[Did Britain build it or did a British corporation in cahoots with the British
State build it? So hard to tell these days....]


Britain's dirty secret

This is Falluja 2, identified by Colin Powell as an Iraqi chemical weapons
plant. Confidential documents show we were warned but we helped build it. And we
covered it up

David Leigh and John Hooper
Thursday March 6, 2003
The Guardian

A chemical plant which the US says is a key component in Iraq's chemical warfare
arsenal was secretly built by Britain in 1985 behind the backs of the Americans,
the Guardian can disclose.

Documents show British ministers knew at the time that the £14m plant, called
Falluja 2, was likely to be used for mustard and nerve gas production.

Senior officials recorded in writing that Saddam Hussein was actively gassing
his opponents and that there was a "strong possibility" that the chlorine plant
was intended by the Iraqis to make mustard gas. At the time Saddam was known to
be gassing Iranian troops in their thousands in the Iran-Iraq war.

But ministers in the then Thatcher government none the less secretly gave
financial backing to the British company involved, Uhde Ltd, through insurance
guarantees.

Paul Channon, then trade minister, concealed the existence of the chlorine plant
contract from the US administration, which was pressing for controls on such
exports.

He also instructed the export credit guarantee department (ECGD) to keep details
of the deal secret from the public.

The papers show that Mr Channon rejected a strong plea from a Foreign Office
minister, Richard Luce, that the deal would ruin Britain's image in the world if
news got out: "I consider it essential everything possible be done to oppose the
proposed sale and to deny the company concerned ECGD cover".

The Ministry of Defence also weighed in, warning that it could be used to make
chemical weapons.

But Mr Channon, in line with Mrs Thatcher's policy of propping up the dictator,
said: "A ban would do our other trade prospects in Iraq no good".

The British taxpayer was even forced to write a compensation cheque for £300,000
to the German-owned company after final checks on the plant, completed in May
1990, were interrupted by the outbreak of the Gulf war.

The Falluja 2 chlorine plant, 50 miles outside Baghdad, near the Habbaniya
airbase, has been pinpointed by the US as an example of a factory rebuilt by
Saddam to regain his chemical warfare capability.

Last month it featured in Colin Powell's dossier of reasons why the world should
go to war against Iraq, which was presented to the UN security council.

Spy satellite pictures of Falluja 2 identifying it as a chemical weapons site
were earlier published by the CIA, and a report by Britain's Joint Intelligence
Committee, published with Tony Blair's imprimatur last September, also focused
on Falluja 2 as a rebuilt plant "formerly associated with the chemical warfare
programme".

UN weapons inspectors toured the Falluja 2 plant last December and Hans Blix,
the chief inspector, reported to the security council that the chemical
equipment there might have to be destroyed.

But until now, the secret of Britain's knowing role in Falluja's construction
has remained hidden.

Last night, Uhde Ltd's parent company in Dortmund, Germany, issued a statement
confirming that their then UK subsidiary had built Falluja 2 for Iraq's chemical
weapons procurement agency, the State Enterprise for Pesticide Production.

A company spokesman said: "This was a normal plant for the production of
chlorine and caustic soda. It could not produce other products".

The British government's intelligence at the time, as shown in the documents,
was that Iraq, which was having increasing difficulty in obtaining precursor
chemicals on the legitimate market, intended to use the chlorine as a feedstock
to manufacture such chemicals as epichlorohydrin and phosphorous trichloride.
These in turn were used to make mustard gas and nerve agents.

Paul Channon, since ennobled as Lord Kelvedon, was last night holidaying on the
Caribbean island of Mustique. He issued a statement through his secretary, who
said: "He can't object to the story. So he's got no comment."

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