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Iraq
UPI Hears...
2003-03-11
Reports from Paris say that President Jacques Chirac, fearing that intense U.S. diplomatic pressure is having its impact on the wavering votes in the Security Council, is privately urging Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to make a grand gesture. Chirac is proposing that the Iraqi leader convene a big news conference in Baghdad — including the CNN, BBC, and al-Jazeera TV cameras — and announce the dismantling of a headline-catching weapons system as a concession to the U.N. inspectors. The only problem seems to be Iraq's previous statements that it has no remaining weapons systems to hand over — despite the small print of the 173-page UNMOVIC inspectors' report that Hans Blix failed to specify in his U.N. address Friday.
Well, there goes that plan.
One small section from the report is worth repeating, if only to emphasize the misleading tone of Hans Blix's optimistic report to the United Nations: "UNMOVIC has credible information that the total quantity of BW (biological weapons) agent in bombs, warheads and in bulk at the time of the Gulf War was 7,000 liters more than declared by Iraq. This additional agent was most likely all anthrax. ... Iraq's claim that anthrax production ceased at the end of 1990 does not seem plausible. ... seems highly probable that the destruction of bulk agent, including anthrax (at the Al Hakam site) did not occur. Based on all the available evidence, the strong presumption is that about 10,000 liters of anthrax was not destroyed and may still exist."
Seems like there was a awful lot in that report that Blix forgot about.
Intelligence reports of Iraqi troops placing explosives in the oil fields around Kirkup, apparently preparing the well-heads for demolition, come with the disturbing footnote that local sources claim the troops are not Iraqi soldiers, but Iranians from the Mujaheddin-al-Khalq (MKO). Fierce opponents of the ayatollahs, the MKO have long been given protection, including bases, arms and training grounds, by the Iraqi regime. MKO defectors in Tehran last month told reporters from Britain's Sunday Times that Iraq had hidden large underground laboratories beneath a swimming pool at Ashraf, the MKO's main military base 43 miles north of Baghdad. U.N. inspectors have been barred from Ashraf, because Baghdad says the MKO bases are the sovereign territory of the Iranian government in exile, claiming it has no jurisdiction over them.
Oh, that's cute! Wonder if Blix mentioned that little setback to anyone? Oh, of course, he's there to inspect Iraq, not Iran. Silly me.
Posted by:Steve

#3  Did I read that right?
Inspectors have been denied access?
And Blixie hasn't reported it?
I'm shocked!
Posted by: Dishman   2003-03-11 15:34:39  

#2  "The only problem seems to be Iraq's previous statements that it has no remaining weapons systems to hand over[...]"

I don't know why that would be a problem. Doesn't seem to have bothered naysayers heretofore.
Posted by: Moira   2003-03-11 14:36:37  

#1  Thanks for nothin' ChIraq. Iraq first, then France. As for Ahsraf, I may be wrong, but isn't that Iraq? I guess we just flush "unfettered access" down the toilet. Better yet, let's just flush Blix , kick the UN off our soil and get on with it already!!
Posted by: Rex Mundi   2003-03-11 14:28:58  

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