LONDON,
April 14 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Now that the U.S.-led
forces actually invaded and occupied Iraq, now that Saddam Hussein’s
regime no longer exists, the question remains; where are Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction? A leading British paper asked Sunday, April 13.
“They
were the reason the United States and Britain were in such a hurry to go
to war, the threat the rank-and-file troops feared most. And yet, after
three weeks of war, after the capture of Baghdad and the collapse of the
Iraqi government, Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction - those
weapons that President Bush, on the eve of hostilities, said were a
direct threat to the people of the United States - have still to be
identified,” The Independent said.
“Many
influential people - disarmament experts, present and former United
Nations arms inspectors, our own Robin Cook - have begun to wonder aloud
if the weapons exist at all.
“The
public surrender of a senior Iraqi scientist could yet backfire against
the U.S. and Britain. Lieutenant-General Amer Hammoudi al-Saadi, who
handed himself over to U.S. forces Saturday, continued to proclaim that
Iraq no longer holds any chemical or biological weapons. He should know:
the British-educated chemical expert headed the Iraqi delegation at
weapons talks with the United Nations.
“The
few "discoveries" trumpeted in the media - the odd barrel
here, a few dozen shells there - have not been on a scale that could
reasonably justify the unprovoked military invasion of a sovereign
country, and in most cases have been proven to been no more than rumor,
or propaganda, or a mixture of the two,” charged the paper.
“It
could still be that, as American forces advance on Tikrit, Saddam's home
town, chemical or biological weapons may be discovered, or even deployed
by diehard Iraqi troops,” the paper said, apparently before the last
Iraqi stronghold was actually captured.
Tikrit
fell to U.S. forces entirely Monday, April 14, without any reports of
chemical finds.
“But
if the casus belli pleaded by George Bush and Tony Blair turns out to be
entirely hollow - and it should be stressed that we can't yet know that
- what does it say about their motivations for going to war in the first
place? How much deception was involved in talking up the Iraqi threat,
and how much self-deception?
“As
Susan Wright, a disarmament expert at the University of Michigan, said
last week: "This could be the first war in history that was
justified largely by an illusion." Even The Wall Street Journal,
one of the administration's biggest cheerleaders, has warned of the
"widespread skepticism" the White House can expect if it does
not make significant, and undisputed, discoveries of forbidden
weapons,” it continued.
Before
the war, American intelligence officials said that they had a list of
14,000 sites where, they suspected, chemical or biological agents had
been harbored, as well as the delivery systems to deploy them. A
substantial number of those sites have been inspected by the invading
troops. Evidence to date of a "grave and gathering" threat:
precisely zero.
“Much
of what has been unearthed points to something we knew about all along:
the weapons programs that Iraq ran before the 1991 Gulf War, before
sanctions, before regular U.S. and British bombing raids in the no-fly
zones and before the UN weapons inspection regime that ran from 1991 to
1998,” according to the paper.
U.S.
troops have discovered a few suspect barrels here, a sample bottle of
nerve agent there, stacks of chemical suits and some drugs typically
used to counteract the effects of a chemical attack, such as atropine
and 2-pam chloride.
According
to many military experts, these finds suggest the vestiges of a weapons
program that has been dismantled, not one that is up and running. The
U.S. government argues that the weapons have been deliberately dispersed
and hidden - a claim that would have more merit if there were any
evidence of where the materials might have gone.
In
his State of the Union address in early February, President Bush was
quite specific about the materials he believed Saddam was hiding: 25,000
liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of plutonium toxin and 500 tons of
sarin, mustard and nerve gas. These days, he does not mention weapons of
mass destruction at all, focusing instead on the liberation of the Iraqi
people - as if liberation, not disarmament, had been the project all
along.
Refuting
U.S. claims, the paper went on, “The administration has shown its
embarrassment in other ways. On day two of the war, Donald Rumsfeld, the
Secretary of Defense, said finding and destroying weapons of mass
destruction was the invading force's number two priority after toppling
Saddam Hussein - itself a reversal of the argument presented at the UN
Security Council.
“A
week later, Victoria Clarke, the Pentagon spokeswoman, pushed the issue
further down the list, behind capturing and evicting "terrorists
sheltered in Iraq" and collecting intelligence on "terrorist
networks".
“Now
we are told that hunting for weapons is something we can expect once the
fighting is over, and that it might go on for months before yielding
significant results. "It's hard work," a plaintive Ms Clarke
said last week.
“Nonsense,
say the disarmament experts. "It's clear there wasn't much,"
said Professor Wright, "otherwise they would have run into
something by now. After all, they've taken Baghdad."
Hans
Blix, the chief UN weapons inspector who spent four months badgering the
United States and Britain in vain for reliable intelligence information
about the whereabouts of lethal weapons, now says he believes the war
was planned on entirely different criteria, well before his inspection
teams went back into Iraq in December.
"I
think the Americans started the war thinking there were some [weapons].
I think they now believe less in that possibility," he told the
Spanish daily El Pais. "You ask yourself a lot of questions when
you see the things they did to try to show that the Iraqis had nuclear
weapons, like the fake contract with Niger."
Anxious
to find a "smoking gun", a team of U.S. disarmament experts
has been set up to question Iraqis involved in weapons programs, while
others comb sites and analyze samples in the field using mobile labs.
The
move has alarmed the weapons inspectors at the UN, where Kofi Annan, the
UN Secretary General, pointedly said last week: "I think they are
the ones with the mandate to disarm Iraq, and when the situation permits
they should go back to resume their work."
The
U.S. team has attempted to lure some of the inspectors, who are
recognized as the sole legitimate international authority on Iraq's
weapons programmes.
The
latest theory being touted in Washington by the usual unnamed government
sources is that the Iraqis have moved their weapons out of the country,
very possibly into Syria.
“This
claim appears to have originated with Israeli intelligence - which has
every motivation for stirring up trouble for its “hostile” Arab
neighbors - and has been bolstered by reports of fighting between Iraqi
Special Republican Guard units and US special forces near the Syrian
border,” The Independent explained.
Disarmament
experts do not give the claim much credence. After all, any suspicious
convoy or mobile laboratory would almost certainly be spotted by U.S.
planes or spy satellites and bombed long before it reached Syria.
“But
the notion does provide the hawks in Washington with a compelling plot
device not unlike the McGuffin factor in Alfred Hitchcock's films - a
catalyst that may or may not have significance in itself but that gets
the suspense going and keeps the story rolling.
“If
the Bush administration should ever seek to turn its military wrath on
Damascus, the weapons of mass destruction it is failing to find in Iraq
might just provide the excuse once again,” concluded the paper.