http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=24505

Sunday, March 13, 2005 

Egypt aided Iraq's 1980s weapons program Egypt aided Iraq's 1980s
weapons program

CHARLES J. HANLEY
Associated Press 12 March 2005

www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/world/11120721.htm

NEW YORK - Egypt secretly supplied crucial help - both technology and
expert 
manpower - to the chemical weapons program of Saddam Hussein's Iraq in
the 
1980s, U.S. arms investigators have found.
The CIA's Iraq Survey Group says Egyptian specialists helped the
Iraqis make 
"technological leaps" on poison gas at the height of the Iran-Iraq
War, when 
Baghdad used nerve agents to kill thousands of Iranian soldiers and
Iranian 
and Iraqi civilians.
The U.S. report is the most authoritative and detailed since such 
collaboration between the Arab nations was first rumored in the late
1980s.
The Cairo government rejected those earlier allegations, and Egypt's 
Washington embassy reiterated that denial when asked by The Associated
Press 
about the CIA report. But in AP interviews, United Nations arms
inspectors 
who scoured Iraq's
files and facilities in the 1990s corroborated the U.S. finding.
Like former enemy Israel, Egypt has long been believed to possess
chemical 
weapons. Experts say there's strong evidence Egyptian warplanes
repeatedly 
used mustard-gas bombs against royalist forces during Cairo's
intervention 
in the Yemen civil war of the 1960s.
In 1981, after the outbreak of war with Iran, President Saddam's Iraqi 
government paid Egypt $12 million "in return for assistance with
production 
and storage of chemical weapons agents," the U.S. weapons hunters say
in a 
little-noticed annex of their Comprehensive Report, a 350,000-word
document 
issued last October.
The Iraq Survey Group, led by CIA special adviser Charles A. Duelfer, had 
spent 20 months in 2003-2004 searching for evidence of Iraqi weapons
of mass 
destruction, cited by President Bush as the rationale for invading
Iraq two 
years ago.
The U.S. arms teams discredited Bush's claims, finding that Iraq had 
dismantled its advanced weapons programs under U.N. inspection in
1991. In 
the process, the Americans uncovered previously unreported details of the 
programs, such as the findings on Egypt and chemical arms.
"During the early years, Egyptian scientists provided consultation, 
technology and oversight allowing rapid advances and technological
leaps in 
weaponization," the Duelfer report says.
>From 1983 to 1988, the Iraqis repeatedly used mustard gas, tabun,
sarin and 
possibly other chemical agents against the Iranians. Most notoriously, in 
1988, Iraqi aircraft dropped sarin and mustard gas on Iranian-held
villages 
in rebellious Iraqi Kurdistan, killing up to 5,000 Iraqi Kurdish
civilians.
The Duelfer report says that in the mid-1980s Baghdad had invited
Egyptian 
chemical weapons experts to Iraq to help with production of sarin, a
nerve 
agent that when inhaled can produce symptoms within seconds -
convulsions, 
paralysis, respiratory failure and possibly death.
>From five tons in 1984, Iraqi sarin production rose to 209 tons in
1987 and 
394 tons in 1988, the report says.
The U.S. arms hunters specify two other instances of critical Egyptian
help:
-In 1983, the Egyptians modified the Iraqis' Grad 122mm multiple-launch 
rocket system to enable warheads to carry chemical agents. That powerful 
weapon system can launch 40 rockets with a range of 12 miles.
-A year later, the Egyptians supplied Iraq with 9-foot-long Grad rockets 
pre-equipped with plastic inserts in the warheads to hold the poisons.
The Duelfer findings were unsurprising to experienced U.N. inspectors,
who 
first entered Iraq in 1991, after it was defeated by a U.S.-led
coalition in 
the Gulf War, to destroy its chemical and biological weapons and
dismantle 
its project to build nuclear bombs.
"We were aware from back in 1991 that there was a link between Iraq and 
Egypt on chemical weapons," said Ron G. Manley of Britain, a former
senior 
U.N. adviser on chemical weapons. He said the warhead inserts, known
as an 
Egyptian design, were an early clue.
The U.N. inspectors pinned down details of the connection through
extensive 
searches of scientists' and government offices, downloading of Iraqi 
computer files and, finally, through "open and frank" discussions with 
officials in Egypt, said another expert familiar with the U.N. work.
This specialist, who spoke with AP on this "very sensitive matter" on 
condition he not be named, said much has yet to be made public about 
Egyptian-Iraqi dealings on chemical weapons.
"It represents a small piece of a long history of cooperation," he
said of 
the Duelfer disclosures.
The U.N. inspectors never publicly divulged the Cairo connection, in
keeping 
with a policy of not naming companies and countries that helped Iraq, to 
encourage them to cooperate in investigations. Nor have the CIA or U.N. 
agencies made documentary evidence of the Egypt link public.
In Washington, Egyptian Embassy spokesman Hisham Elnakib repeated a 
long-standing official denial: "Egypt had no relation whatsoever with
Iraq 
in the field of chemical weapons."
Iraq's actions violated the 1925 Geneva Protocol banning use of chemical 
weapons, but Egyptian aid, strictly speaking, would not have been a 
violation, said a leading scholar in this field, Jonathan Tucker of 
California's Monterey Institute of International Studies.
However, "it definitely is a violation of an emerging norm against
chemical 
warfare," he said. 








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