April 3, 2005
Panel: U.S. Ignored Work of U.N. Arms
Inspectors
By Dafna Linzer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Of all the claims U.S. intelligence made about Iraq's
arsenal in the fall and winter of 2002, it was a handful of
new charges that seemed the most significant: secret
purchases of uranium from Africa, biological weapons being
made in mobile laboratories, and pilotless planes that could
disperse anthrax or sarin gas into the air above U.S.
cities.
By the time President Bush ordered U.S. troops to disarm
Saddam Hussein of the deadly weapons he was allegedly trying
to build, every piece of fresh evidence had been tested --
and disproved -- by U.N. inspectors, according to a report
commissioned by the president and released Thursday.
The work of the inspectors -- who had extraordinary
access during their three months in Iraq between November
2002 and March 2003 -- was routinely dismissed by the Bush
administration and the intelligence community in the run-up
to the war, according to the commission led by former
senator Charles S. Robb (D-Va.) and retired appellate court
judge Laurence H. Silberman.
But the commission's findings, including a key judgment
that U.S. intelligence knows "disturbingly little" about
nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea, are leading to
calls for greater reliance on U.N. inspectors to test
intelligence where the United States has little or no
access.
"U.N. inspectors are boots on the ground," said David
Albright, a nuclear specialist who accompanied the
International Atomic Energy Agency to Iraq in the mid-1990s.
Albright and others think the IAEA should be given greater
access in Iran, and returned to North Korea. It would be up
to the agency's board, which includes the United States, to
authorize increased powers.
The Bush administration tussled with inspectors before
the Iraq war and maintains a hostile relationship with the
IAEA, whose director, Mohamed ElBaradei, the United States
is trying to replace this year. The administration also
wants to shut down a U.N. inspection regime led by Hans Blix
that was set up to investigate biological, chemical and
missile programs in Iraq.
During more than two years of investigations in Iran, the
IAEA has "been critical in uncovering their secret
activities so we know the scope and the status of the
nuclear programs and the problems," said Albright, who has
exposed unknown nuclear sites in Iran and has followed the
IAEA's work there. "There is a tremendous amount of detail
that the intelligence community didn't have prior to the
IAEA going in and intensifying the investigation."
The White House has not publicly presented intelligence
to support its assertion that Iran has a nuclear weapons
program, as it did with Iraq. Instead, it routinely points
to the IAEA investigation, Iran's large oil reserves and the
secrecy that surrounded Iran's nuclear program for nearly
two decades.
The IAEA has not found evidence that Iran is using its
nuclear energy program as a cover for bomb building, as the
administration claims. But those findings have been
dismissed by some members of the administration.
John R. Bolton, nominated to be the next U.S. ambassador
to the United Nations, has called the findings "simply
impossible to believe."
Jonathan Tucker, who was a bioweapons inspector for the
United Nations in Iraq during the 1990s, said inspectors
have limited access and rely heavily on intelligence that
can be provided by powerful countries such as the United
States.
"What they can provide is ground truth and legitimacy. If
you hope to persuade countries to impose sanctions or other
measures on proliferators, the word of inspectors is
valuable."
North Korea kicked out IAEA inspectors in December 2002,
a move that deprived the intelligence community of a key
avenue of information about the closed country. The lack of
access to North Korea, which has been judged to have the
capacity to build six to eight nuclear weapons, has been a
source of frustration for the international agency.
But at the time of the IAEA's departure from Pyongyang,
attention in Washington and in Vienna, where the IAEA is
based, was largely focused on Iraq.
Months before U.S. troops attacked Iraq in March 2003,
the IAEA challenged every piece of evidence the Bush
administration offered to support claims of a nuclear
program there, according to the commission.
In January, IAEA inspectors discovered that documents
showing Iraq had tried to buy uranium from Niger were
forged. But the CIA chose to stick to the claim for another
six months.
Two years earlier, the IAEA disputed CIA claims that Iraq
was trying to buy black-market aluminum tubes for a nuclear
program. The IAEA assessment, which turned out to be
accurate, was first shared with U.S. intelligence in July
2001, according to the authors of the presidential
commission report.
Blix's U.N. group tested evidence supplied by an Iraqi
defector codenamed "Curveball," whose tales of mobile
bioweapons laboratories turned out to be fabrications,
according to the report. Among Curveball's claims was that
an Iraqi facility had been redesigned, with a temporary
wall, to allow mobile laboratories to slip in and out
undetected.
"When United Nations Monitoring Verification and
Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) inspectors visited the site
on Feb. 9, 2003, they found that the wall was a permanent
structure and could find nothing to corroborate Curveball's
reporting," the commissioners wrote.
"We offered eyes and ears," Blix said in a telephone
interview yesterday. "We knew a lot about the country, we
examined places, got intelligence tips about where to go and
conducted 700 inspections at 500 sites in three months."
UNMOVIC also determined before the war that CIA claims
about a fleet of pilotless Iraqi planes were incorrect. The
unmanned aerial vehicles did not have the capability to
deliver chemical or biological weapons and were probably
designed for reconnaissance missions.
The Bush administration has prevented the IAEA from
returning to Iraq since the invasion. UNMOVIC will likely be
dismantled unless the United States agrees to turn it into
an international inspection force for biological weapons and
missile programs.
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