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http://www.latimes.com/la-fg-uniraq15dec15,0,550256.story

http://www.latimes.com/la-fg-uniraq15dec15,0,550256.story

Iraq List Censored to Protect the Innocent and the Helpful

By Maggie Farley and Bob Drogin
Times Staff Writers

December 15 2002

UNITED NATIONS -- When the 10 nonnuclear members of the Security Council receive their
censored copy of Iraq's weapons declaration Monday, the reports will no longer contain
Iraq's recipes for weapons of mass destruction. But another potentially volatile 
ingredient
will be excised as well: the names of foreign companies that, knowingly or not, have
supplied Iraq with weapons-making materials.

Security Council members are concerned not only that such disclosures might embarrass
their nations' companies but also that Iraq might have set out to do so intentionally, 
by
naming prestigious multinationals or firms connected with government officials.

For their part, U.N. inspectors say that they don't want to undermine any intelligence-
gathering efforts done with the cooperation of companies and that they are also worried
about liability issues.

"Should they be held responsible if they thought they were selling a fermenter to a 
beer
company and it ended up in a biological weapons program in Iraq?" asked Ewen Buchanan
of the U.N.'s inspection office.

It is not clear whether any of the companies or countries named on Iraq's current list 
are
new to U.N. inspectors or whether they refer to previously unknown transactions. A 
nine-
page index to the new Iraqi declaration suggests that, as in the past, Iraq has chiefly
duplicated information about procurement activities that occurred before 1991.

But past Iraqi declarations and documents discovered by U.N. weapons inspectors in Iraq
from 1991 to 1998 "were littered with the names of suppliers," Buchanan said.

One set of Iraqi documents in particular, dating from 1996 and 1997, was "chockablock 
with
supplier names, front companies, letters of credit and other details," recalled a 
former U.N.
inspector who asked not to be identified. Those names, with the exception of several
accidentally revealed in one U.N. report, have never been made public by the world 
body.

Although most of the declared deals were done legally before the Security Council 
ordered
Baghdad to give up its weapons of mass destruction in 1991, they reveal the deceptions
Iraq employed to obtain the building blocks of its weapons programs, especially its 
allegedly
extensive biological weapons efforts.

According to accidental disclosures in a 1999 U.N. report compiled under then-chief
weapons inspector Richard Butler, from 1985 to 1989, Iraq bought strains of anthrax,
botulinum toxin, gangrene, West Nile virus and other pathogens from the American Type
Culture Collection, a biological supply firm in Rockville, Md. Iraq also successfully 
ordered
germ strains from the Pasteur Institute in Paris.

Some of the strains were ordered in the name of the University of Baghdad, considered 
to
be a place of legitimate research, while others went to a front company acting as a
purchasing agent for Iraq's weapons program. But all were paid for by the military,
according to Iraqi records turned over to the U.N.

Companies in Italy, Germany and Switzerland supplied fermenters used to grow the germs.
In 1987 and 1988, 39 tons of growth media sufficient to produce about 4 tons of 
bacteria --
enough to kill everyone in the world many times over -- came from the Oxoid company in
Britain and Fluka Chemie in Switzerland. Iraq still hasn't accounted for the remaining
growth media, U.S. and U.N. analysts have said.

Rolf Ekeus, the chief U.N. inspector in the 1990s, decided at the time not to publicly 
identify
any of Iraq's foreign suppliers to ensure their cooperation in U.N. 
intelligence-gathering
efforts.

Buchanan said that previous inspection teams would often question suppliers about what
they had sold to whom and then cross-check the information. Often, the process revealed
the middlemen or front companies that had procured materials for Iraq's covert weapons
programs.

Chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix said last week that he intends to follow suit 
and to
excise the names in the new report before he shares it with the 10 nonnuclear members 
of
the Security Council. If the inspectors "were to give the names publicly, they would 
never
get another foreign supplier to give them any information," Blix told reporters.

During the 1990s, U.N. inspectors tracked scores of suspect transactions to companies 
in
Eastern Europe, Asia and elsewhere. More recently, Western intelligence agencies have
investigated and in some cases intercepted additional Iraqi procurement efforts in 
several
countries.

U.S. and British intelligence sources have said that Iraq has tried to order from 
Turkey
thousands of atropine auto-injectors used to combat nerve gas and has attempted to buy
enriched uranium from West Africa, along with aluminum tubes that could be used for
uranium enrichment.

The U.N. and the U.S. are also investigating Iraq's attempt to buy a high-tech Kolchuga
radar system from Ukraine through Jordanian middlemen. A presidential bodyguard
reportedly taped the Ukrainian president authorizing that deal.

There may be more revelations in Iraq's 11,807-page declaration that only the five
permanent Security Council members -- the U.S., Britain, China, France and Russia -- 
are
authorized to see. But if the five have their way, the rest of the world won't hear 
about
them.

Farley reported from the U.N. and Drogin from Washington.
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives. 
For
information about reprinting this article, go to www.lats.com/rights.





Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times

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