[iwar] [fc:Us:.Iraq.Moving.Chemical.Weapons]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-22 21:51:02


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Date: Mon, 22 Oct 2001 21:51:02 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Us:.Iraq.Moving.Chemical.Weapons]
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Guardian Unlimited | World Latest | US: Iraq Moving Chemical Weapons


From the Associated Press

Us: Iraq Moving Chemical Weapons

Tuesday October 23, 2001 12:50 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) - Iraq is moving some of its chemical weapons industry to
underground bunkers, a government official said Monday.
Moving it into specially built bunkers could make it harder to find and
destroy, but the U.S. has designed bombs and other weapons specifically to
blow up concealed, bunkered weapons of mass destruction.
Some officials in the U.S. administration, notably Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz, have called for strikes on Iraq, but others want the war on
terrorism to focus solely on Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida and Afghanistan.
U.S. intelligence has not obtained credible evidence linking Iraq to either
the Sept. 11 attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center or the ongoing
anthrax scare.
``We have no illusions about Saddam Hussein and his record of threats and
assaults upon his own people, as well as neighboring countries, is very well
known, as are his attempts to develop weapons of mass destruction,'' said
State Department spokesman Phil Reeker on Monday. ``We don't put anything
past Saddam Hussein, but I don't believe that there's any clear linkage (to
the anthrax attack) at this point.''
Iraq has rebuilt some of its capacity to make chemical weapons since the
Gulf War, and has the scientific expertise to produce such weapons on short
notice, according to a Pentagon report released in January.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has long tried to hide his weapons production
capacity. Saddam had previously stockpiled mustard, tabun, sarin and VX
chemical agents, says the report, ``Proliferation: Threat and Response.''
Information on Iraq's weapons program has been sketchy since it expelled
U.N. weapons inspectors in 1998. The country has also retained the
scientific and engineering expertise for its weapons programs.
The Iraqi military has used chemical weapons against Iran and Kurds in
northern Iraq. A document found by U.N. inspectors but seized by Iraqi
officials suggested Saddam may have hidden an additional 6,000 weapons after
the Gulf War.
In addition, Iraq acknowledged in 1995 that it had produced 7,800 gallons of
biological agents, including anthrax, botulism toxins and aflatoxins.
However, U.N. weapons inspectors said Iraq likely had produced three to four
times more.
Iraq also said it had deployed munitions filled with biological agents to
airfields to be used against Israel and coalition forces in Saudi Arabia,
the report says. It claimed all these weapons had been destroyed.
To attack with these chemical and biological weapons, Iraq has short-range
ballistic missile warheads and aerial bombs. It has been working on a
pilotless drone, as well.
Saddam's government has said it disarmed, and it closed the country to U.N.
weapons inspectors in late 1998. The United States responded with several
days of airstrikes.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001

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