Saddam's WMD Moved to Syria, An Israeli Says

BY IRA STOLL - Staff Reporter of the Sun

December 15, 2005  The New York Sun

URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/24480 

http://www.nysun.com/article/24480?access=568192  (for nonsubscribers)

Saddam Hussein moved his chemical weapons to Syria six weeks before the war
started, Israel's top general during Operation Iraqi Freedom says.

The assertion comes as President Bush said yesterday that much of the
intelligence on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction was incorrect.

The Israeli officer, Lieutenant General Moshe Yaalon, asserted that Saddam
spirited his chemical weapons out of the country on the eve of the war. "He
transferred the chemical agents from Iraq to Syria," General Yaalon told The
New York Sun over dinner in New York on Tuesday night. "No one went to Syria
to find it."

>From July 2002 to June 2005, when he retired, General Yaalon was chief of
staff of the Israel Defense Force, the top job in the Israeli military,
analogous to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the American
military. He is now a military fellow at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy. He made similar, but more speculative, remarks in April 2004
that attracted little notice in America; at that time he was quoted as
saying of the Iraqi weapons, "Perhaps they transferred them to another
country, such as Syria."

The Israeli general's remarks came on the eve of Mr. Bush's speech to the
Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, in which the president addressed the
issue of intelligence and defended the decision to go to war. "When we made
the decision to go into Iraq, many intelligence agencies around the world
judged that Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction. This judgment was
shared by the intelligence agencies of governments who did not support my
decision to remove Saddam. And it is true that much of the intelligence
turned out to be wrong," Mr. Bush said in remarks that were one of a series
of speeches he has given recently on the war.

Mr. Bush's defense of the war echoed themes he has been pressing since
before the war began and through his successful campaign for re-election.
"Given Saddam's history and the lessons of September the 11th, my decision
to remove Saddam Hussein was the right decision. Saddam was a threat - and
the American people and the world is better off because he is no longer in
power."

An official at the Iraqi embassy in Washington, Entifadh Qanbar, said he
believed the Israeli general's account, but that the Iraqi government is
"basically operating in the dark" because it does not have its own
intelligence agency. He said the issue underscored the need for the new
Iraqi government to have control of its own intelligence service. "We don't
have any way to find anything out about Syria because we don't have
intelligence," Mr. Qanbar said. He said there is a high-rise building in
Baghdad with 1,000 employees working on intelligence but that it has no
budget appropriation from the Iraqi government and "doesn't report to the
Iraqi government."

"Nobody knows who it belongs to, but you should understand who it belongs
to," he said, in what was apparently a reference to American involvement.

An Iraqi politician, Mithal Al-Alusi, whose sons were both assassinated in
Iraq last year, told The New York Sun's Eli Lake last month that his party
would press the Iraqi government to renew the search for weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq. Mr. Al-Alusi said he believes Saddam clearly had the
weapons before the invasion. "They will find the weapons, I am sure they
will," Mr. Al-Alusi said.

A spokesman at the Syrian embassy in Washington did not return a call
seeking comment. But General Yaalon's comment could increase pressure on the
Syrian government that is already mounting from Washington and the United
Nations. Mr. Bush has been keeping the rhetorical heat on Damascus. On
Monday, he said in a speech, "Iraq's neighbor to the west, Syria, is
permitting terrorists to use that territory to cross into Iraq."

Also Monday, Mr. Bush issued a statement saying, "Syria must comply with
United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1559, 1595, and 1636 and end its
interference in Lebanon once and for all. "The resolutions call for ending
Syria's occupation of Lebanon and for Syrian cooperation into the
investigation of the assassination of a Lebanese politician, Rafik Hariri.

On Saturday, the White House issued a statement calling attention to Syrian
prisoners of conscience such as Kamal Labwani. "The Syrian Government must
cease its harassment of Syrians peacefully seeking to bring democratic
reform to their country. The United States stands with the Syrian people in
their desire for freedom and democracy," said the statement, issued in the
name of the White House press secretary.

Yesterday, the State Department spokesman, Sean McCormack, described Syria
as an "oppressive regime." He also pointed to a recent report by a United
Nations investigator looking into the assassination of Hariri. "The Syrian
Government has failed to offer its full cooperation," Mr. McCormack said,
citing the U.N. investigator's report that "details allegations of document
burning by the Syrians, of intimidating witnesses."

When, during an interview with the Sun in April, Vice President Cheney was
asked whether he thought that Iraqi weapons of mass destruction had been
moved to Syria, Mr. Cheney replied only that he had seen such reports.

An article in the Fall 2005 Middle East Quarterly reports that in an
appearance on Israel's Channel 2 on December 23, 2002, Israel's prime
minister, Ariel Sharon stated, "Chemical and biological weapons which Saddam
is endeavoring to conceal have been moved from Iraq to Syria." The
allegation was denied by the Syrian government at the time as "completely
untrue," and it attracted scant American press attention, coming as it did
on the eve of the Christmas holiday.

Syria shares a 376-mile border with Iraq. The Syrian ruling party and Saddam
Hussein had in common the ideology of Baathism, a mixture of Nazism and
Marxism.

Syria is one of only eight countries that has not signed the Chemical
Weapons Convention, a treaty that obligates nations not to stockpile or use
chemical weapons. And it has long been the source of concern in America and
Israel and Lebanon about its chemical warfare program apart from any weapons
that may have been received from Iraq. The director of Central Intelligence,
George Tenet, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee in March
of 2004, "Damascus has an active CW development and testing program that
relies on foreign suppliers for key controlled chemicals suitable for
producing CW."





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