-Caveat Lector-

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DI26Ak01.html

Blair fetches the stick for Bush to beat Iraq
By Sanjay Suri

LONDON - The long-awaited British government dossier on Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein's weapons capability produces little hard evidence of
Saddam's access to nuclear weapons. It says only that he can use chemical
and biological weapons at 45 minutes notice and can develop nuclear weapons
within one or two years "if Iraq obtained fissile material and other
essential components from foreign sources".

But that is not the importance of the dossier's release. The 55-page report
is, in fact, less an intelligence assessment that seeks to describe than it
is a political manifesto that seeks to persuade. As such, it includes photos
of Iranian soldiers killed in the war with Iraq and civilian Kurds killed by
chemical weapons in Halabja in 1988. It lists weapons that UN inspectors
failed to find during inspections in the early 1990s.

Most importantly, the dossier seeks to shift the burden of proof back onto
Iraq to show that it, in fact, does not have any such weapons. While Iraq
claims that all biological weapons and agents have been destroyed, the
dossier says that "no convincing proof of any kind has been produced to
support this claim".

In that larger sense, therefore, the release of the document is a clear
signal of an impending collision between Iraq and the US.

Iraq immediately sought to defuse the crisis with a declaration following
publication of the dossier that United Nations inspectors will have
"unfettered access" to all Iraqi sites listed in the British dossier.

But the 55-page dossier makes a clear case that UN inspections will no
longer be good enough. Saddam has "identified possible weak points in the
inspections process and knows how to exploit them", the dossier says.
"Sensitive equipment and papers are already being concealed."

Iraq signaled immediate readiness to open the listed sites to inspection.
Presidential adviser Amer Saadi said following publication of the dossier
that "inspectors will have unfettered access" after practical arrangements
are made for their visit likely next month but only "if there is no
interference from outside parties".

Saadi said, "His [Blair's] allegations are long, his evidence is short." The
report, he said, is a "hodgepodge of half-truths, lies and short-sighted and
naive allegations".

But the British dossier follows the US line closely in distancing possible
action from an acceptance of UN inspections. "The history of UN weapons
inspections was characterized by persistent obstruction," the dossier says.

The dossier says that "Iraq has admitted to UNSCOM [United Nations Special
Commission] to having a large, effective system for hiding proscribed
material including documentation, components, production equipment and
possibly biological and chemical agents and weapons from the UN". Iraqis had
in the past resorted to physical threats and psychological intimidation of
inspectors, the dossier says.

In the face of these allegations, the new Iraqi offer of access to UN
inspectors will not be good enough, analysts say. The dossier speaks of
alternative sites for weapons, and also of an alternative leadership to
Saddam Hussein. The dossier says Saddam would have the final word on use of
chemical and biological weapons, but suggests that authority to use these
weapons "could have delegated to his son Qusai".

The dossier has been prepared on the basis of the work of Britain's Joint
Intelligence comprising the Secret Intelligence Service, Government
Communications Headquarters, the Security Service and the Defense
Intelligence Staff.

It is "unprecedented for the government to publish this kind of document",
Prime Minister Tony Blair wrote in a foreword to the report. Blair said, "I
am in no doubt that the threat is serious and current, that he has made
progress on weapons of mass destruction, and that he has to be stopped." To
ignore the threat "would be to place at risk the property and lives of our
own people", he says. "We must ensure that he does not get to use the
weapons he has, or get hold of the weapons he wants."

The report contains several assertions about Saddam Hussein's program but
offers little detail other than satellite pictures of facilities alleged to
be used for manufacture of chemical and biological weapons. "We cannot
publish everything we know," Blair says. The report suggests that there is a
lot of specific material that cannot be revealed. "Intelligence rarely
offers a complete account of activities which are designed to remain
concealed," the dossier says. "Intelligence sources need to be protected and
this limits the detail that can be made available."

In one of few details offered, the dossier names an Indian firm as supplying
equipment that could be used by Iraq to launch nuclear and chemical strikes.
The dossier says, "A new plant at al-Mamoun for indigenously producing
ammonium perchlorate, which is a key component in the production of solid
propellant rocket motors has also been constructed. This has been provided
illicitly by NEC Engineers Private Limited, an Indian chemical engineering
firm with extensive links in Iraq." The British government report says that
this Indian company has also been supplying to "other suspect facilities
such as the Fallujah 2 chlorine plant".

Rajiv Dhir, the general manager of NEC Engineers, was arrested by Indian
authorities in June and charged with violation of India's export controls.
Dhir faces seven years' imprisonment if convicted. Navdeep Suri, spokesman
for the Indian High Commission, confirmed that the company's export license
had been revoked and stated that "such actions are in violation of India's
export control laws and whenever such a violation comes to the government's
attention, firm action is taken".

Although the dossier notes that "other [Indian] individuals and companies
are still illicitly procuring for Iraq", Suri declined to comment on what he
characterized as these "speculative statements".

In an interview with London's Guardian newspaper, C P Ahuja, current NEC
Engineers manager, said that the dossier's allegations against his firm were
"absolutely wrong". While Ahuja admitted that the firm did business in Iraq,
he said it did so "under UN auspices". "We are just an engineering company,"
he said on Tuesday. "We don't make chemicals."

The dossier says that Iraq currently lacks the equipment to make a nuclear
bomb. "Iraq needs certain key equipment, including gas centrifuge components
and components for the production of fissile material before a nuclear bomb
could be developed." But it says Saddam is "almost certainly seeking an
indigenous ability to enrich uranium to the level needed for a nuclear
weapon".

The dossier says that Saddam has "sought significant quantities of uranium
from Africa, despite having no active civil nuclear power program that could
require it". Iraq, it says, also has been looking for vacuum pumps, magnet
production lines, anhydrous hydrogen fluoride and fluorine gas and 60,000
aluminum tubes - all components needed to build nuclear weapons.

The dossier alleges that after the Gulf War in 1991, Saddam refurbished his
weapons sites to manufacture chemical and biological weapons, and still
possesses the bombs, shells, artillery rockets and ballistic missiles he
would need to deliver them. Saddam has them and is prepared to conceal them
from inspections and, in the end, to use them, the dossier says.

Biological weapons are being developed in mobile laboratories, the report
says. It names a woman, Dr Rihab Taha, as a leading figure in Iraq's
biological weapons program. The dossier says Iraq has "illegally obtained up
to 20 al-Hussein missiles with a range of 650 kilometers". These can carry
chemical or biological warheads, the report says. Saddam is also deploying
al-Samoud liquid propellant missiles with a range up to 200 kilometers,
instead of the 150 kilometer limit set by the UNSCOM team.

The report says that Iraq has constructed an engine stand to test missiles
that could reach British bases in Cyprus, Greece and Turkey, all of the Gulf
region and Israel. All these programs have been funded by an income of US$3
billion earned last year outside UN control.

Iraq also has huge quantities of mustard gas, and of the nerve agents tabun,
sarin and VX, according to the report. These are being produced at new
facilities at Salman Pak and are supported by storage and precursor
facilities known as Fallujah 1, 2 and 3.

Saddam "continues to attach great importance to the possession of weapons of
mass destruction and ballistic missiles which he regards as being the basis
for Iraq's regional power". The dossier adds that "new chemical facilities
have been built, some with illegal foreign assistance, and are probably
fully operational or ready for production".

These are said to include Ibn Sina company at Tarmiyah, headed by Hikmat
Na'im al-Jalu and a facility at Al Qa'Qa. Other facilities of concern listed
are the castor oil production plant at Fallujah, al-Dawrah foot and mouth
disease vaccine institute, and a vaccine plant at Abu Ghraib.

(Inter Press Service)

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