http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=10111

Russia Hid Saddam's WMDs
By Ion Mihai Pacepa
Washington Times | October 2, 2003

On March 20, Russian President Vladimir Putin denounced the U.S.-led
"aggression" against Iraq as "unwarranted" and "unjustifiable." Three days
later, Pravda said that an anonymous Russian "military expert" was
predicting that the United States would fabricate finding Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov immediately started
plying the idea abroad, and it has taken hold around the world ever since.

As a former Romanian spy chief who used to take orders from the Soviet KGB,
it is perfectly obvious to me that Russia is behind the evanescence of
Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction. After all, Russia helped
Saddam get his hands on them in the first place. The Soviet Union and all
its bloc states always had a standard operating procedure for deep sixing
weapons of mass destruction - in Romanian it was codenamed "Sarindar,
meaning "emergency exit." I implemented it in Libya. It was for ridding
Third World despots of all trace of their chemical weapons if the Western
imperialists ever got near them. We wanted to make sure they would never be
traced back to us, and we also wanted to frustrate the West by not giving
them anything they could make propaganda with.

All chemical weapons were to be immediately burned or buried deep at sea.
Technological documentation, however, would be preserved in microfiche
buried in waterproof containers for future reconstruction. Chemical weapons,
especially those produced in Third World countries, which lack sophisticated
production facilities, often do not retain lethal properties after a few
months on the shelf and are routinely dumped anyway. And all chemical
weapons plants had a civilian cover making detection difficult, regardless
of the circumstances.

The plan included an elaborate propaganda routine. Anyone accusing Moammar
Gadhafi of possessing chemical weapons would be ridiculed. Lies, all lies!
Come to Libya and see! Our Western left-wing organizations, like the World
Peace Council, existed for sole purpose of spreading the propaganda we gave
them. These very same groups bray the exact same themes to this day. We
always relied on their expertise at organizing large street demonstrations
in Western Europe over America's "war-mongering" whenever we wanted to
distract world attention from the crimes of the vicious regimes we
sponsored.

Iraq, in my view, had its own "Sarindar" plan in effect direct from Moscow.
It certainly had one in the past. Nicolae Ceausescu told me so, and he heard
it from Leonid Brezhnev. KGB chairman Yury Andropov, and later, Gen. Yevgeny
Primakov, told me so, too. In the late 1970s, Gen. Primakov ran Saddam's
weapons programs. After that, as you may recall, he was promoted to head of
the Soviet foreign intelligence service in 1990, to Russia's minister of
foreign affairs in 1996, and in 1998, to prime minister. What you may not
know is that Primakov hates Israel and has always championed Arab
radicalism. He was a personal friend of Saddam's and has repeatedly visited
Baghdad after 1991, quietly helping Saddam play his game of hide-and-seek.

The Soviet bloc not only sold Saddam its WMDs, but it showed them how to
make them "disappear." Russia is still at it. Primakov was in Baghdad from
December until a couple of days before the war, along with a team of Russian
military experts led by two of Russia's topnotch "retired"generals:
Vladislav Achalov, a former deputy defense minister, and Igor Maltsev, a
former air defense chief of staff. They were all there receiving honorary
medals from the Iraqi defense minister. They clearly were not there to give
Saddam military advice for the upcoming war-Saddam's Katyusha launchers were
of World War II vintage, and his T-72 tanks, BMP-1 fighting vehicles and MiG
fighter planes were all obviously useless against America. "I did not fly to
Baghdad to drink coffee," was what Gen. Achalov told the media afterward.
They were there orchestrating Iraq's "Sarindar" plan.

The U.S. military in fact, has already found the only thing that would have
been allowed to survive under the classic Soviet "Sarindar" plan to
liquidate weapons arsenals in the event of defeat in war - the technological
documents showing how to reproduce weapons stocks in just a few weeks.

Such a plan has undoubtedly been in place since August 1995 - when Saddam's
son-in-law, Gen. Hussein Kamel, who ran Iraq's nuclear, chemical and
biological programs for 10 years, defected to Jordan. That August, UNSCOM
and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors searched a chicken
farm owned by Kamel's family and found more than one hundred metal trunks
and boxes containing documentation dealing with all categories of weapons,
including nuclear. Caught red-handed, Iraq at last admitted to its
"extensive biological warfare program, including weaponization," issued a
"Full, Final and Complete Disclosure Report" and turned over documents about
the nerve agent VX and nuclear weapons.

Saddam then lured Gen. Kamel back, pretending to pardon his defection. Three
days later, Kamel and over 40 relatives, including women and children, were
murdered, in what the official Iraqi press described as a "spontaneous
administration of tribal justice." After sending that message to his cowed,
miserable people, Saddam then made a show of cooperation with UN inspection,
since Kamel had just compromised all his programs, anyway. In November 1995,
he issued a second "Full, Final and Complete Disclosure" as to his
supposedly non-existent missile programs. That very same month, Jordan
intercepted a large shipment of high-grade missile components destined for
Iraq. UNSCOM soon fished similar missile components out of the Tigris River,
again refuting Saddam's spluttering denials. In June 1996, Saddam slammed
the door shut to UNSCOM's inspection of any "concealment mechanisms." On
Aug. 5, 1998, halted cooperation with UNSCOM and the IAEA completely, and
they withdrew on Dec. 16, 1998. Saddam had another four years to develop and
hide his weapons of mass destruction without any annoying, prying eyes. U.N.
Security Council resolutions 1115, (June 21, 1997), 1137 (Nov. 12, 1997),
and 1194 (Sept. 9, 1998) were issued condemning Iraq-ineffectual words that
had no effect. In 2002, under the pressure of a huge U.S. military buildup
by a new U.S. administration, Saddam made yet another "Full, Final and
Complete Disclosure," which was found to contain "false statements" and to
constitute another "material breach" of U.N. and IAEA inspection and of
paragraphs eight to 13 of resolution 687 (1991).

It was just a few days after this last "Disclosure," after a decade of
intervening with the U.N. and the rest of the world on Iraq's behalf, that
Gen. Primakov and his team of military experts landed in Baghdad - even
though, with 200,000 U.S. troops at the border, war was imminent, and Moscow
could no longer save Saddam Hussein. Gen. Primakov was undoubtedly cleaning
up the loose ends of the "Sarindar" plan and assuring Saddam that Moscow
would rebuild his weapons of mass destruction after the storm subsided for a
good price.

Mr. Putin likes to take shots at America and wants to reassert Russia in
world affairs. Why would he not take advantage of this opportunity? As
minister of foreign affairs and prime minister, Gen. Primakov has authored
the "multipolarity" strategy of counterbalancing American leadership by
elevating Russia to great-power status in Eurasia. Between Feb. 9-12, Mr.
Putin visited Germany and France to propose a three-power tactical alignment
against the United States to advocate further inspections rather than war.
On Feb. 21, the Russian Duma appealed to the German and French parliaments
to join them on March 4-7 in Baghdad, for "preventing U.S. military
aggression against Iraq." Crowds of European leftists, steeped for
generations in left-wing propaganda straight out of Moscow, continue to find
the line appealing.

Mr. Putin's tactics have worked. The United States won a brilliant military
victory, demolishing a dictatorship without destroying the country, but it
has begun losing the peace. While American troops unveiled the mass graves
of Saddam's victims, anti-American forces in Western Europe and elsewhere,
spewed out vitriolic attacks, accusing Washington of greed for oil and not
of really caring about weapons of mass destruction, or exaggerating their
risks, as if weapons of mass destruction were really nothing very much to
worry about after all.

It is worth remembering that Andrei Sakharov, the father of the Soviet
hydrogen bomb, chose to live in a Soviet gulag instead of continuing to
develop the power of death. "I wanted to alert the world," Sakharov
explained in 1968, "to the grave perils threatening the human race
thermonuclear extinction, ecological catastrophe, famine." Even Igor
Kurchatov, the KGB academician who headed the Soviet nuclear program from
1943 until his death in 1960, expressed deep qualms of conscience about
helping to create weapons of mass destruction. "The rate of growth of atomic
explosives is such," he warned in an article written together with several
other Soviet nuclear scientists not long before he died, "that in just a few
years the stockpile will be large enough to create conditions under which
the existence of life on earth will be impossible."

The Cold War was fought over the reluctance to use weapons of mass
destruction, yet now this logic is something only senior citizens seem to
recall. Today, even lunatic regimes like that in North Korea not only
possess weapons of mass destruction, but openly offer to sell them to anyone
with cash, including terrorists and their state sponsors. Is anyone paying
any attention? Being inured to proliferation, however, does not reduce its
danger. On the contrary, it increases it.




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