http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/06/21/060622014432.acs11f38.html
Hundreds of chemical weapons found in Iraq : US intelligence
21 June 2006


US-led coalition forces in Iraq have found some 500 chemical weapons since
the March 2003 invasion, Republican lawmakers said, citing an intelligence
report.


"Since 2003, Coalition forces have recovered approximately 500 weapons
munitions which contain degraded mustard or sarin nerve agent,"


said an overview of the report unveiled by Senator Rick Santorum and Peter
Hoekstra, head of the intelligence committee of the House of
Representatives.


"Despite many efforts to locate and destroy Iraq's pre-Gulf war chemical
munitions, filled and unfilled pre-Gulf war chemical munitions are assessed
to still exist,"


it says.

The lawmakers cited the report as validation of the US rationale for the
war, and stressed the ongoing danger they pose.


 "This is an incredibly  - in my mind - significant finding. The idea that,
as my colleagues have repeatedly said in this debate on the other side of
the aisle, that there are no weapons of mass destruction, is in fact false,"


Santorum said.

A Pentagon official who confirmed the findings said that all the weapons
were pre-1991 vintage munitions "in such a degraded state they couldn't be
used for what they are designed for."

 The official, who asked not to be identified, said most were 155 millimeter
artillery projectiles with mustard gas or sarin of varying degrees of
potency.


 "We're destroying them where we find them in the normal manner,"


the official said.

 In 2004, the US army said it had found a shell containing sarin gas and
another shell containing mustard gas, and a Pentagon official said at the
time the discovery showed there were likely more.

 The intelligence overview published Wednesday stressed that the pre-Gulf
War Iraqi chemical weapons could be sold on the black market.


 "Use of these weapons by terrorists or insurgent groups would have
implications for coalition forces in Iraq. The possibility of use outside
Iraq cannot be ruled out,"


it said.

 Santorum said the two-month-old report was prepared by the National Ground
Intelligence Center, a military intelligence agency that started looking for
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq when the Iraq Survey Group stopped doing
so in late 2004.

 Last year the head of Iraq Survey Group, Charles Duelfer, said that
insurgents in Iraq had already used old chemical weapons in their attacks.

 Nevertheless,


"the impression that the Iraqi Survey Group left with the American people
was they didn't find anything,"


Hoekstra said.


 "But this says: Weapons have been discovered; more weapons exist. And they
state that Iraq was not a WMD-free zone, that there are continuing threats
from the materials that are or may still be in Iraq,"


he said.

 Asked just how dangerous the weapons are, Hoekstra said:


"One or two of these shells, the materials inside of these, transferred
outside of the country, can be very, very deadly."


 The report said that the purity of the chemical agents - and thus their
potency - depends on


"many factors, including the manufacturing process, potential additives, and
environmental storage conditions."


"While agents degrade over time, chemical warfare agents remain hazardous
and potentially lethal,"


it said.

 Reporters questioned the lawmakers as to why the Bush administration had
not played up the report to boost their case for continued warfare in Iraq.

 "The administration has been very clear that they want to look forward,"
Santorum said. "They felt it was not their role to go back and fight
previous discussions."

Fear that Saddam Hussein might use his alleged arsenal of chemical and
biological weapons was may reason US officials gave for launching the March
2003 invasion of Iraq.



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