<< Perhaps the United Nations is already the irrelevant organization that
President Bush expressed concern last September it might become. If what has
already transpired is insufficient to convince the U.N. Security Council
that Iraq has no intention of cooperating, then it is time that the rhetoric
cease and it is acknowledged that no one cares enough to act. >>

National Review Online
January 13, 2003, 9:10 a.m.
"No Smoking Gun"
Farce revealed.
By Richard Spertzel

Hans Blix, chief U.N. weapons inspector, reported to the U.N. Security
Council that UNMOVIC had found "no smoking gun." It seems that the
expectation for a smoking gun would be a biological or chemical weapon. Did
anyone truly believe that the inspectors would find such a "smoking gun,"
given the nature of the inspections and Iraq's recalcitrance to provide a
complete and accurate declaration of its weapons-of-mass-destruction
programs? Did the news media? Did the diplomats? Did the inspectors? What
person with any reasoning abilities would really expect to find a smoking
gun at sites that Iraq has every reason to believe will be inspected. Iraq
would not be brazen enough to have activities ongoing at such sites.

Most of the site inspections over the last several weeks have been to sites
that were under monitoring by UNSCOM until December 1998. One needs to
understand what monitoring was designed to accomplish. Monitoring of sites
with dual-use technologies only serve to hinder the ability of Iraq to
exploit technologies, supplies, and equipment for prohibited purposes; not
to find prohibited weapons, i.e., a "smoking gun." Besides, in 1990 when
Iraq was not hampered by inspectors, it did not have agent-filled weapons at
the research-and-development sites. If one considers Iraq's
biological-weapons program leading up to the Gulf War (according to Iraq's
account), except for a few brief days, no munitions or weapons were present
at any of the biological sites. Weapons' filling with biological agents was
accomplished only at the Muthanna State Establishment where CW weapons were
also filled. The biological-filled munitions were stored inside abandoned
railroad tunnels, buried in the sand at Airfield 37 and Al Azzizziyia
Airbase, and buried in the sand along the Tigris Canal. The probability of
finding similar hidden storage sites - and hence a "smoking gun" as
inspections are currently being conducted is somewhere between nil and none.
Such a smoking gun should not be expected.

Counting on UNMOVIC or any other inspection regime to find a smoking gun is
ridiculously unrealistic. Such folly can only bring cheer to Iraq, its
friends on the Security Council, and everyone else that should, by now,
recognize that Iraq has no intention of giving up its weapons of mass
destruction, but also does not want to force Iraq to comply.

As for Iraqi cooperation as determined by allowing unfettered access, Iraq
never denied UNSCOM access to monitored sites. Thus such "unfettered access"
for the current inspectors does not reveal any indication of Iraq's
willingness to cooperate. The December 7, 2002 declaration by Iraq on its
WMD programs, however, is very revealing. Iraq's failure to respond to any
of the remaining issues identified by UNSCOM in the 1998 "Technical
Evaluation Meetings" with Iraq shouts volumes about Iraq's willingness and
intent to cooperate. What do the U.N. Security Council and the governments
of Europe need to accept that Iraq is not going to give up its WMD
willingly?

Many are arguing that we must "give the inspectors time to do their job."
Time to do what? Monitor known dual-use technology sites? Monitoring is only
a hindrance to a country determined to have WMD programs, not a deterrent.
It certainly is not aimed at finding concealed weapons. Eventually everyone
would grow tired of the arrangement and Iraq will have succeeded in
retaining its WMD programs.

The last several weeks have been a circus. Newspapers, radio, television
networks, diplomats, politicians, etc., are all creating a hoopla over the
resumption of inspections, Iraqi cooperation, no smoking gun, ad nauseam.
Yet nothing has changed from the UNSCOM days. Iraq still shows no signs of
giving up its weapons of mass destruction and the WMD programs, or of
properly accounting for its assertions that it has no such weapons or
programs. If Iraq's position is the truth, then why the reluctance to
respond credibly to unresolved issues? Why the blatant attempts to assure
that its scientists are not interviewed in private or abroad? Instead, Iraq
has invited the media to accompany inspections and to visit the same sites,
"assuring the world" that Iraq has no such WMD programs - thereby adding to
the circus atmosphere.

It should be recalled that in early 1995 Iraq was denying that it ever had a
BW program, in spite of the accumulating evidence by UNSCOM to the contrary.
Iraq then also made a great display for the news media to assure the world
that its Al Hakam complex was only for animal-feed production when in
reality that was only a cover story for its largest BW-agent production
facility. Does the world forget so easily? Or is it only that the world body
does not care what Iraq possesses?

Perhaps the United Nations is already the irrelevant organization that
President Bush expressed concern last September it might become. If what has
already transpired is insufficient to convince the U.N. Security Council
that Iraq has no intention of cooperating, then it is time that the rhetoric
cease and it is acknowledged that no one cares enough to act.

A suggestion to the U.N. Security Council: If you don't mean it, don't say
it; if you mean it, then take the necessary action to back up what you say.
Otherwise stop the farce.

- Richard Spertzel was head of the biology section of UNSCOM (1994-1998) and
is available through www.benadorassociates.com.

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