AFP
Iraqi weapons material may have been moved to Syria: Pentagon official
Tue Oct 28, 3:21 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The director of a Pentagon agency that analyzes imagery
from satellites and spy planes said Iraqi leaders may have moved weapons of
mass destruction "material" into neighboring Syria before the war.

Retired Lieutenant General James Clapper said senior Iraqi leaders made an
intensive effort to bury, hide and disperse equipment, documents and other
material related to their weapons of mass destruction programs in the months
before the war, moving some of it out of the country.

"I think personally that the senior leadership saw what was coming and I
think they went to some extraordinary lengths to dispose of the evidence,"
he said, director of the National Imagery and Mapping Agency. "I'll call it
an educated hunch."

He noted there was an "uptick" in truck traffic from Iraq into Syria before
the onset of combat and even as the war was raging.

Clapper, a former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, acknowledged
that there were limits to what overhead surveillance can detect inside
trucks.

"But certainly, inferentially, the obvious conclusion one draws is that the
certain uptick in traffic ... may have been people leaving the scene,
fleeing Iraq, and unquestionably, I am sure, material," he said.

Clapper's agency is responsible, among other things, for interpreting
imagery collected by US spy satellites and planes.
The United States has so far failed to find any weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq despite pre-war US intelligence assessments asserting that it had
chemical and biological weapons.

"Based on the evidence we had at the time, I thought the conclusions we
reached about the presence of at least a latent WMD program was accurate and
balanced," he said.

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