Iraq: the myth and the reality
As the drumbeat grows louder for a possible attack on Baghdad, we ask arms inspectors and military and foreign affairs experts: is Saddam as dangerous as the US makes out, and what would be the consequences of war?
Julian Borger in Washington, Richard Norton-Taylor, Ewen MacAskill and Brian Whitaker Guardian
Friday March 15, 2002
1. Does Iraq have, or is it developing, weapons of mass destruction?
The case for military action against Saddam Hussein stands or falls on this apparently simple factual question. President George Bush and his deputy, Dick Cheney, backed by Tony Blair, claim there is no doubt that Baghdad possesses and could use weapons of mass destruction, and so, as Mr Bush put it, "inaction is not an option".
Most analysts, however, concede that there is considerable doubt about the extent of Saddam's weapons programme, and about how dangerous it could be to the rest of the world. What is not in doubt is that Saddam has a record of aggressively pursuing the acquisition of weapons of mass destruction, and has had more than three years since the UN weapons inspectors withdrew to try to reconstitute his former nuclear, biological and chemical programmes.
At the centre of the debate on Iraq's weapons capability are the inspectors from the now-defunct United Nations Special Commission on Iraq (Unscom), who spent seven years, from 1991 to 1998, attempting to gain access to the regime's arms facilities. Despite their shared technical background, not all of them can agree on the facts.
Charles Duelfer, an American who was deputy chairman of Unscom, believes the Iraqis still have dangerous weapons in their arsenal - probably not nuclear warheads, but possibly chemical weapons and, almost certainly and most worryingly, biological agents.
"The biological issue is the biggest issue and the least understood," Mr Duelfer says. "[Saddam] has mobile labs, which have the capacity to produce stuff in large quantities, and he's continuing to build weapons."
Mr Duelfer's judgment is that Iraq "retained a missile capability that could constitute a strategic reserve; how effective that would be is an open question".
Not effective at all, says Scott Ritter, who stands as a vocal minority at the other end of the former arms inspector divide. While in Unscom he gained the reputation of being one of its most aggressive sleuths, but he has since sharply shifted tack and is today a leading sceptic on the issue.
Mr Ritter is sure the Iraqis never succeeded in turning their chemical and biological agents into a weapon that could spray its lethal warhead over a large area.
"They lacked an effective dispensing mechanism. That requires specific capabilities, like bomblets, and the ability to aerosolise the weapon. Missiles require a precise fusing mechanism which Iraq never had."
Although Mr Ritter concedes that 5-10% of Iraq's known pre-1990 stockpile of chemical and biological arms has not been accounted for, he argues that even if Saddam had tried to hide this remnant of his arsenal "it would no longer be viable". Weapons built before the Gulf war that slipped through the Unscom net would by now have passed their sell-by date.
Ali Muhsin Hamid, the Arab League's ambassador in London, agrees. UN inspectors destroyed 95% of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, and the remaining 5% has been rendered unuseable by the fact that Iraq is prevented under sanctions from replacing equipment needed to deploy them.
Ben Bradshaw, the Foreign Office minister responsible for the Middle East, including policy on Iraq, has no doubts that "Iraq has and is developing weapons of mass destruction. We cannot afford to ignore his weapons".
More specifically, Saddam is developing new missile-launching technology that would allow him to strike beyond the 150km (93-mile) limit imposed by the UN. Israel and several Gulf states would lie within his range.
Most analysts believe that Iraq has so far failed to procure long-range missiles able to deliver weapons of mass destruction. However, it has developed an unmanned aerial vehicle modelled on a converted jet trainer aircraft, which the CIA said recently had been adapted to deliver chemical or, more likely, biological warfare agents.
The most vexed area of disagreement relates to the most profound fear: is Saddam building nuclear weapons? Western intelligence agencies and independent analysts all agree that nuclear weapons are far more difficult to develop than chemical or biological, simply because of the difficulty involved in acquiring fissile material.
Rosemary Hollis, head of the Middle East programme at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, says that from discussions with nuclear scientists it seemed clear that Iraq does not have the capacity to build nuclear weapons. She suggests that the emphasis now on Saddam's nuclear ambitions is dictated by Washington's plans for a pre-emptive strike on Iraq.
Mr Bradshaw believes that Iraq has restarted its nuclear weapons programme. "Saddam could develop a nuclear weapon within five years," he says, though he adds that would only happen "if controls are lifted".
Opponents of military intervention such as Mr Ritter counter that even before Saddam was walled in by sanctions and international surveillance he failed to create a nuclear bomb.
Were Saddam to possess fully operational weapons of mass destruction, would he use them? Among Iraqis themselves, there is rare agreement between supporters and opponents of the Baghdad regime that Saddam is unlikely to do so. Dr Burhan Chalabi, an Iraqi-born British businessman and a strong critic of sanctions against Iraq, said deploying such weapons would serve no useful purpose. "Apart from Kuwait and Israel, Iraq has made peace with all its neighbours, including Saudi Arabia."
Brigadier-General Najib Salihi, a prominent member of the Iraqi opposition, agrees. Saddam would risk losing control of both the army and his people if he pressed the button, he says.
Mr Bradshaw points out that Saddam has already used chemical weapons against Iran and against the Kurds of northern Iraq at Halabja, attacking and killing them with mustard gas and the nerve agent tabun.
To which Mr Ritter replies: "Under international law, at what point do we justify a war about bad behaviour in the past?"
2. What evidence is there for Saddam's possession or development of weapons of mass destruction?
For the Iraqi-born Dr Chalabi, the answer is blunt: "There is no evidence."
Mr Hamid, of the Arab League, makes the same point more expansively. Talk of "evidence" is political rhetoric, he says. "Either the US aim is to force Iraq to accept the inspectors again or to have this issue burning in order to distract the attention of Arabs from the situation in the Palestinian occupied territories."
Sir John Moberly, who was the British ambassador to Baghdad between 1982 and 1985, argues that to dismiss any fear of the regime as rhetoric is to belie the evidence of history. Though he concedes he is not privy to specifics, he is familiar with Saddam's past duplicity.
"The Iraqis said they had abandoned weapons programmes but we found later when one of the leadership defected to Jordan that the programmes were continuing."
Exhibit A in the debate over Iraq's weapons of mass destruction is the final substantive report delivered by Unscom in January 1999, in which it gave an account of what biological and chemical weapons had been accounted for and what remained unknown. The document confirms that much of the pre-1990 stockpile was destroyed either in the Iran-Iraq war or under Unscom supervision. For the rest, though, the key recurring phrase was "cannot be verified".
Colonel Terry Taylor, a former UN inspector in Iraq, says he and his colleagues had proof that the Iraqis had weaponised anthrax, botulinum toxin and aflatoxin. They also carried out research and development work on other agents including ricin (a toxin) and animal and plant agents, and had several hundreds of tons of mustard agent in missiles, artillery and rocket form, as well as a weaponised version of the nerve agent sarin.
"The most worrying outstanding issue is that Unscom had documentary proof that the Iraqis had acquired hundreds of tons of the chemicals essential to the production of VX nerve agent - one of the most deadly nerve agents developed in recent times. They refused to disclose the location and confirm the quantities."
Col Taylor adds that the Iraqi engineers and scientists are still in place to develop and produce similar weapons. "Having been at close quarters with these programmes over a number of years in Iraq I concluded that they would make every effort to conceal their weapons of mass destruction programmes and continue to develop them as far as possible."
Mr Duelfer described as "very credible" an Iraqi defector named Adnan al-Haideri who fled Iraq last year. Mr al-Haideri, a civil engineer, claimed that he had worked on renovations to secret weapons of mass destruction facilities concealed in private villas, wells and under the Saddam Hussein hospital in Baghdad.
Evidence of a nuclear capability is sketchy. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which is responsible for monitoring nuclear weapons and which is still making visits to Iraq, is upbeat, concluding recently that there is no sign of a surviving programme.
However, the comfort that affords is undermined by Mr Duelfer and Mr Ritter who for once can agree that the IAEA has proved largely ineffectual. Key components of three prototype nuclear bombs are reported to have been made before the Gulf war but were never handed over, including the high explosive "lenses" designed to force the fissile core to implode.
However, according to Mr Ritter the same Iraqi source which revealed the existence of the three lenses also said that the delicate devices had been roughly handled and wrecked by Saddam's Special Republican Guard. "What the Iraqis retained is useless," he says.
Mr Duelfer accepts that it is unlikely Saddam has a nuclear bomb, but argues that there is credible evidence from defectors and other intelligence that the Iraqi leader is marshalling his nuclear experts to have a fresh attempt at building a bomb.
3. Would an offer to allow UN weapons inspectors back into Iraq be a meaningful and sufficient response to negate the threat of military force?
Again, the experts at the centre of the dispute - the arms inspectors - cannot agree. The most optimistic view comes from Hans Blix, the Swedish head of Unmovic, which in 1999 replaced Unscom after it was expelled from Iraq. He is confident that once his newly trained 230-strong team of inspectors are back in Iraq they will have a real impact. He is also certain that this route would be a much safer and more efficient way of removing the fangs from the regime than a military offensive.
"Ten years and thousands of inspections and reports later it is recognised that Unscom's efforts probably led to the destruction of more weapons of mass destruction than did the Gulf war," he says.
Mr Duelfer, with years of experience of Saddam's evasions, is less sanguine about Unmovic's chances. "Blix can do no more than what Iraq permits and the security council is willing to back up," he says, pointing out that as a UN body, it would have to make its information and intelligence available to countries such as France, Russia and China, which have had a history of sympathy and cooperation with Iraq.
Sir John Moberly thinks that if the Iraqis did allow the inspectors back, they would take much wind out of US military sails. "It will be very difficult to carry out any attack and maintain support internationally if Iraq has complied."
Other analysts suggest the US is adopting a cynical approach. For Mr Ritter, no Iraqi response would be sufficient to stop an attack by an administration that has set its sights on "regime change".
Dr Chalabi also sees a double game being played. "If the Americans have made up their mind to attack Iraq, they don't need any excuse such as demanding to send inspectors back. This is just spin to prepare public opinion for an attack."
Mr Hamid, of the Arab League, says the only way to convince Arabs that the US is genuine in its resolve to deal with weapons of mass destruction is to tackle Israel's nuclear arsenal as well as Iraq's. "If the Israeli weapons are looked at, the Arabs will feel that the US is serious, fair, even-handed and objective."
In the strategy being pursued by Washington and London, access to UN inspectors and military action are inextricably linked - one depends on the other. The British government now shares the Bush administration's view that there is no chance of Saddam allowing in UN inspectors without a credible threat of serious military action.
Col Taylor agrees with that view. For him, bargaining is not on the agenda. "You have to demonstrate to Baghdad that substantial and credible military action will take place. You cannot negotiate with Saddam Hussein." guardian.co.uk Continued |