr. Kay's comments to recycle through the
presidential debate season like cardboard ducks on a midway shooting range.

But while war opponents believe Mr. Kay's statements are a clear indication
that Mr. Bush misled Americans in the lead-up to war, key Iraq
experts-including a former UN weapons inspector-say more questions are
raised than answered by Mr. Kay's post-mortem.

Critics have already pointed out that Mr. Kay's statements to reporters
contradict more in-depth analysis he provided in an October 2002 interim
report of the Iraq Survey Group. In it he said that, in spite of many
obstacles to the WMD search, his Iraq Survey Group, or ISG, already had
discovered "dozens of WMD-related program activities and significant amounts
of equipment that Iraq concealed from the United Nations during the
inspections that began in late 2002." He said the ISG found suspected WMD
documents in a pile of warm ash in a prison in July 2003, and vials of
botulinum in the home of an Iraqi scientist. The most recent assertion by
Mr. Kay that Iraqi WMD do not "exist" also goes against his statements
suggesting Iraq may have moved WMD to Syria.

Mr. Kay's statements also contradict earlier findings of UN inspections
teams without directly refuting them. Although the work of UN inspectors
going back nearly a decade was hampered by Saddam Hussein and thwarted even
by the Security Council, it produced volumes of evidence of extensive
programs in unconventional warfare. The two agencies, UNSCOM and its
predecessor, UNMOVIC, failed to halt the buildup of chemical, biological,
and nuclear capabilities but did document its worrying existence.

"He is trying to say that six months of work under Iraq Survey Group is as
legitimate as nine years under UNSCOM," said Laurie Mylroie, a consultant on
Iraq in both the Clinton and Bush administrations and author of "Bush vs.
the Beltway: How the CIA and the State Department Tried to Stop the War on
Terror."

A key former weapons inspector in Iraq, retired Army Col. Richard O.
Spertzel, told WORLD: "If Dr. Kay says there are currently no weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq, he may be right. But the absence of evidence is
not the evidence of absence."

Col. Spertzel joined UNSCOM in 1994 after a 28-year military career where he
honed his expertise in bioweapons. As a condition of surrender at the end of
the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein was to give up all weapons of mass destruction
within 15 days. Those conditions were never met, and successive
international teams would try to force his compliance. Col. Spertzel served
as a weapons inspector and head of UNSCOM's biological weapons team for four
years, making more than 40 trips to Baghdad, where he oversaw all
inspections of bioweapons facilities and met with top-level officials,
including Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz.

He discovered ample evidence that Saddam was directing a campaign to build
and use unconventional weapons. He was part of a four-member team that
discovered Iraq was using 18 metric tons of growing medium to produce
anthrax and botulinum toxin-out of scale with any legitimate civilian
purposes. They also discovered viral programs underway to develop camel pox,
rotaviruses, and hemorrhagic conjunctivitis. In 2002 testimony before the
House Armed Services Committee, Col. Spertzel described "a well-planned
broadly encompassing program" that included a "terrorist component." Col.
Spertzel said then, "There is no doubt in my mind that Iraq has a much
stronger BW [biological weapons] program today than it had in 1990."

More importantly, Col. Spertzel believes many of those programs continued up
until the war. In a Jan. 27 interview Col. Spertzel told WORLD that, despite
Mr. Kay's recent statements, he has seen nothing in the work of the Iraq
Survey Group-or from his own sources-to render his 2002 assessment obsolete:
"There is ample evidence of continuing programs and no reason to believe
that they would instantly disappear."

Since the war, Col. Spertzel said he has been told by an unnamed Iraqi
source "with 100 percent reliability" that the regime's bioweapons program
was sent to Syria then transferred to Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, an area under
control of the Syrian Army and known to be a training ground for the
Hezbollah terror group.

Other Iraqi contacts have told him other WMD programs were either destroyed
in the weeks leading up to the war after President Bush issued an ultimatum
to Saddam, or they were buried in desert sand. "You are not moving
munitions, you are moving agents. That doesn't take much to do," he said.

To find such stashes will take the cooperation of Syrian authorities and
Iraqi informants. But while the Iraq Survey Group employs more than 1,200
personnel-drawn from the CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency, and other
military posts-it has employed few, if any, former inspectors. Hamish
Killip, a British inspector under UNSCOM and former colonel in the Royal
Engineers, is the only Iraq Survey Group adviser WORLD could confirm with
prewar Iraq weapons inspection experience.


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