4 Iraqis Tell of Looting at Munitions Site in '03


By JAMES GLANZ and JIM DWYER
New York Times

October 28, 2004

 


 

BBAGHDAD, Iraq, Oct. 27 - Looters stormed the weapons site at Al Qaqaa in
the days after American troops swept through the area in early April 2003 on
their way to Baghdad, gutting office buildings, carrying off munitions and
even dismantling heavy machinery, three Iraqi witnesses and a regional
security chief said Wednesday.

The Iraqis described an orgy of theft so extensive that enterprising
residents rented their trucks to looters. But some looting was clearly
indiscriminate, with people grabbing anything they could find and later
heaving unwanted items off the trucks.

Two witnesses were employees of Al Qaqaa - one a chemical engineer and the
other a mechanic - and the third was a former employee, a chemist, who had
come back to retrieve his records, determined to keep them out of American
hands. The mechanic, Ahmed Saleh Mezher, said employees asked the Americans
to protect the site but were told this was not the soldiers' responsibility.

The accounts do not directly address the question of when 380 tons of
powerful conventional explosives vanished from the site sometime after early
March, the last time international inspectors checked the seals on the
bunkers where the material was stored. It is possible that Iraqi forces
removed some explosives before the invasion. 

But the accounts make clear that what set off much if not all of the looting
was the arrival and swift departure of American troops, who did not secure
the site after inducing the Iraqi forces to abandon it.

"The looting started after the collapse of the regime," said Wathiq
al-Dulaimi, a regional security chief, who was based nearby in Latifiya. But
once it had begun, he said, the booty streamed toward Baghdad.

Earlier this month, on Oct. 10, the directorate of national monitoring at
the Ministry of Science and Technology notified the International Atomic
Energy Agency that the explosives, which are used in demolition and missiles
and are the raw material for plastic explosives, were missing. The agency
has monitored the explosives because they can also be used as the initiator
of an atomic bomb.

Agency officials examined the explosives in January 2003 and noted in early
March that their seals were still in place. On April 3, the Third Infantry
Division arrived with the first American troops.

Chris Anderson, a photographer for U.S. News and World Report who was with
the division's Second Brigade, recalled that the area was jammed with
American armor on April 3 and 4, which he believed made the removal of the
explosives unlikely. "It would be quite improbable for this amount of
weapons to be looted at that time because of the traffic jam of armor," he
said.

The brigade blew up numerous caches of arms throughout the area, he said.
Mr. Anderson said he did not enter the munitions compound.

The Second Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division arrived outside the site
on April 10, under the command of Col. Joseph Anderson. The brigade had been
ordered to move quickly to Baghdad because of civil disorder there after Mr.
Hussein's government fell on April 9.

They gathered at Al Qaqaa, about 30 miles south, simply as a matter of
convenience, Colonel Anderson said in an interview this week. He said that
when he arrived at the site - unaware of its significance - he saw no signs
of looting, but was not paying close attention.

Because he thought the brigade would be moving on to Baghdad within hours,
Al Qaqaa was of no importance to his mission, he said, and he was unaware of
the explosives that international inspectors said were hidden inside. 

Pentagon officials said Wednesday that analysts were examining surveillance
photographs of the munitions site. But they expressed doubts that the
photographs, which showed vehicles at the location on several occasions
early in the conflict, before American troops moved through the area, would
be able to indicate conclusively when the explosives were removed.

Col. David Perkins, who commanded the Second Brigade of the Third Infantry
Division, called it "very highly improbable" that 380 tons of explosives
could have been trucked out of Al Qaqaa in the weeks after American troops
arrived. 

Moving that much material, said Colonel Perkins, who spoke Wednesday to news
agencies and cable television, "would have required dozens of heavy trucks
and equipment moving along the same roadways as U.S. combat divisions
occupied continually for weeks." 

He conceded that some looting of the site had taken place. But a chemical
engineer who worked at Al Qaqaa and identified himself only as Khalid said
that once troops left the base itself, people streamed in to steal computers
and anything else of value from the offices. They also took munitions like
artillery shells, he said.

Mr. Mezher, the mechanic, said it took the looters about two weeks to
disassemble heavy machinery at the site and carry that off after the smaller
items were gone.

James Glanz reported from Baghdad for this article and Jim Dwyer from New
York. Ali Adeeb contributed reporting from Baghdad, and Khalid W. Hussein
and Zainab Obeid fromAl Qaqaa. 



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