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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

30 January 2003

Negroponte Says Iraq Has Failed to Meet U.N. Resolution Conditions

(Questions remain about anthrax, SCUD missiles, bacteria) (1840)
The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations told a Senate committee
January 30 that Iraq has failed to provide a full and accurate
declaration on all aspects of its weapons of mass destruction
programs, and has failed to provide full cooperation to U.N. weapons
inspection teams.
What Iraq has done, says Ambassador John Negroponte, is to provide
cooperation on process, but not on substantive demands laid out in
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441. "In short, Iraq is not
disarming. Iraq failed the tests set out by 1441 and is close to
squandering its final opportunity," Negroponte said.
Negroponte and Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage testified
January 30 before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which is
evaluating two U.N. weapons inspection reports on Iraqi disarmament
that were presented to the Security Council January 27.
Security Council Resolution 1441 required Iraq to disarm and meet two
important tests -- provide a full and accurate WMD declaration, and
unconditionally and actively support U.N. weapons inspection teams,
Negroponte said. "The presentations we heard on Monday [January 27]
confirmed that, in spite of the urgency introduced in Resolution 1441,
Iraq did not meet either test," he said.
The Security Council received reports from Hans Blix, chief of the
U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), and
Mohamed ElBaradei, director-general of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA). The two reports came 60 days after inspections began in
Iraq to verify Iraqi compliance and cooperation with disarming its WMD
programs, Negroponte said.
Quoting Blix's report, Negroponte said the Iraqi declaration does not
"clarify and submit supporting evidence regarding the many open
disarmament issues. ... 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."
Negroponte said the reports raised questions about Iraqi weaponization
of the nerve agent VX, 6,500 chemical weapons bombs containing 1,000
tons of chemical weapons, 122mm chemical rocket warheads, more than
8,500 liters of anthrax, 650 kilograms of bacterial growth media, the
effective range of the liquid-fueled Al Samoud missile and the
solid-fueled Al Fatah missile, and the casting chambers for solid-fuel
ballistic missiles. Also, he said there is concern about troves of
official documents that might document the status of the current Iraqi
WMD programs, but cannot be found.
"The declaration is also silent on any steps since 1998 with regard to
Iraq's nuclear program, mobile biological weapons labs, or indeed any
new activities since inspections ended," Negroponte said.
Following is the text of Negroponte's remarks as prepared for
delivery:
(begin text)
Statement by the Honorable John D. Negroponte
U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
January 30, 2003
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee,
Thank you for inviting me to report on the presentations to the United
Nations Security Council on Monday, January 27, by Dr. Hans Blix of
UNMOVIC and Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General of the IAEA. The
Deputy Secretary has given a comprehensive presentation. I would like
to briefly give a bit of context to Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei's
reports.
It certainly has been quite a week. The combination of Monday's
presentations by UNMOVIC and IAEA and the President's State of the
Union [address] on Tuesday have intensified the debate that we are
facing in the Security Council. Yesterday I was in the Council until
late in the afternoon. Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei answered follow-up
questions and Council Members made national statements based on two
days worth of analysis of the reports. There is obviously a lot of
interest in the plans for Secretary Powell's presentation scheduled
for next Wednesday, and we certainly predict a period of intense
diplomatic activity -- not only in the Council, but around the world
in capitals.
As the Deputy Secretary has said, Resolution 1441 presented Iraq with
the requirement to disarm, and two tests. One -- would Iraq submit a
"currently accurate, full and complete" declaration of all aspects of
its WMD programs and delivery systems; and, two -- would Iraq
cooperate "immediately, unconditionally and actively with UNMOVIC and
the IAEA"? In sum, to use Secretary Powell's phrase, would Iraq turn
on the light for the inspectors?
The presentations we heard on Monday confirmed that, in spite of the
urgency introduced in Resolution 1441, Iraq did not meet either test.
The declaration was a fundamental test of cooperation and intent, and
Iraq failed it resoundingly. On January 27, Dr. Blix again said: the
declaration does not "clarify and submit supporting evidence regarding
the many open disarmament issues....
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." The inspectors'
reports raise the following key issues, still unanswered:
-- Iraq's declaration stated that VX was produced on a pilot basis
only and was unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991 because the
quality was poor and the material unstable. UNMOVIC has information
that Iraq in fact achieved a high degree of purity and indications
that the poison was weaponized.
-- An Iraqi Air Force document discovered in the late '90s by U.N.
inspectors but confiscated from them was only recently provided to
UNMOVIC. It indicates that Iraq's declaration did not account for
6,500 chemical weapons bombs, containing 1,000 tons of chemical
weapons, from the 1980s.
-- There are unanswered questions about 122 mm chemical rocket
warheads, 12 of which UNMOVIC found in a bunker constructed since
1998. Iraq has yet to account for thousands of chemical rockets. Dr.
Blix said these 12 could constitute "the tip of a submerged iceberg".
We join him in asking where the remaining warheads are.
-- Dr. Blix said there are "strong indications" that Iraq produced
more than the 8,500 liters of anthrax it admitted to and claims to
have unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991. Iraq has provided
no additional or convincing evidence on anthrax production and
destruction.
-- Iraq did not declare some 650 kilograms of bacterial growth media
and deliberately deleted information about the importation of this
media that Iraq had previously provided in February 1999.
-- There remain "significant questions" about Iraqi SCUD missiles, and
Iraq is developing two missiles (the liquid-fueled Al Samoud and the
solid-fueled Al Fatah) which UNMOVIC knows were tested at ranges
greater than 150 kilometers -- the range limit established in
Resolution 687. Dr. Blix said "The missiles might very well represent
prima facie cases of proscribed systems" and, in reply to a question I
put to him in the Council yesterday, he said he expected to make a
determination in that regard soon.
-- Iraq has casting chambers for solid-fuel missiles "capable of
ranges significantly greater than 150 kilometers" and imported other
equipment, including 380 rocket engines. Dr. Blix said that "these
items may well be for proscribed purposes", and we believe they are.
-- Based on a tip, UNMOVIC discovered some 3,000 official documents in
a private home that deal with such subjects as laser enrichment of
uranium. Dr. Blix remarked that he "cannot help but think" that other
private residences may contain troves of documents.
The declaration is also silent on any steps since 1998 with regard to
Iraq's nuclear program, mobile biological weapons labs, or indeed any
new activities since inspections ended.
The inspectors acknowledged that there has been Iraqi cooperation on
process. But that is not the substantive and active cooperation the
Council requires.
The Resolution determined that "Iraq shall provide UNMOVIC and the
IAEA immediate, unimpeded, unconditional, and unrestricted access" and
unimpeded movement. Instead, we see signs of attempts to intimidate
UNMOVIC by large numbers of minders -- at times as many as five
minders for each inspector, as well as "spontaneous" demonstrations,
and restrictions masked by concern for safety. Dr. Blix himself told
us that the presence of the minders "bordered on harassment" and
described some "recent disturbing incidents" including official
allegations that the inspectors are spying. The Iraqi government now
claims it cannot ensure that its citizens will allow inspectors
entrance to private property. And Iraq has refused to allow the free
and unrestricted use of U-2s on U.N. missions, a clear violation of
1441.
Inspectors must also have "immediate, unimpeded, unrestricted, and
private access to all officials and other persons whom UNMOVIC and the
IAEA wish to interview in the mode or location of UNMOVIC's or the
IAEA's choice." But UNMOVIC and IAEA have not been able to obtain
private interviews, even after the belated assurance two weeks ago
that the government would "encourage" its citizens to accept private
meetings. Inspectors have noted that they have not been provided with
all the names of personnel in Iraq's former and current WMD programs,
as required.
On the question of nuclear proliferation, IAEA Director General
ElBaradei informed the Council that, to date, IAEA has "found no
evidence that Iraq has revived its nuclear weapons programme since the
elimination of the program in the 1990s." That said, Dr. ElBaradei was
also clear that to date Iraq had only provided passive support -- not
"proactive support," to use his words. It is well to recall, however,
that in 1991 the IAEA was on the verge of declaring Iraq nuclear
weapons-free, when subsequent inspections based on defector
information revealed an extensive, secret nuclear weapons program -- a
reminder that we can never be complacent when it comes to Iraqi
veracity. The IAEA also has outstanding questions that Iraq's
declaration failed to address. According to Dr. ElBaradei, these
include weapons design and centrifuge development. The IAEA has not
yet completed its evaluation of aluminum tubes. Dr. ElBaradei
indicated that it appears that the tubes would be consistent with
Iraq's claim they are for the reverse engineering of rockets -- still
a prohibited activity under the sanctions regime -- and unless
modified would not be suitable for manufacturing centrifuges. However,
the IAEA is still investigating the matter. We believe their
characteristics are not consistent with a rocket program and are
intended for nuclear centrifuges. Dr. ElBaradei also explained that
IAEA has yet to determine the relocation or use of certain, dual-use
items, such as the high explosive HMX which was sealed by IAEA in
1998, and which Iraq claims it has used since for mining. He added
that IAEA is still investigating reports of Iraqi attempts to import
uranium after 1991, which Iraq denies.
In short, Iraq is not disarming. The Council's unanimity in support of
Resolution 1441 is the important result of enormous diplomatic energy.
There was substantial give and take over weeks of negotiation, because
we all understood that President Bush had transformed the debate and
the importance of the undertaking. Iraq failed the tests set out by
1441 and is close to squandering its final opportunity.
(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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