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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mark Konrad who wrote (15737)3/5/2003 3:43:47 PM
From: Volsi Mimir  Respond to of 25898
 
Are there records on bio weapons development and/or (human) testing available beyond 1995?--
another report
also at the end is a link to the whole Iraq database thru the years. This report:
fas.org
[snip]....Initially Iraq denied having ever had any offensive biological weapons program or activities. [snip]

On 22 June 1996, the Government of Iraq submitted a declaration which it stated to contain its official FFCD on the proscribed biological weapons program. This document of 622 pages was essentially a copy of the May 1996 draft. [S/1996/848] According to Iraq, all biological warfare munitions, agents and documents related to the proscribed biological warfare activities had been destroyed unilaterally, even though such action, if it occurred, would have been in violation of the directives of the Security Council.[S/1997/774]

Iraq requested that its biological weapons Full, Final and Complete Disclosure of September 1997 be assessed, again, by international experts during a special meeting for that purpose which was held in Baghdad in July 1998. International experts assembled by UNSCOM had examined Iraq's biological weapons declarations on three previous occasions and expressed the unanimous view that Iraq's disclosures were incomplete, inadequate and technically flawed. The UNSCOM Executive Chairman proposed that the July 1998 meeting focus primarily on the material balance of biological weapons produced and disposed of by Iraq. Iraq agreed to this proposal. [S/1998/920]This required the following key elements of the material balance to be considered and analysed :

growth media such as yeast extract, casein or thioglycollate
microorganisms
production of bulk BW agents microorganisms or their toxins
production of munitions
the union of bulk biological or toxin agents with munitions to make BW weapons
the destruction of unused bulk agents and munitions
ultimately the use or destruction of the weapons
Iraq declared that it had produced and filled with biological weapons agents special warheads for the Al Hussein missiles and R-400 aerial bombs. Iraq also disclosed the development of biological weapons spray tanks and some other weapon systems for the delivery of biological weapons agents.[S/1998/920] Iraq has not provided any evidence to support its account of what agents were filled into munitions, the quantity of agents consumed in the filling process, and the quantity and type of munitions filled with each agent. Within the overall production figures of CW and BW R-400 bombs, it is not possible to determine how many weapons were filled with particular biological weapons agents.[UNSCOM 03 June 98]

Growth media. The material balance in this area as declared by Iraq is full of uncertainties. The acquisition of media by Iraq cannot be verified. The figures presented in the full, final and complete disclosure for media consumed in the production of biological weapons agents have little or no supporting evidence. The international expert team assessed that the material balance for the growth media could not be verified. [S/1998/920] Substantial quantities of microbial growth media are not reported and/or not included in the material balance. Iraq has not reported all of the purchases of growth media for the BW program imported by Iraq's main procurement agency for the BW program, the Technical and Scientific Materials Import Division (TSMID). For example, the quantity of yeast extract [known to UNSCOM] imported for Iraq's BW program by TSMID and not reported by Iraq is sufficient for 3 to 4 times more anthrax production than declared by Iraq in the FFCD. On 29 May 1998, Iraq stated that this is due to confusion on the part of UNSCOM between media ordered for the Forensic Laboratory versus for the BW program. Because the import has not been acknowledged, this media has not been accounted for by Iraq in its material balance calculations. Even among the growth media reported by Iraq, there are unresolved discrepancies in accounting for consumed media, lost/stolen/discarded media and media remaining after bulk agent production ceased. [UNSCOM 03 June 98]
Biological weapons agents -- The level of production of bulk biological weapons agents remains unverifiable. The international experts came to the conclusion that the material balance of biological weapons bulk agents, including those weaponized, could not be verified. It is not possible to determine if biological weapons agents produced were dried to enhance storage stability. [S/1998/920] Iraq has not provided a credible accounting of bulk agent production. No production documents have been provided to support Iraq's statements on production of anthrax spores, botulinum toxin and spores, gas gangrene spores or aflatoxin. Iraq has stated that the production figures are only estimates. Explanations offered for not using fermenters at various time periods, or for relatively high production failure rates, or for fermenters being unused are not consistent with information available to UNSCOM. The Technical Evaluation Meeting (TEM) between UNSCOM international experts from 15 countries and Iraq convened in Vienna concluded that there is an unexpected and unexplained discrepancy between production capability and stated agent production. Iraq maintained that it was difficult if not impossible to provide any verifiable account for bulk production of BW agents because relevant documents had been unilaterally destroyed rather than made available to UNSCOM. [UNSCOM 03 June 98] The FFCD does not adequately support the actual production quantities of the four BW agents( Clostridium perfringens (Gas gangrene), Clostridium botulinum (botulinum toxin), Bacillus anthracis (anthrax) and aflatoxin) acknowledged to be intended for weaponisation. Iraq maintained that the core document for production data was the "1990 Al Hakam Report" and that production was based on availability of equipment and personnel as well as the filling requirements for weapons. Iraq claims that there was no strategic plan or a co-ordinated effort for agent production. Iraq has contended in the FFCD that the BW program turned to existing fermenters within Iraq only after external acquisition sources failed. Evidence does not support this as such existing sources were already obtained before external contracts were sought. Similarly, Iraq contends that initial production of botulinum toxin was dependent on availability of growth media. This is not supported by the evidence. Overall, the UNSCOM expert team considered that production equipment acquisition was better planned and co-ordinated than portrayed by Iraq. [UNSCOM 08 April 1998] UNSCOM experts' calculations of possible agent production quantities, either by equipment capacity or by growth media amounts, far exceed Iraq's stated results. Significant periods when the fermenters were claimed not to be utilized are unexplained, especially for a period after August 1990, when Iraq's BW production facilities were ordered to operate at their maximum capacity. Stated low productivity of readily available equipment has not been adequately explained. The idle times for fermenter utilization and low productivity are technically not credible. [S/1997/774]
Aflatoxin Production Declared production of the biological warfare agent aflatoxin is inaccurate and could not have occurred using the process stated by Iraq. In its June 1996 FFCD, Iraq claimed that, in September 1990, it had zero balance on hand, having produced only 410 litres of aflatoxin that were nearly totally consumed by weapons field trials. Careful analysis by UNSCOM showed that the quantity produced would have been inadequate for the declared number of field trials. Iraq claimed to have produced 1,782 litres of aflatoxin for filling weapons from 1 October to 31 December 1990. Given the facilities, equipment and personnel available, such large production would not have been possible. A new account of aflatoxin production and weaponization is contained in the September 1997 FFCD, but the changes are not adequately explained or supported by documentary evidence. The new account is no more credible than the June 1996 version.[S/1997/774]
Field Trials Iraq's biological warfare field trials are underreported and inadequately described to allow for proper verification. Documents obtained by UNSCOM in August 1995 and interview statements of some Iraqi personnel involved in the trials provided details sufficiently different from the accounts given in the FFCD to conclude that there had been undisclosed field trials. The accounts of weapons field trials have a direct impact on the material balance of biological warfare agent production. Contrary to its own previous declarations, Iraq, in its September 1997 FFCD, denied a field trial with six R400 aerial bombs filled with botulinum toxin, simulant B or aflatoxin.[S/1997/774]
Al Hussein missile warheads -- UNSCOM has not been able to verify the biological weapons missile warheads material balance, including production and destruction. Iraq asserted that as many as 25 Al Hussein special warheads were produced for filling with BW agents. Iraq has provided different written accounts and oral accounts concerning the destruction of these 25 BW agent filled warheads it acknowledged having produced [UNSCOM 03 June 98]. Accounts have changed over time. One week after the end of the July 1998 meeting, a senior Iraqi official stated that instead of the declared five anthrax and sixteen botulinum toxin missile warheads, there had been in fact sixteen anthrax and five botulinum toxin missile warheads filled. The official insisted that this change in disclosure would not affect Iraq's declaration on the total quantity of biological weapons agents produced and weaponized. Iraq did not present any supporting documents or other specific evidence to substantiate the new statement. This new explanation contradicted all accounts of the unilateral destruction of special warheads, including those filled with biological warfare agents, that had been provided for the previous three years by Iraqi personnel directly involved in warhead filling and destruction activities. [S/1998/920]
R-400 aerial bombs -- Production documents have been provided by Iraq to support R400-type aerial bomb production. However, numbers submitted by Iraq for the unilateral destruction of chemical/biological-warfare R400 bombs are such that it appears that more munitions were destroyed than were produced.[S/1998/920] R400 quality control acceptance documentation by the Air Force has been provided for the period June to September 1990. There is no evidence that production ended in September, and during June through September 1990, 1359 bombs were produced, but Iraq asserts that only 1242 were delivered to Muthanna State Establishment, Al Hakam, or to the Air Force. Iraq states that the remaining 117 bombs were melted in 1991 and not filled with CW or BW agents. However, this account can not be verified. Iraq has provided some evidence of destruction. Physical evidence supports Iraq's account that some BW agent filled R400 bombs were destroyed at a firing range called Azzizziyia. However, laboratory analysis of the contents of three bombs recovered does not support Iraq's account of their filling. [UNSCOM 03 June 98] As determined by the team of international experts, none of the sub-components of the R-400 bombs material balance could be verified. No evidence exists as to the total number of weapons filled and no consistent explanation was provided for the allocation of biological weapons agents to weapons. [S/1998/920] A diary of a military officer was provided by Iraq as evidence of unilateral destruction of 157 bombs of R400 type. Interview testimony supports the assertion that at least some of the bombs were biological agent-filled. Excavation by the Commission of their destruction site has identified up to 25 destroyed R400 bombs, most with a black stripe allegedly indicative of a biological warfare bomb to be filled with either botulinum toxin (BTX) or anthrax spores. Further analysis has revealed evidence of decontaminated BTX in two such bombs recovered relatively intact. What is still unknown is whether all of the R400 bombs were biological agent-filled or some were filled with chemical warfare agents; whether 157 R400 bombs was the total number of such bombs filled with biological warfare agents; and how many such bombs were produced for biological agent filling. [S/1997/774]
Drop tanks -- The modified drop tank -- a device to spray weapons-grade biological warfare agent from fighter aircraft -- appears to be the most efficient for the delivery of biological warfare agents produced by Iraq. [UNSCOM 03 June 98] The development of the drop tank for dissemination of biological weapons agents appears to have been pursued with the utmost vigour by Iraq. The team of international experts assessed that the account in the full, final and complete disclosure of the drop tank project could not be verified. [S/1998/920]
Aerosol generator -- Aerosol generators for biological weapons agents were developed by Iraq by modification of helicopter-borne commercial chemical insecticide disseminators. A document was submitted by Iraq that reports the successful testing of such devices in August 1988. Iraq did not account for the final disposition of the devices produced. The expert team assessed that the account of the biological weapons aerosol generators could not be verified. [S/1998/920] Iraq has stated that the activity related to this aerosol disseminating device was not mentioned in the 1997 declaration because the effort was primitive and inconsequential [UNSCOM 03 June 98].

In June 1998 Iraq once again declared that the biological weapons program had been obliterated. It stated that it would not revise its declaration of full, final and complete disclosure. At that time UNSCOM proposed a shift in methodology to focus on the munitions end of the programme. [S/1998/529]
The international expert team at the July 1998 meeting concluded that Iraq's full, final and complete disclosure, in its totality, could not be verified. The team recommended that no further verification of Iraq's current biological weapons full, final and complete disclosure be conducted at the senior international expert level, until Iraq commits itself to provide substantive, new information. [S/1998/920]

The Iraq index:
fas.org