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by
Imad Khadduri
Former Iraqi Nuclear Scientist
June
12, 2003
As
the swelter of anger bubbles from the machination of misinformation that led to
the faltering WMD casus belli for invading Iraq, the retreat and
half-baked excuses of Bush, Blair, Cheney, Wolfowitz and Powell further expose
the sharp edge of their deceit. Whether it was "intelligence" failure
or "flailing" the intelligence, time will soon tell. In the meantime,
the fig leaves keep falling.
During
CNN's Late Edition with Colin Powell, reported by the Toronto Star on June 9,
2003, Powell claimed that "the two alleged mobile biological weapons labs,
which are being studied by allied inspectors now in Iraq, are the same ones he
described to the world last Feb. 5 at a U.N. presentation which was the result
of four days and four nights of meetings with the CIA." "I stand
behind that presentation," he said.
He
further asserted, "I'll give you the killer argument why these vans were
exactly what I said they were. I can assure you that if those biological vans
were not ... what I said they were on the 5th of February, on the 6th of
February Iraq would have hauled those vans out, put them in front of a press
conference, given them to U.N. inspectors to try to drive a stake through the
heart of my presentation."
Only
if the Iraqis knew which vans he was talking about.
In
an article published on the same day as Powell's interview, Peter Beaumont and
Antony Barnett reported in the Observer that there is mounting indications that
these vans were for "balloons, not germs."
The
Iraqis concur.
According
to the article, "Senior Iraqi officials of the al-Kindi Research, Testing,
Development, and Engineering facility in Mosul were shown pictures of the
mobile production trailers, and they claimed that the trailers were used to
produce hydrogen chemically for artillery weather balloons. Artillery balloons
are essentially balloons that are sent up into the atmosphere and relay
information on wind direction and speed, allowing more accurate artillery fire.
Crucially, these systems need to be mobile. The Observer has discovered that
not only did the Iraq military have such a system at one time, but that it was
actually sold to them by the British. In 1987, Marconi, now known as AMS, sold
the Iraqi army an Artillery Meteorological System or Amets for short."
Other
experts who have examined the evidence agree and have cast doubt over the Bush
administration's assertions. They argue that the lack of any trace of pathogens
found in the fermentation tanks, the use of canvas sides on vehicles where
technicians would be working with dangerous germ cultures, and the lack of an
autoclave for steam sterilization all provide credence to the Iraqi argument
that the labs were merely used for artillery balloons.
In
fact, the American experts themselves concede that the van could, at best,
serve only one stage of the process for biological weapons production. There
would need to be three or four other stages in the process, or other
complementary vans, to be able to produce Powell's less than heuristic claim.
Powell
is not new to this misinformation game.
In
my earlier article, "The demise of the nuclear bomb hoax," published
on February 16, 2003, I referred to Geoff Simons' The Scourging of Iraq in
which "Washington lied persistently and comprehensively to gain the
required international support [for the Gulf war]. For example, the U.S.
claimed to have satellite pictures showing a massive Iraqi military build-up on
the Saudi/ Iraqi border. When sample photographs were later obtained from Soyuz
Karta by an enterprising journalist, no such evidence was discernible."
Simons
references an article by Maggie O'Kane, published in the Guardian on 16
December 1995, which revealed that the enterprising journalist was Jean Heller
of the St. Petersburg Times in Florida.
Eventually,
the U.S. commander -- none other than Colin Powell himself -- admitted that
there had been no massing of Iraqi troops. But by then the so-called evidence
had served its purpose.
So,
was Powell really worried that the Iraqis might "try to drive a stake
through the heart of [his] presentation"?
Well,
it's never too late.
Imad Khadduri has an MSc in
Physics from the University of Michigan (United States) and a PhD in Nuclear
Reactor Technology from the University of Birmingham (United Kingdom). Khadduri
worked with the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission from 1968 till 1998. He was able
to leave Iraq in late 1998 with his family. He now teaches and works as a
network administrator in Toronto, Canada. Email: imad.khadduri@rogers.com. This article
first appeared at Yellow Times.org. Thanks to
Matthew Riemer at YT.