-Caveat Lector-

UN Inspection Team Faces Smear Campaign
by Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington

Published on Friday, November 29, 2002 by the Guardian/UK
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,850264,00.html

A campaign to discredit the UN weapons inspections mission to Iraq
flared into action yesterday with the publication of bizarre
personal details about one of the experts waiting to go to Baghdad.

About 100 weapons experts have been selected so far to join the
mission's chief, Hans Blix, in Iraq. The team is expected to grow to
300 experts over the coming weeks.

However, a report in the Washington Post yesterday suggested that
the relatively small world of weapons experts was fraught with
rivalries.

A number of former inspectors - who apparently were not selected by
Mr Blix - say the new teams lack experience, and accuse him of
deliberately overlooking old hands for fear of antagonizing Iraq.

The newspaper went on to detail the sexual practices of one of the
current inspectors.

Harvey "Jack" McGeorge, 53, from Virginia, is a co-founder of an S &
M group in the Washington DC area, and a former chairman of the
board for the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom.

The former marine was recommended for the mission by the US state
department, and is now in New York.

He heads his own security consultancy, selling counter-bioterrorism
products and conducting seminars on chemical and biological weapons,
but he does not hold a scientific degree.

A trawl of the internet by the Post found that Mr McGeorge was also
a member of the Leather Leadership Conference Inc, which "produces
training sessions for current and potential leaders of the
sadomasochism/leather/fetish community".

In an interview with the newspaper, Mr McGeorge said he would resign
rather than damage the UN mission.

"I have been very upfront with people in the past about what I do,
and it has never prevented me from getting a job or doing service,"
he said. "I am who I am. I am not ashamed of who I am - not one bit.
But I cannot allow my actions, as they may be perceived by others,
to damage an organization which has done nothing to deserve that
damage."

A spokesman for the UN said that Mr McGeorge's private life had
nothing to do with his qualifications as an inspector.

However, he provides a convenient target for critics of Mr Blix,
particularly aggrieved former inspectors.

They say he has overlooked potentially qualified experts by
requiring applicants to quit their government jobs before applying.
There are also fears that some members of the teams are from private
industry, and will use the mission to garner media attention and
sell their products.

© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

The Post article:
(sorry, couldn't access the url - maybe someone else will have
better luck?)

11/29/02 2:13:04 PM Pacific Standard Time

The Washington Post
Weapons Inspectors' Experience Questioned
Va. Man Is Cited As Example; Hiring Process Criticized
By James V. Grimaldi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 28, 2002; Page 1

The United Nations launched perhaps its most important weapons
inspections
ever yesterday with a team that includes a 53-year-old Virginia man
with
no specialized scientific degree and a leadership role in
sadomasochistic sex
clubs.

The United Nations acknowledged yesterday that it did not conduct a
background check on Harvey John "Jack" McGeorge of Woodbridge, who
was in
New York waiting to be sent to Iraq as a munitions analyst. McGeorge
was
picked for the diplomatically sensitive mission over some of the
most
experienced disarmament sleuths in the world. A U.N. spokesman said
McGeorge was part of a group recommended by the State Department,
which in turn
said it was merely forwarding names for consideration.

The disclosures about McGeorge's qualifications come as concerns are
being
raised among some former U.N. weapons inspectors that the current
team
lacks experience. The former inspectors, who worked for the United
Nations
Special Commission created after the Persian Gulf War, say the new
inspectors have
been selected in part to avoid offending Iraq. These critics say
that Hans
Blix, the executive chairman of the U.N. Monitoring, Verification
and
Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), is bypassing some experienced
inspectors
because they were opposed by Iraq as too aggressive in the earlier
inspections.

Former inspectors also say that rules requiring applicants to quit
their
government jobs meant that some of the best-qualified experts did
not
apply, leaving many positions to be filled by applicants, such as
McGeorge, from
the private sector. The former inspectors also say the current
inspection
team lacks the size, mobility and equipment to do its job
adequately, and
that the new U.N. policy of not sharing information with
intelligence
agencies could further handicap the team's ability to find weapons
sites.

U.N. officials defended their team of inspectors, saying that they
are
highly qualified and among the best in the field. But they
acknowledged
that they conducted no background checks.

"As the United Nations, with people applying from many countries, we
do
not have the capability to do that," said Ewen Buchanan, a spokesman
for
UNMOVIC. "How would you check?"

McGeorge is a former Marine and Secret Service specialist who offers

seminars on "weaponization of chemical and biological agents" for
$595 a
session. Since 1983, he has been president of his own firm, Public
Safety
Group Inc., which sells bioterror products to governments. One
online ad
promotes his role as a "certified United Nations Weapons inspector."

McGeorge does not possess a degree in one of the specialized fields
--
such as biochemistry, bacteriology or chemical engineering -- that
the United
Nations says it seeks in its inspectors. U.S. and U.N. officials
said a
background check apparently was not conducted on McGeorge or any of
the
inspector applicants.

An Internet search of open Web sites conducted by The Washington
Post
found that McGeorge is the co-founder and past president of Black
Rose, a
Washington-area pansexual S&M group, and the former chairman of the
board
of the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom. He is also a founding
officer
of the Leather Leadership Conference Inc., which "produces training
sessions
for current and potential leaders of the
sadomasochism/leather/fetish
community," according to its Web site. Several Web sites describe
McGeorge's training seminars, which involve various acts conducted
with knives and
ropes.

McGeorge said yesterday that a State Department official invited him
to
apply for the U.N. team, and officials at State and the United
Nations did
not ask about his S&M background. But he said he would tender his
resignation to Blix if The Post printed a story about it.

"I have been very upfront with people in the past about what I do,
and it
has never prevented me from getting a job or doing service,"
McGeorge
said. "I am who I am. I am not ashamed of who I am -- not one bit.
But I cannot
allow my actions, as they may be perceived by others, to damage an
organization which has done nothing to deserve that damage."

A State Department official said that the Bureau of Nonproliferation

collected résumés from potential UNMOVIC candidates and then passed
along,
without recommendation, those who appeared to meet the general
criteria of
the jobs. However, the official said he believes that background
checks
were not conducted before the résumés were forwarded.

Half the 100 inspectors picked so far were recommended by
governments, and
the other half applied directly to the United Nations. Buchanan
added that
the United Nations considers McGeorge's private life irrelevant to
his
rolen as a munitions analyst.

"I believe that Mr. McGeorge is technically very competent,"
Buchanan
said. "He knows his subject, which is weapons. As a general
principle, I think
what people do in their private life, as long as it doesn't
interfere with
[their] professional life -- and I'm not aware that it has
interfered --
or doesn't break any rules or laws, shouldn't be a significant
issue."

Interviewed by telephone, McGeorge defended his training and
experience.
"I was a military ordnance explosive disposal specialist," McGeorge
said. "I
was very well trained on chemical and biological agents."

McGeorge's r indicates that he trained as an inspector with UNMOVIC
in February 2001 in Vienna. He said he was interviewed in person by
Blix and
joined the team as a temporary staff member in December 2001.

McGeorge's professional background reveals he served for a few years
each
as a Marine ordnance disposal technician and a munitions
countermeasures
specialist with the Secret Service, both stints occurring more than
20
years ago.

On his r, McGeorge lists an honorary doctorate from a Russian
institute in Moscow. McGeorge received an associate's degree in
security management
from Northern Virginia Community College in 1983. He also lists
numerous
articles on chemical and biological weapons in such publications as
Defense and Foreign Affairs and NBC Defense & Technology
International.

One of his most cited achievements is preparing, under contract with
the
federal government, a compendium of incidents involving biological
and
chemical agents dating back to the 1940s.

Past weapons inspectors have criticized the selection of inspectors,

saying experienced candidates, including former missile inspector
Timothy V.
McCarthy, were passed over. The critics say the new team needs
seasoning
if it is to find minute evidence of weapons-making in a country the
size of
Texas.

"We just knew too much," said Richard Spertzel, former head of the
biological weapons inspection team for the U.N. Special Commission
on
Iraq. "They couldn't pull the wool over our eyes."

The two renowned experts retained, Igor Mitrokhin and Nikita
Smidovich,
will not be conducting field inspections.

Mitrokhin, a respected Russian chemical weapons expert, has been
named the
chief of the agency's health and safety division. Smidovich, a
Russian
missile expert whose encyclopedic knowledge of Iraq's missile
program has
long made him unpopular in Iraq, has been appointed head of
inspector
training.

Smidovich said during a break at recent training session that
although
there is a "new culture" at UNMOVIC, the agency still has "very
tough
inspectors." He said that the less experienced inspectors can learn
everything they
need to know from a massive archive that includes a recording of
virtually
every meeting with the Iraqis. "We have it all on tape," he said.

Blix defended the abilities of the new inspectors, saying that his
chief
inspector, Demetrius Perricos, "probably has the greatest experience
in
the world."

"He has 30 years of inspections behind him," he added. "He handled
the
whole North Korea business in the IAEA [International Atomic Energy
Agency]; he
was in Iraq in the beginning of the '90s; he was in South Africa and

handled the verification of the disarming of their nuclear weapons."

A U.N. Security Council diplomat said that Washington wants to
increase
the number of inspections and double the size of the inspection
team's roster,
which now consists of 300 people. The Bush administration has been
pressing UNMOVIC to move up the date of the next scheduled training
session from
January to December. One council official said that Blix was likely
to
begin "a sort of worldwide trawl" for new inspectors.

Another council diplomat acknowledged the new inspection agency
lacks the
experience of its predecessor and that it will take time to reach
full
speed. "A lot of the inspectors are inexperienced, and it's a matter
of
not trying to push UNMOVIC to run before it can walk," said a
council member.

Former inspectors also were concerned about reports that members of
the
current UNMOVIC team work in the private sector and might have
products to
sell. A stint on a U.N. inspections team can boost an inspector's
profile,
bringing media attention and lucrative business opportunities, as
some of
the former inspectors found.

One current inspector works for a company developing a sensor to
detect
biological substances, such as anthrax spores.
"I don't know of any technology out there for biology that you could
wave
over and say this is a bad building," said former inspector and
biological
warfare expert David Franz.

Correspondent Colum Lynch and researcher Alice Crites also
contributed to
this report.

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