October 7, 2004
U.S. 'Almost All Wrong' on Weapons
Report on Iraq Contradicts Bush Administration Claims
By Dana Priest and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, October 7, 2004; Page A01
The 1991 Persian Gulf War and subsequent U.N. inspections
destroyed Iraq's illicit weapons capability and, for the
most part, Saddam Hussein did not try to rebuild it,
according to an extensive report by the chief U.S. weapons
inspector in Iraq that contradicts nearly every prewar
assertion made by top administration officials about Iraq.
Charles A. Duelfer, whom the Bush administration chose to
complete the U.S. investigation of Iraq's weapons programs,
said Hussein's ability to produce nuclear weapons had
"progressively decayed" since 1991. Inspectors, he
said, found no evidence of "concerted efforts to
restart the program."
The findings were similar on biological and chemical
weapons. While Hussein had long dreamed of developing an
arsenal of biological agents, his stockpiles had been
destroyed and research stopped years before the United
States led the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. Duelfer said
Hussein hoped someday to resume a chemical weapons effort
after U.N. sanctions ended, but had no stocks and had not
researched making the weapons for a dozen years.
Duelfer's report, delivered yesterday to two
congressional committees, represents the government's most
definitive accounting of Hussein's weapons programs, the
assumed strength of which the Bush administration presented
as a central reason for the war. While previous reports have
drawn similar conclusions, Duelfer's assessment went beyond
them in depth, detail and level of certainty.
"We were almost all wrong" on Iraq, Duelfer
told a Senate panel yesterday.
President Bush, Vice President Cheney and other top
administration officials asserted before the U.S. invasion
that Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear weapons program,
had chemical and biological weapons and maintained links to
al Qaeda affiliates to whom it might give such weapons to
use against the United States.
But after extensive interviews with Hussein and his key
lieutenants, Duelfer concluded that Hussein was not
motivated by a desire to strike the United States with
banned weapons, but wanted them to enhance his image in the
Middle East and to deter Iran, against which Iraq had fought
a devastating eight-year war. Hussein believed that "WMD
helped save the regime multiple times," the report
said.
The report also provides a one-of-a-kind look at
Hussein's personality. The former Iraqi leader participated
in numerous interviews with one Arabic-speaking FBI
interrogator. Hussein told his questioner he felt threatened
by U.S. military power, but even then, he maintained a
fondness for American movies and literature. One of his
favorite books was Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and
the Sea." He hoped for improved relations with the
United States and, over several years, sent proposals
through intermediaries to open a dialogue with Washington.
Hussein, the report concluded, "aspired to develop a
nuclear capability" and intended to work on rebuilding
chemical and biological weapons after persuading the United
Nations to lift sanctions. But the report also notes:
"The former regime had no formal written strategy or
plan for the revival of WMD after sanctions. Neither was
there an identifiable group of WMD policy makers or planners
separate from Saddam" tasked to take this up once
sanctions ended.
Among the most diplomatically explosive revelations was
that Hussein had established a worldwide network of
companies and countries, most of them U.S. allies, that
secretly helped Iraq generate $11 billion in illegal income
and locate, finance and import banned services and
technologies. Among those named are officials or companies
from Belarus, China, Lebanon, France, Indonesia, Jordan,
Poland, Russia, Turkey, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and
Yemen.
Duelfer said one of Hussein's main strategic goals was to
persuade the United Nations to lift economic sanctions,
which had devastated the country's economy and, along with
U.N. inspections, had forced him to stop weapons programs.
Even as Hussein became more adept at bypassing the
sanctions, he worked to erode international support for
them.
Democrats seized on the exhaustive report, which comes
amid a presidential race dominated so far by the Iraq war,
to argue that the administration misled the American public
about the risk Hussein posed and then miscalculated the
difficulties of securing postwar peace.
"Now we have a report today that there clearly were
no weapons of mass destruction," Sen. John Edwards
(N.C.), the Democratic vice presidential candidate, said in
West Palm Beach, Fla. "All of that known, and Dick
Cheney said again last night that he would have done
everything the same. George Bush has said he would have done
everything the same. . . . They are in a complete state of
denial about what is happening in Iraq."
Neither Bush nor challenger John F. Kerry spoke directly
about the report yesterday, though at a campaign appearance
in Pennsylvania the president emphasized that Hussein was a
threat to the United States.
"There was a risk -- a real risk -- that Saddam
Hussein would pass weapons or materials or information to
terrorist networks," Bush said. "In the world
after September 11th, that was a risk we could not afford to
take."
Supporters rallied around the administration, which has
suffered a string of setbacks recently with revelations that
the CIA had warned the White House about the strength of
Iraqi insurgents, and from former Iraq administrator L. Paul
Bremer, who said this week that the United States should
have put more troops in Iraq during the invasion.
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) said: "We
didn't have to find plans or weapons to see what happened
when Saddam Hussein used chemical and biological weapons on
his own people. So just because we can't find them and
Saddam Hussein had 12 years to hide them doesn't mean he
didn't have them and didn't use them."
But Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) said the report
showed U.N. inspections and sanctions had worked in
preventing Hussein from pursuing his weapons ambitions.
"Despite the effort to focus on Saddam's desires and
intentions, the bottom line is Iraq did not have either
weapons stockpiles or active production capabilities at the
time of the war."
Duelfer's report contradicted a number of specific claims
administration officials made before the war.
It found, for example, that Iraq's "crash"
program in 1991 to build a nuclear weapon before the Persian
Gulf War was far from successful, and was nowhere near being
months away from producing a weapon, as the administration
asserted. Only micrograms of enriched uranium were produced
and no weapon design was completed. The CIA and
administration officials have said they were surprised by
the advanced state of Iraq's pre-1991 nuclear program, which
was discovered after the war, and therefore were more prone
to overestimate Iraq's capability when solid proof was
unavailable.
There also was no evidence that Iraq possessed or was
developing a mobile biological weapons production system, an
assertion Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and others made
before the invasion. The two trailers that were found in
early 2003 were "almost certainly designed and built .
. . exclusively for the generation of hydrogen" gas.
Duelfer also found no information to support allegations
that Iraq sought uranium from Africa or any other country
after 1991, as Bush once asserted in a major speech before
the invasion. The only two contacts with Niger that were
discovered were an invitation to the president of Niger to
visit Baghdad, and a visit to Baghdad by a Niger minister in
2001 seeking petroleum products for cash. There was one
offer to Iraq of "yellowcake" uranium, and that
was from a Ugandan businessman offering uranium from Congo.
The deal was turned down, and the Ugandan was told that
Baghdad was not interested because of the sanctions.
Nuclear
Weapons
Despite the U.S. intelligence judgment that Iraq in 2002
had reconstituted its nuclear weapons program, Duelfer
reported that after 1991, Baghdad's nuclear program had
"progressively decayed." He added that the Iraq
Survey Group investigators had found no evidence "to
suggest concerted efforts to restart the program."
There was an attempt to keep nuclear scientists together
and two scientists were discovered to have saved documents
and technology related to the uranium enrichment program,
but they appeared to be the exception.
Although some steps were taken that could have helped
restart the nuclear program, using oil-for-food money,
Duelfer concluded that his team "uncovered no
indication that Iraq had resumed fissile material or nuclear
weapons research and development activities since
1991."
Biological
Weapons
Duelfer's report is the first U.S. intelligence
assessment to state flatly that Iraq had secretly destroyed
its biological weapons stocks in the early 1990s. By 1995,
though, and under U.N. pressure, it abandoned its efforts.
The document rules out the possibility that biological
weapons might have been hidden, or perhaps smuggled into
another country, and it finds no evidence of secret
biological laboratories or ongoing research that could be
firmly linked to a weapons program.
Some biological "seed stocks" -- frozen samples
of relatively common microbes such as bolutinum -- were
found in the home of one Iraqi official last year. But the
survey team said Iraq had "probably" destroyed any
bulk quantities of germs it had at the height of the program
in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The team also found no evidence of stocks of the smallpox
virus, which the administration had claimed it had.
Chemical
Weapons
Duelfer's report said that no chemical weapons existed
and that there is no evidence of attempts to make such
weapons over the past 12 years. Iraq retained dual-use
equipment that could be used for such an effort.
"The issue is that he has chemical weapons, and he's
used them," Cheney told CNN in March 2002. The National
Intelligence Estimate said that "although we have
little specific information on Iraq's CW stockpile, Saddam
probably has stocked at least 100 metric tons and possibly
as much as 500 MT of CW agents -- much of it added in the
last year."
One of the reasons the intelligence community feared a
chemical weapons arsenal was that U.N. inspectors said Iraq
had not fully explained missing chemical agents during the
1990s. The report determined that unanswered questions were
almost certainly the result of poor accounting.
Iraq's responses to U.N. inspectors regarding chemical
weapons appear to have been truthful, and where incomplete,
with differing recollections among former top officials,
mostly the result of fading memories of when or how
stockpiles were destroyed. Those were the identical reasons
Iraq offered to U.N. inspectors before the war.
One of the key findings of the report is that
"Saddam never abandoned his intentions to resume a
chemical weapons effort when sanctions were lifted."
The evidence included in the report to back up claims of
Hussein's intent is described as "extensive, yet
fragmentary and circumstantial." The report quotes a
single scientist who reached that conclusion in hindsight
and based on information he learned from the U.S. inspection
team long after U.S. troops had captured Iraq.
After 17 months of investigation, the U.S. team was able
to find only 30 of 130 scientists identified with Iraq's
pre-1991 chemical weapons programs. "None of those
interviewed had any knowledge of chemical weapons
programs" or knew of anyone involved in such work,
according to the report. There was one exception, the
reported noted, from a scientist who maintained he was asked
to make a chemical agent, but that story was uncorroborated
and there was no follow-up.
Delivery
Systems
Iraq's secret quest to develop a more powerful missile
was discovered and disrupted by U.N. weapons inspectors in
the weeks before the U.S.-led invasion. In the 19 months
since then, the survey team has uncovered more evidence
suggesting that Hussein intended to use the Al Samoud 2 and
other proposed missiles to extend the reach of his military
beyond the country's borders.
Iraq was allowed to continue developing short-range
missiles for self-defense under the terms of the U.N.
agreement that ended the 1991 Gulf War. But the Al Samoud 2,
which Iraq began building in 2001, was clearly designed for
flights exceeding the U.N.-imposed 93-mile limit, the new
report says. And Duelfer's team found blueprints for
missiles with potential ranges up to 10 times as far.
The team "uncovered Iraqi plans or designs for three
long-range ballistic missiles with ranges from 400 to 1,000
kilometers (250 to 621 miles), and for a 1,000-km-range
(932-mile) cruise missile," the report says. It adds
that none of the planned missiles was in production, and
only one of them had progressed beyond the design phase.
The report concludes that Iraq "clearly intended to
reconstitute long-range delivery systems," and
maintains that the missiles, if built, could potentially
have been combined with biological, chemical or nuclear
warheads, if Hussein acquired them.
At the same time, the missile that U.S. military planners
had most feared in the run-up to the invasion appears to
have vanished. While Bush administration officials had
asserted that Hussein had hidden a small arsenal of Scud
missiles, Duelfer said interviews and documents suggest Iraq
"did not retain such missiles after 1991."
Staff writers Dafna Linzer and Joby Warrick
contributed to this report.
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