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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

27 January 2003

More Work Remains on Iraqi Disarmament, Blix Says

(UNMOVIC chairman reports on Iraq to U.N. Security Council) (5460)
United Nations -- Significant questions remain to be answered
concerning Iraq's chemical, biological and ballistic weapons programs
before dossiers are closed and there can be confidence that Iraq has
been disarmed, Hans Blix, the chief U.N. weapons inspector told the
Security Council January 27.
Blix, the head of the U.N. Monitoring Verification and Inspections
Commission (UNMOVIC), reported to the council 60 days after the start
of the inspections process in Iraq, as required by Security Council
resolution 1441 passed November 8, 2002.
He said that the discovery of 3,000 pages of documents relating to the
laser enrichment of uranium in the private home of a scientist
supports "a concern that has long existed that documents might be
distributed to the homes of private individuals."
"We cannot help but think that the case might not be isolated and that
such placement of documents is deliberate to make discovery difficult
and to seek to shield documents by placing them in private homes," the
UNMOVIC chief said.
So far, Blix said, UNMOVIC feels that "Iraq has decided in principle"
to cooperate on process, particularly in granting access to sites and
providing support services for UNMOVIC but has not made a similar
decision on providing substance on its banned weapons programs.
"Information provided by member states tells us about the movement and
concealment of missiles and chemical weapons and mobile units for
biological weapons production," Blix said. "We shall certainly follow
up any credible leads given to us and report what we might find as
well as any denial of access."
Blix called on Iraq to extend its newly announced search for
undeclared chemical warheads such as those found by UNMOVIC to other
weapons programs and then "declare what may be found and destroy it
under our supervision."
Blix cited the following problems:
-- Iraq has placed unacceptable conditions on UNMOVIC's use of a U-2
reconnaissance plane;
-- disturbing protests and harassment of inspectors which are
"unlikely to occur ... without initiative or encouragement from
authorities";
-- Iraq has "brushed aside as evil machinations of UNSCOM" issues
remaining from previous U.N. weapons inspection reports between 1991
and 1999;
-- UNMOVIC has information that conflicts with Iraq's account of its
production of the deadly nerve agent VX;
-- Iraq's records fail to account for 6,500 chemical bombs Iraq
produced prior to 1990 and about 1,000 tonnes [metric tons] of
chemical agent for them;
-- the recent discovery of a number of chemical warheads not
previously acknowledged by Iraq;
-- strong indications that Iraq produced more anthrax than it
declared; and
-- Iraqi scientists' refusal to talk with U.N. inspectors in private.
Following are terms or abbreviations used in the text:
-- UNMOVIC: U.N. Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission.
-- IAEA: International Atomic Energy Agency.
-- UNSCOM: U.N. Special Commission.
Following is the text of Blix's report to the council:
(begin text)
Executive Chairman of UNMOVIC, Dr. Hans Blix
The governing Security Council resolutions
The resolution adopted by the Security Council on Iraq in November
last year asks UNMOVIC and the IAEA to "update" the Council 60 days
after the resumption of inspections. This is today. The updating, it
seems, forms part of an assessment by the Council and its Members of
the results, so far, of the inspections and of their role as a means
to achieve verifiable disarmament in Iraq.
As this is an open meeting of the Council, it may be appropriate
briefly to provide some background for a better understanding of where
we stand today. With your permission, I shall do so.
I begin by recalling that inspections as a part of a disarmament
process in Iraq started in 1991, immediately after the Gulf War. They
went on for eight years until December 1998, when inspectors were
withdrawn. Thereafter, for nearly four years there were no
inspections. They were resumed only at the end of November last year.
While the fundamental aim of inspections in Iraq has always been to
verify disarmament, the successive resolutions adopted by the Council
over the years have varied somewhat in emphasis and approach.
In 1991, resolution 687 (1991), adopted unanimously as a part of the
cease-fire after the Gulf War, had five major elements. The three
first related to disarmament. They called for:
-- declarations by Iraq of its programmes of weapons of mass
destruction and long range missiles;
-- verification of the declarations through UNSCOM and the IAEA;
-- supervision by these organizations of the destruction or the
elimination of proscribed programmes and items.
After the completion of the disarmament:
-- the Council would have authority to proceed to a lifting of the
sanctions (economic restrictions); and
-- the inspecting organizations would move to long-term ongoing
monitoring and verification.
Resolution 687 (1991), like the subsequent resolutions I shall refer
to, required cooperation by Iraq but such was often withheld or given
grudgingly. Unlike South Africa, which decided on its own to eliminate
its nuclear weapons and welcomed inspection as a means of creating
confidence in its disarmament, Iraq appears not to have come to a
genuine acceptance -- not even today -- of the disarmament, which was
demanded of it and which it needs to carry out to win the confidence
of the world and to live in peace.
As we know, the twin operation 'declare and verify', which was
prescribed in resolution 687 (1991), too often turned into a game of
'hide and seek'. Rather than just verifying declarations and
supporting evidence, the two inspecting organizations found themselves
engaged in efforts to map the weapons programmes and to search for
evidence through inspections, interviews, seminars, inquiries with
suppliers and intelligence organizations. As a result, the disarmament
phase was not completed in the short time expected. Sanctions remained
and took a severe toll until Iraq accepted the Oil for Food Programme
and the gradual development of that programme mitigated the effects of
the sanctions.
The implementation of resolution 687 (1991) nevertheless brought about
considerable disarmament results. It has been recognized that more
weapons of mass destruction were destroyed under this resolution than
were destroyed during the Gulf War: large quantities of chemical
weapons were destroyed under UNSCOM supervision before 1994. While
Iraq claims -- with little evidence -- that it destroyed all
biological weapons unilaterally in 1991, it is certain that UNSCOM
destroyed large biological weapons production facilities in 1996. The
large nuclear infrastructure was destroyed and the fissionable
material was removed from Iraq by the IAEA.
One of three important questions before us today is how much might
remain undeclared and intact from before 1991; and, possibly,
thereafter; the second question is what, if anything, was illegally
produced or procured after 1998, when the inspectors left; and the
third question is how it can be prevented that any weapons of mass
destruction be produced or procured in the future.
In December 1999 -- after one year without inspections in Iraq --
resolution 1284 (1999) was adopted by the Council with four (4)
abstentions. Supplementing the basic resolutions of 1991 and following
years, it provided Iraq with a somewhat less ambitious approach: in
return for "cooperation in all respects" for a specified period of
time, including progress in the resolution of "key remaining
disarmament tasks", it opened the possibility, not for the lifting,
but the suspension of sanctions.
For nearly three years, Iraq refused to accept any inspections by
UNMOVIC. It was only after appeals by the Secretary-General and Arab
States and pressure by the United States and other Member States, that
Iraq declared on 16 September last year that it would again accept
inspections without conditions.
Resolution 1441 (2002) was adopted on 8 November last year and
emphatically reaffirmed the demand on Iraq to cooperate. It required
this cooperation to be immediate, unconditional and active. The
resolution contained many provisions, which we welcome as enhancing
and strengthening the inspection regime. The unanimity by which it was
adopted sent a powerful signal that the Council was of one mind in
creating a last opportunity for peaceful disarmament in Iraq through
inspection.
UNMOVIC shares the sense of urgency felt by the Council to use
inspection as a path to attain, within a reasonable time, verifiable
disarmament of Iraq. Under the resolutions I have cited, it would be
followed by monitoring for such time as the Council feels would be
required. The resolutions also point to a zone free of weapons of mass
destruction as the ultimate goal.
As a subsidiary body of the Council, UNMOVIC is fully aware of and
appreciates the close attention, which the Council devotes to the
inspections in Iraq. While today's "updating" is foreseen in
resolution 1441 (2002), the Council can and does call for additional
briefings whenever it wishes. One was held on 19 January and a further
such briefing is tentatively set for 14 February.
I turn now to the key requirement of cooperation and Iraq's response
to it. Cooperation might be said to relate to both substance and
process. It would appear from our experience so far that Iraq has
decided in principle to provide cooperation on process, notably
access. A similar decision is indispensable to provide cooperation on
substance in order to bring the disarmament task to completion through
the peaceful process of inspection and to bring the monitoring task on
a firm course. An initial minor step would be to adopt the
long-overdue legislation required by the resolutions.
I shall deal first with cooperation on process.
Cooperation on process
It has regard to the procedures, mechanisms, infrastructure and
practical arrangements to pursue inspections and seek verifiable
disarmament. While inspection is not built on the premise of
confidence but may lead to confidence if it is successful, there must
nevertheless be a measure of mutual confidence from the very beginning
in running the operation of inspection.
Iraq has on the whole cooperated rather well so far with UNMOVIC in
this field. The most important point to make is that access has been
provided to all sites we have wanted to inspect and with one exception
it has been prompt. We have further had great help in building up the
infrastructure of our office in Baghdad and the field office in Mosul.
Arrangements and services for our plane and our helicopters have been
good. The environment has been workable.
Our inspections have included universities, military bases,
presidential sites and private residences. Inspections have also taken
place on Fridays, the Muslim day of rest, on Christmas day and New
Years day. These inspections have been conducted in the same manner as
all other inspections. We seek to be both effective and correct.
In this updating I am bound, however, to register some problems.
Firstly, relating to two kinds of air operations.
While we now have the technical capability to send a U-2 (U.S.
reconnaissance aircraft) plane placed at our disposal for aerial
imagery and for surveillance during inspections and have informed Iraq
that we planned to do so, Iraq has refused to guarantee its safety,
unless a number of conditions are fulfilled. As these conditions went
beyond what is stipulated in resolution 1441 (2002) and what was
practiced by UNSCOM and Iraq in the past, we note that Iraq is not so
far complying with our request. I hope this attitude will change.
Another air operation problem -- which was solved during our recent
talks in Baghdad -- concerned the use of helicopters flying into the
no-fly zones. Iraq had insisted on sending helicopters of their own to
accompany ours. This would have raised a safety problem. The matter
was solved by an offer on our part to take the accompanying Iraq
minders in our helicopters to the sites, an arrangement that had been
practiced by UNSCOM in the past.
I am obliged to note some recent disturbing incidents and harassment.
For instance, for some time farfetched allegations have been made
publicly that questions posed by inspectors were of intelligence
character. While I might not defend every question that inspectors
might have asked, Iraq knows that they do not serve intelligence
purposes and Iraq should not say so.
On a number of occasions, demonstrations have taken place in front of
our offices and at inspection sites.
The other day, a sightseeing excursion by five inspectors to a mosque
was followed by an unwarranted public outburst. The inspectors went
without any UN insignia and were welcomed in the kind manner that is
characteristic of the normal Iraqi attitude to foreigners. They took
off their shoes and were taken around. They asked perfectly innocent
questions and parted with the invitation to come again.
Shortly thereafter, we receive protests from the Iraqi authorities
about an unannounced inspection and about questions not relevant to
weapons of mass destruction. Indeed, they were not. Demonstrations and
outbursts of this kind are unlikely to occur in Iraq without
initiative or encouragement from the authorities. We must ask
ourselves what the motives may be for these events. They do not
facilitate an already difficult job, in which we try to be effective,
professional and, at the same time, correct. Where our Iraqi
counterparts have some complaint they can take it up in a calmer and
less unpleasant manner.
Cooperation on substance
The substantive cooperation required relates above all to the
obligation of Iraq to declare all programmes of weapons of mass
destruction and either to present items and activities for elimination
or else to provide evidence supporting the conclusion that nothing
proscribed remains.
Paragraph 9 of resolution 1441 (2002) states that this cooperation
shall be "active". It is not enough to open doors. Inspection is not a
game of "catch as catch can". Rather, as I noted, it is a process of
verification for the purpose of creating confidence. It is not built
upon the premise of trust. Rather, it is designed to lead to trust, if
there is both openness to the inspectors and action to present them
with items to destroy or credible evidence about the absence of any
such items.
The declaration of 7 December
On 7 December 2002, Iraq submitted a declaration of some 12,000 pages
in response to paragraph 3 of resolution 1441 (2002) and within the
time stipulated by the Security Council. In the fields of missiles and
biotechnology, the declaration contains a good deal of new material
and information covering the period from 1998 and onward. This is
welcome.
One might have expected that in preparing the Declaration, Iraq would
have tried to respond to, clarify and submit supporting evidence
regarding the many open disarmament issues, which the Iraqi side
should be familiar with from the UNSCOM document S/1999/94 of January
1999 and the so-called Amorim Report of March 1999 (S/1999/356). These
are questions which UNMOVIC, governments and independent commentators
have often cited.
While UNMOVIC has been preparing its own list of current "unresolved
disarmament issues" and "key remaining disarmament tasks" in response
to requirements in resolution 1284 (1999), we find the issues listed
in the two reports as unresolved, professionally justified. These
reports do not contend that weapons of mass destruction remain in
Iraq, but nor do they exclude that possibility. They point to lack of
evidence and inconsistencies, which raise question marks, which must
be straightened out, if weapons dossiers are to be closed and
confidence is to arise.
They deserve to be taken seriously by Iraq rather than being brushed
aside as evil machinations of UNSCOM. Regrettably, the 12,000 page
declaration, most of which is a reprint of earlier documents, does not
seem to contain any new evidence that would eliminate the questions or
reduce their number. Even Iraq's letter sent in response to our recent
discussions in Baghdad to the President of the Security Council on 24
January does not lead us to the resolution of these issues.
I shall only give some examples of issues and questions that need to
be answered and I turn first to the sector of chemical weapons.
Chemical weapons
The nerve agent VX is one of the most toxic ever developed.
Iraq has declared that it only produced VX on a pilot scale, just a
few tonnes [metric tons]and that the quality was poor and the product
unstable. Consequently, it was said, that the agent was never
weaponised. Iraq said that the small quantity of agent remaining after
the Gulf War was unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991.
UNMOVIC, however, has information that conflicts with this account.
There are indications that Iraq had worked on the problem of purity
and stabilization and that more had been achieved than has been
declared. Indeed, even one of the documents provided by Iraq indicates
that the purity of the agent, at least in laboratory production, was
higher than declared.
There are also indications that the agent was weaponised. In addition,
there are questions to be answered concerning the fate of the VX
precursor chemicals, which Iraq states were lost during bombing in the
Gulf War or were unilaterally destroyed by Iraq.
I would now like to turn to the so-called "Air Force document" that I
have discussed with the Council before. This document was originally
found by an UNSCOM inspector in a safe in Iraqi Air Force Headquarters
in 1998 and taken from her by Iraqi minders. It gives an account of
the expenditure of bombs, including chemical bombs, by Iraq in the
Iraq-Iran War. I am encouraged by the fact that Iraq has now provided
this document to UNMOVIC.
The document indicates that 13,000 chemical bombs were dropped by the
Iraqi Air Force between 1983 and 1988, while Iraq has declared that
19,500 bombs were consumed during this period. Thus, there is a
discrepancy of 6,500 bombs. The amount of chemical agent in these
bombs would be in the order of about 1,000 tonnes. In the absence of
evidence to the contrary, we must assume that these quantities are now
unaccounted for.
The discovery of a number of 122 mm chemical rocket warheads in a
bunker at a storage depot 170 km southwest of Baghdad was much
publicized. This was a relatively new bunker and therefore the rockets
must have been moved there in the past few years, at a time when Iraq
should not have had such munitions.
The investigation of these rockets is still proceeding. Iraq states
that they were overlooked from 1991 from a batch of some 2,000 that
were stored there during the Gulf War. This could be the case. They
could also be the tip of a submerged iceberg. The discovery of a few
rockets does not resolve but rather points to the issue of several
thousands of chemical rockets that are unaccounted for.
The finding of the rockets shows that Iraq needs to make more effort
to ensure that its declaration is currently accurate. During my recent
discussions in Baghdad, Iraq declared that it would make new efforts
in this regard and had set up a committee of investigation. Since then
it has reported that it has found a further 4 chemical rockets at a
storage depot in Al Taji.
I might further mention that inspectors have found at another site a
laboratory quantity of thiodiglycol, a mustard gas precursor.
Whilst I am addressing chemical issues, I should mention a matter,
which I reported on 19 December 2002, concerning equipment at a
civilian chemical plant at Al Fallujah. Iraq has declared that it had
repaired chemical processing equipment previously destroyed under
UNSCOM supervision, and had installed it at Fallujah for the
production of chlorine and phenols. We have inspected this equipment
and are conducting a detailed technical evaluation of it. On
completion, we will decide whether this and other equipment that has
been recovered by Iraq should be destroyed.
Biological weapons
I have mentioned the issue of anthrax to the Council on previous
occasions and I come back to it as it is an important one.
Iraq has declared that it produced about 8,500 litres of this
biological warfare agent, which it states it unilaterally destroyed in
the summer of 1991. Iraq has provided little evidence for this
production and no convincing evidence for its destruction.
There are strong indications that Iraq produced more anthrax than it
declared, and that at least some of this was retained after the
declared destruction date. It might still exist. Either it should be
found and be destroyed under UNMOVIC supervision or else convincing
evidence should be produced to show that it was, indeed, destroyed in
1991.
As I reported to the Council on 19 December last year, Iraq did not
declare a significant quantity, some 650 kg, of bacterial growth
media, which was acknowledged as imported in Iraq's submission to the
Amorim panel in February 1999. As part of its 7 December 2002
declaration, Iraq resubmitted the Amorim panel document, but the table
showing this particular import of media was not included. The absence
of this table would appear to be deliberate as the pages of the
resubmitted document were renumbered.
In the letter of 24 January to the President of the Council, Iraq's
Foreign Minister stated that "all imported quantities of growth media
were declared". This is not evidence. I note that the quantity of
media involved would suffice to produce, for example, about 5,000
litres of concentrated anthrax.
Missiles
I turn now to the missile sector. There remain significant questions
as to whether Iraq retained SCUD-type missiles after the Gulf War.
Iraq declared the consumption of a number of SCUD missiles as targets
in the development of an anti-ballistic missile defence system during
the 1980s. Yet no technical information has been produced about that
programme or data on the consumption of the missiles.
There has been a range of developments in the missile field during the
past four years presented by Iraq as non-proscribed activities. We are
trying to gather a clear understanding of them through inspections and
on-site discussions.
Two projects in particular stand out. They are the development of a
liquid-fuelled missile named the Al Samoud 2, and a solid propellant
missile, called the Al Fatah. Both missiles have been tested to a
range in excess of the permitted range of 150 km, with the Al Samoud 2
being tested to a maximum of 183 km and the Al Fatah to 161 km. Some
of both types of missiles have already been provided to the Iraqi
Armed Forces even though it is stated that they are still undergoing
development.
The Al Samoud's diameter was increased from an earlier version to the
present 760 mm. This modification was made despite a 1994 letter from
the Executive Chairman of UNSCOM directing Iraq to limit its missile
diameters to less than 600 mm. Furthermore, a November 1997 letter
from the Executive Chairman of UNSCOM to Iraq prohibited the use of
engines from certain surface-to-air missiles for the use in ballistic
missiles.
During my recent meeting in Baghdad, we were briefed on these two
programmes. We were told that the final range for both systems would
be less than the permitted maximum range of 150 km.
These missiles might well represent prima facie cases of proscribed
systems. The test ranges in excess of 150 km are significant, but some
further technical considerations need to be made, before we reach a
conclusion on this issue. In the mean time, we have asked Iraq to
cease flight tests of both missiles.
In addition, Iraq has refurbished its missile production
infrastructure. In particular, Iraq reconstituted a number of casting
chambers, which had previously been destroyed under UNSCOM
supervision. They had been used in the production of solid-fuel
missiles. Whatever missile system these chambers are intended for,
they could produce motors for missiles capable of ranges significantly
greater than 150 km.
Also associated with these missiles and related developments is the
import, which has been taking place during the last few years, of a
number of items despite the sanctions, including as late as December
2002. Foremost amongst these is the import of 380 rocket engines which
may be used for the Al Samoud 2.
Iraq also declared the recent import of chemicals used in propellants,
test instrumentation and, guidance and control systems. These items
may well be for proscribed purposes. That is yet to be determined.
What is clear is that they were illegally brought into Iraq, that is,
Iraq or some company in Iraq, circumvented the restrictions imposed by
various resolutions.
Mr. President,
I have touched upon some of the disarmament issues that remain open
and that need to be answered if dossiers are to be closed and
confidence is to arise. Which are the means at the disposal of Iraq to
answer these questions? I have pointed to some during my presentation
of the issues. Let me be a little more systematic. Our Iraqi
counterparts are fond of saying that there are no proscribed items and
if no evidence is presented to the contrary they should have the
benefit of the doubt, be presumed innocent. UNMOVIC, for its part, is
not presuming that there are proscribed items and activities in Iraq,
but nor is it -- or I think anyone else after the inspections between
1991 and 1998 -- presuming the opposite, that no such items and
activities exist in Iraq. Presumptions do not solve the problem.
Evidence and full transparency may help. Let me be specific.
Find the items and activities
Information provided by Member States tells us about the movement and
concealment of missiles and chemical weapons and mobile units for
biological weapons production. We shall certainly follow up any
credible leads given to us and report what we might find as well as
any denial of access.
So far we have reported on the recent find of a small number of empty
122 mm warheads for chemical weapons. Iraq declared that it appointed
a commission of inquiry to look for more. Fine. Why not extend the
search to other items? Declare what may be found and destroy it under
our supervision?
Find documents
When we have urged our Iraqi counterparts to present more evidence, we
have all too often met the response that there are no more documents.
All existing relevant documents have been presented, we are told. All
documents relating to the biological weapons programme were destroyed
together with the weapons.
However, Iraq has all the archives of the Government and its various
departments, institutions and mechanisms. It should have budgetary
documents, requests for funds and reports on how they have been used.
It should also have letters of credit and bills of lading, reports on
production and losses of material.
In response to a recent UNMOVIC request for a number of specific
documents, the only new documents Iraq provided was a ledger of 193
pages which Iraq stated included all imports from 1983 to 1990 by the
Technical and Scientific Importation Division, the importing authority
for the biological weapons programme. Potentially, it might help to
clear some open issues.
The recent inspection find in the private home of a scientist of a box
of some 3,000 pages of documents, much of it relating to the laser
enrichment of uranium support a concern that has long existed that
documents might be distributed to the homes of private individuals.
This interpretation is refuted by the Iraqi side, which claims that
research staff sometimes may bring home papers from their work places.
On our side, we cannot help but think that the case might not be
isolated and that such placements of documents is deliberate to make
discovery difficult and to seek to shield documents by placing them in
private homes.
Any further sign of the concealment of documents would be serious. The
Iraqi side committed itself at our recent talks to encourage persons
to accept access also to private sites. There can be no sanctuaries
for proscribed items, activities or documents. A denial of prompt
access to any site would be a very serious matter.
Find persons to give credible information: a list of personnel
When Iraq claims that tangible evidence in the form of documents is
not available, it ought at least to find individuals, engineers,
scientists and managers to testify about their experience. Large
weapons programmes are moved and managed by people. Interviews with
individuals who may have worked in programmes in the past may fill
blank spots in our knowledge and understanding. It could also be
useful to learn that they are now employed in peaceful sectors. These
were the reasons why UNMOVIC asked for a list of such persons, in
accordance with resolution 1441.
Some 400 names for all biological and chemical weapons programmes as
well as their missile programmes were provided by the Iraqi side. This
can be compared to over 3,500 names of people associated with those
past weapons programmes that UNSCOM either interviewed in the 1990s or
knew from documents and other sources. At my recent meeting in
Baghdad, the Iraqi side committed itself to supplementing the list and
some 80 additional names have been provided.
Allow information through credible interviews
In the past, much valuable information came from interviews. There
were also cases in which the interviewee was clearly intimidated by
the presence of and interruption by Iraqi officials. This was the
background of resolution 1441's provision for a right for UNMOVIC and
the IAEA to hold private interviews "in the mode or location" of our
choice, in Baghdad or even abroad.
To date, 11 individuals were asked for interviews in Baghdad by us.
The replies have invariably been that the individual will only speak
at Iraq's monitoring directorate or, at any rate, in the presence of
an Iraqi official. This could be due to a wish on the part of the
invited to have evidence that they have not said anything that the
authorities did not wish them to say. At our recent talks in Baghdad,
the Iraqi side committed itself to encourage persons to accept
interviews "in private", that is to say alone with us. Despite this,
the pattern has not changed. However, we hope that with further
encouragement from the authorities, knowledgeable individuals will
accept private interviews, in Baghdad or abroad.
UNMOVIC's capability
Mr. President, I must not conclude this "update" without some notes on
the growing capability of UNMOVIC.
In the past two months, UNMOVIC has built-up its capabilities in Iraq
from nothing to 260 staff members from 60 countries. This includes
approximately 100 UNMOVIC inspectors, 60 air operations staff, as well
as security personnel, communications, translation and interpretation
staff, medical support, and other services at our Baghdad office and
Mosul field office. All serve the United Nations and report to no one
else. Furthermore, our roster of inspectors will continue to grow as
our training programme continues -- even at this moment we have a
training course in session in Vienna. At the end of that course, we
shall have a roster of about 350 qualified experts from which to draw
inspectors.
A team supplied by the Swiss Government is refurbishing our offices in
Baghdad, which had been empty for four years. The Government of New
Zealand has contributed both a medical team and a communications team.
The German Government will contribute unmanned aerial vehicles for
surveillance and a group of specialists to operate them for us within
Iraq. The Government of Cyprus has kindly allowed us to set up a Field
Office in Larnaca. All these contributions have been of assistance in
quickly starting up our inspections and enhancing our capabilities. So
has help from the U.N. in New York and from sister organizations in
Baghdad.
In the past two months during which we have built-up our presence in
Iraq, we have conducted about 300 inspections to more than 230
different sites. Of these, more than 20 were sites that had not been
inspected before. By the end of December, UNMOVIC began using
helicopters both for the transport of inspectors and for actual
inspection work. We now have eight helicopters. They have already
proved invaluable in helping to "freeze" large sites by observing the
movement of traffic in and around the area.
Setting up a field office in Mosul has facilitated rapid inspections
of sites in northern Iraq. We plan to establish soon a second field
office in the Basra area, where we have already inspected a number of
sites.
Mr. President,
We have now an inspection apparatus that permits us to send multiple
inspection teams every day all over Iraq, by road or by air. Let me
end by simply noting that that capability which has been built-up in a
short time and which is now operating, is at the disposal of the
Security Council.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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