Powell's speech at a glance 
                                                           Minute-by-minute coverage of Colin Powell's                                                          presentation to the security council 
  guardian.co.uk
                                                           Simon Jeffery                                                          Wednesday February 5, 2003 
                                                           3.35pm: Mr Powell begins his                                                          presentation. He tells the security                                                          council that the resolution returning the                                                          inspectors placed the onus on Iraq to                                                          disarm, not for the inspectors to disarm                                                          it. He quotes Hans Blix's assessment                                                          that Iraq had not acknowledged the                                                          need to disarm.
                                                           3.40pm: He says the evidence he will                                                          show the security council will                                                          demonstrate Iraq is not disarming but in                                                          fact rebuilding its weapons of mass                                                          destruction. He plays a tape he says                                                          was intercepted by intelligence officials                                                          between two Iraqi officers                                                          acknowledging Mohamed el-Baradei                                                          was visiting the following day and                                                          discusssing what to do with a "modified                                                          vehicle".
                                                           3.45pm: He plays a second tape, recorded last month, that he                                                          says contains orders to hide weapons from the inspectors. Mr                                                          Powell describes it as part of a 12-year-old Iraqi policy to not                                                          cooperate with inspectors. He gives the security council details                                                          of an Iraqi special committee - answering to Saddam Hussein -                                                          to monitor the inspectors.
                                                           3.47pm: Iraq's 12,000-page declaration of its weapons of mass                                                          destruction is described as "false" by the US secretary of state.                                                          He says his evidence is backed up by "solid" sources, and says                                                          Iraqi officials are hiding banned materials in their homes and                                                          cars to prevent them falling into the inspectors' hands.
                                                           3.50pm: He says the US has satellite photographs showing                                                          weapons materials being moved. He shows a wepons storage                                                          facility at Taji he says has active chemical weapons bunkers.                                                          The bunkers were cleared before the inspectors arrived. Mr                                                          Powell says Iraq is tapping the inspectors' communications to                                                          find out where they are going.
                                                           3.55pm: A satellite image of a frequently monitored ballistic                                                          weapons facility is shown with trucks moving materials a few                                                          days before inspectors arrive. Mr Powell says the same pattern                                                          has been repeated at 30 sites since the inspectors returned.
                                                           3.57pm: Saddam Hussein warned scientists that disclosing                                                          information would be punishable by death and that if they left the                                                          country for interviews they would be treated as spies. Officials                                                          were also given guidance in how to mislead inspectors.
                                                           4.01pm: He says Iraq has placed itself in danger of "serious                                                          consequences" by failing the tests in resolution 1441 and the                                                          security council risks irrelevence if it allows its orders to be                                                          ignored. "How much longer are we willing to put up with Iraq's                                                          noncompliance before we as a council, we as the United                                                          Nations say: 'Enough. Enough'," he asks.
                                                           4.05pm: Moving onto biological weapons he says Iraq has not                                                          accounted for all the 85,000 litres of anthrax it declared to the                                                          first inspection regime and details mobile biological weapons                                                          factories moved around on wheels and rails revealed to the US                                                          by a defector. There are both research and production facilities,                                                          he says, which operated from Thursday to Friday evenings                                                          because Iraqi officials knew inspectors would not visit on the                                                          Muslim holy day.
                                                           4.10pm: He says Iraq has seven to 18 such laboratories, which                                                          he illustrates with an image of a lorry packed with scientific                                                          equipment. The factories can produce anthrax and botulinium.                                                          He shows footage of a Iraqi Mirage fighter jet equipped with                                                          sprayer tanks dispensing 2,000 litres of simulated anthrax.
                                                           4.13pm: Mr Powell says there is furthermore evidence that Iraq                                                          has destroyed the chemical weapons it admitted to having. He                                                          says the US knows Iraq has put elements of its chemical                                                          weapons programmes into its permitted infrastructure to hide                                                          them. Iraq designed its programmes to be inspected, he says.
                                                           4.16pm: He shows a slide of chemical weapons leaving the                                                          al-Mussayyib facilities corraborated by a defector who saw the                                                          weapons go. A later slide shows bulldozers taking the topsoil                                                          around the plant to remove chemical traces. 
                                                           4.19pm: Another intercept has an Iraqi army colonel telling a                                                          captain to "remove the expression 'nerve agents' wherever it                                                          comes up in the wireless instructions".
                                                           4.21pm: Iraq has 100-150 tonnes of chemical agents and the                                                          intent to use them, Mr Powell says. He quotes a source who                                                          told intelligence officers that 1,600 death row prisoners were                                                          used in chemical weapons experiments. "Saddam's inhumanity                                                          has no limits," he tells the security council.
                                                           4.25pm: President Saddam attempted to obtain high tolerance                                                          aluminium tubes that can be adapted for enriching uranium after                                                          inspectors returned at the end of last year. Mr Powell says Iraq                                                          at present has two of the three components needed to make a                                                          nuclear bomb. It has also attempted to aquire magnets for                                                          nuclear weapons manufacture.
                                                           4.30pm: Delivery systems above the permitted 150km                                                          maximum limit for ballistic missiles include a dozen prohibited                                                          al-Husayn and al-Abbas missiles with ranges of 600km and                                                          900km. Saddam has attempted to acquire missile engines since                                                          the inspectors returned and wants missiles with a range                                                          exceeding 1000km, Mr Powell says.
                                                           4.33pm: Iraq is also developing small unmanned aeroplanes                                                          with a range of 500km to deliver weapons, he tells the council.
                                                           4.37pm: Mr Powells says Baghdad has an agent in an al-Qaida                                                          linked terrorist group in northern Iraq that gave sanctuary to the                                                          group's members when they were driven from Afghanistan by the                                                          US military campaign. He says terrorists have been based in                                                          Baghdad for the last eight months coordinating operations in the                                                          Middle East and beyond. He names an "al-Qaida linked                                                          terrorist", Al-Zarqawi, who has colleagues in Chechnya who                                                          harbour ambitions to kill Russians with toxins and also in the                                                          UK poison cell that has manufactured ricin, he says.
                                                           4.44pm: He says he is "not comforted" by the idea that a                                                          secular Iraqi regime would not work with religiously motivated                                                          groups such as al-Qaida. Mr Powell says "hatred and ambition"                                                          unite Iraq and al-Qaida. Tells council that the "nexus of Iraq and                                                          terror" is decades old but the role of toxins is new.
                                                           4.47pm: Mr Powell discloses the testimony of a senior al-Qaida                                                          official who revealed that he received training in Iraq.
                                                           4.49pm: Details ethnic cleansing against Kurds and Marsh                                                          Arabs in "Saddam's police state" and says the Iraqi leader has                                                          "utter contempt" for human life. "Given his determination to                                                          exact revenge on those who oppose him should we take the                                                          risk," he asks. "Leaving Saddam Hussein alone for a few more                                                          months with weapons of mass destruction is not an option," he                                                          says. 
                                                           4.51pm: "We wrote 1441 to give Iraq one last chance, Iraq is so                                                          far not taking that one last chance. We must not shrink from the                                                          task that is ahead of us," he concludes. |