Published on Wednesday, December 18, 2002 by the lndependent/UK

Leaked Report Says German and US Firms Supplied Arms to Saddam:
Baghdad's uncensored report to UN names Western companies alleged to have 
developed its weapons of mass destruction
 
by Tony Paterson in Berlin 
  
Iraq's 11,000-page report to the UN Security Council lists 150 foreign 
companies, including some from America, Britain, Germany and France, that 
supported Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction program, a German 
newspaper said yesterday.

Berlin's left-wing Die Tageszeitung newspaper said it had seen a copy of the 
original Iraqi dossier which was vetted for sensitive information by US 
officials before being handed to the five permanent Security Council members 
two weeks ago. An edited version was passed to the remaining 10 members of the 
Security Council last night.

British officials said the list of companies appeared to be accurate. Eighty 
German firms and 24 US companies are reported to have supplied Iraq with 
equipment and know-how for its weapons programs from 1975 onwards and in some 
cases support for Baghdad's conventional arms program had continued until last 
year.

It is not known who leaked the report, but it could have come from Iraq. 
Baghdad is keen to embarrass the US and its allies by showing the close 
involvement of US, German, British and French firms in helping Iraq develop its 
weapons of mass destruction when the country was a bulwark against the much 
feared spread of Iranian revolutionary fervor to the Arab world.

The list contained the names of long-established German firms such as Siemens 
as well as US multinationals. With government approval, Siemens exported 
machines used to eliminate kidney stones which have a "dual use" high precision 
switch used to detonate nuclear bombs. Ten French companies were also named 
along with a number of Swiss and Chinese firms. The newspaper said a number of 
British companies were cited, but did not name them.

"From about 1975 onwards, these companies are shown to have supplied entire 
complexes, building elements, basic materials and technical know-how for Saddam 
Hussein's program to develop nuclear, chemical and biological weapons of mass 
destruction," the newspaper said. "They also supplied rockets and complete 
conventional weapons systems," it added.

The five permanent members of the Security Council – the United States, 
Britain, Russia, France and China – have repeatedly opposed revealing the 
extent of foreign companies' involvement, although a mass of relevant 
information was collected by UN weapons inspectors who visited the country 
between 1991 and 1998. The UN claims that publishing the extent of the 
companies' involvement in Iraq would jeopardize necessary co-operation with 
such firms.

German involvement outstripped that of all the other countries put together, 
the paper said. During the period to 1991, the German authorities permitted 
weapons cooperation with Iraq and in some cases "actively encouraged" it, 
according to the newspaper which cited German assistance allegedly given to 
Iraq for the development of poison gas used in the 1988 massacre of Kurds in 
northern Iraq. It said that after the massacre America reduced its military 
cooperation with Iraq but German firms continued their activities until the 
Gulf War.

Die Tageszeitung quoted sources close to the US Vice President, Dick Cheney, as 
saying the Bush administration was hoping to prove a German company was 
continuing to co-operate with the Iraqi regime over the supply of equipment 
allegedly useful in the construction of weapons of mass destruction.

American weapons experts have recently voiced concern that the German 
Government has permitted Siemens to sell Baghdad at least eight sophisticated 
medical machines which contain devices that are vital for nuclear weapons. The 
machines, known as "lithotripters", use ultrasound to destroy kidney stones in 
patients. However, each machine contains an electronic switch that can be used 
as a detonator in an atomic bomb, according to US experts. Iraq was reported to 
have requested an extra 120 switches as "spare parts" during the initial 
transaction.

The delivery of the machines was approved by the European Commission and the UN 
because sanctions against Iraq do not apply to medical equipment. Siemens and 
the German Government have insisted that the machines, which are being used in 
northern Iraq under a World Health Organization program, cannot be used to make 
nuclear weapons.

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