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"We
are looking at scientists and technicians here, not
politicians," Boucher
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WASHINGTON,
December 23 (IslamOnline.net) – The United States plans to make the
best of the elite Iraqi scientists and technicians, who helped develop
the military arsenal and weapons program of the ousted regime, to
prevent them from selling their expertise to other countries or
terrorist groups, media reports said according to the U.S. State
Department.
"We
are looking at scientists and technicians here, not politicians, not
political people. If there are issues that arise with regard to
individuals, those issues will be looked at," Department
Spokesman Richard Boucher told a recently-held press conference in
Washington.
Boucher
said that the program would begin with a $2 million U.S. contribution,
and the United States may provide as much as $20 million more later.
He
said that the U.S. intended to establish a new office in Baghdad to
enhance the "peaceful research" program. The office will be
named "The International Iraqi Center for Sciences and
Industry".
The
center is expected to be operational within six months after its
inauguration, with analysts describing it as a "prison" for
the highly decorated scientists.
The
revelation coincided with arrests of some Iraqi scientists by U.S.
troops.
Iraq's
interim scientific research and education minister Ziyad Abd said that
the scientists are currently being questioned on the country's alleged
weapons of mass destruction, the central rationale used by the U.S. to
invade Iraq.
The
U.S., in effect, regards the Iraqi scientists as the bedrock of
developing the weapons programs and arsenal that gave Washington and
its close allies worldwide a cause for concern.
Following
the invasion, many Iraqi scientists vanished into thin air when they
felt that their lives were at a real risk.
The
Israeli daily Maariv reported last April that Israeli death
squads had been sent to Iraq to
liquidate some 500 Iraqi scientists, who were involved in the
country's biological and chemical weapons.
The
paper said the scientists were the same ones who were listed by U.N.
weapons inspectors for interviews during their mandate in Iraq before
the invasion which started March 20.
A
number of scientists and university professors had further sent an SOS
e-mail, complaining that the U.S. occupation forces were threatening
their lives.