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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

20 September 2002

U.N. Arms Inspectors Preparing to Go to Iraq

(UNMOVIC chief reports to Security Council) (630)
By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent
United Nations -- The chief U.N. weapons inspector officially briefed
the Security Council September 19 on preparations under way to begin
inspections in Iraq, where, he said, "there will be no sanctuaries."
Hans Blix, chairman of the U.N. Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection
Commission (UNMOVIC) said that he wants "to get off to a flying start"
with inspections as soon as possible. He said that his upcoming
meeting in Vienna with Iraqi officials the week of September 30 will
be to go over the details of what is needed to conduct inspections but
"we are not giving any discounts on Security Council resolutions."
Talking with journalists after his almost two-hour private meeting
with the Security Council, Blix said that the practical arrangements
to be discussed include "how do we get there, how do we land, what is
our cooperation with the national directorate, accommodations,
security of inspectors, flight path of helicopters, communications,
transportation, jeeps."
"There are quite a few such things that need to be settled. Since we
want to have successful inspections and we want to avoid any clashes,
differences, and conflict with Iraq, we think it would be best to talk
to them about what our rights are, explain to them so they know what
they can expect," he said. "We are not uncertain about what the
resolutions say ... but we do need to explain.
"We are the servants of the Security Council and we are basing
ourselves on Resolution 1284 and preceding resolutions beginning in
1991 with Resolution 687, etc. We know all this. We are not in doubt
about what needs to be done," the UNMOVIC chief said.
After the Vienna meeting, the first step for UNMOVIC will be to send
administrative staff into Baghdad to check the condition of the U.N.
offices that were vacated almost four years ago and to reopen
laboratories, replace computers if necessary, and basically get the
infrastructure in place before the weapons inspectors arrive.
Blix noted that the inspectors come from 45 difference countries and
are in their homelands, so preparations have to be made to get them to
Iraq. Nevertheless, he stressed, the inspectors will be U.N. employees
and will not be paid by their governments.
Blix said that he has some sites he wants the inspectors to look at
immediately, but he has not discussed the sites with Iraqi officials.
Blix said he will demand full, unfettered access to any site for his
inspectors.
Presidential sites will not be spared by UNMOVIC, he said. "There is a
special procedure laid down (for presidential sites) and I told (the
Iraqis) that I will make use of such a right."
"We are not giving any immunities. In our view, there are no
sanctuaries in Iraq," he said.
UNMOVIC will welcome any intelligence information from other
governments on potential weapons sites, the chairman said.
Nevertheless, "intelligence, in our view, is a one-way traffic. If
member governments want us to try to find anything hidden, well, give
us information. But we are not supposed to give information back."
"Some may not like that, but I think integrity is more important than
information," Blix said.
Once UNMOVIC is fully operational in Iraq, it will have 60 days to
draw up a program of work and report back to the Security Council. In
the past Blix has said that after that point, with Baghdad's
cooperation, he expects to have the disarmament of Iraq completed in a
year.
Secretary General Kofi Annan met with Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji
Sabri September 18 and stressed "the need to provide full and
unconditional cooperation to the U.N. inspectors and reaffirmed his
confidence in Blix's professionalism and impartiality," UN spokesman
Fred Eckhard said.
Eckhard said that the United Nations does not see the upcoming meeting
in Vienna as negotiations with the Iraqis, but "discussions on
practical arrangements on the understanding that there are no
conditions."
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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