France provided Iraq with aircraft to launch AMDs By Paul Michaud, Special to Arab News
arabnews.com
PARIS, 17 October — The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is accusing France of having provided Iraq with the aircraft permitting it to carry and launch arms of massive destruction (AMDs), according to a major document published in the Oct. 16 issue of Le Monde.
In the story, written by Le Monde’s intelligence specialist Jacques Isnard, the CIA — in a 24-page document titled “Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program” — is said to accuse France of having provided Iraq with the aircraft — notably the Mirage F1-EQ — which has been specially adapted to carry biological weapons.
According to the document, Iraq had adapted its fleet of Mirages back in the 1990s to carry 2200-liter containers of biochemical agents under their fuselage, with the report also specifying that three types of chemicals were destined to be carried in the containers: permanganate of potassium, glycerin, or bacillus subtilis, also known as Anthrax B.
The report says that tests were carried out at the time at the Abu Obeydi military base near the junction of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, but the CIA does not specify whether the aircraft remained adapted to carry the biochemical weapons at the time of UN-mandated inspections that ended in 1998.
Isnard notes that although Iraq has received a significant number of military aircraft from Russia, only France is named as being a source of the aircraft that has, according to the CIA, given Iraq the means of transporting AMDs and launching them.
The document also says that France has provided Iraq with “more than 120” Mirage F1-EQs since 1982, but that presently only 12 to 15 of them are in use, the remainder having been “cannibalized” to provide the existing fleet with spare parts.
French intelligence sources have told Isnard that “there exists a basis” for the CIA’s accusations, but that, in their estimation — that of the French Direction generale de la securite exterieure (DGSE, the French equivalent of the CIA) — the CIA is at least just as guilty as the French for toying around with biological weapons, notably with its special operation of 1966.
During the 1966 trials the CIA spread a non-lethal biochemical substance — the well-named bacillus subtilis — in nine stations of the New York subway system, and this, claimed the organization a decade later, was to warn the US government of how vulnerable America was if ever a bacteriological war were launched on its soil. |