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Wednesday » December 18 » 2002


Iraq names European, U.S., Japanese suppliers to its former nuclear program

  DAFNA LINZER

Canadian Press


Tuesday, December 17, 2002



UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Dozens of suppliers, most in Europe, the United States and Japan,
provided the components and know-how Saddam Hussein needed to build an atomic bomb,
according to Iraq's 1996 accounting of its nuclear program.

The secret declaration, shown to The Associated Press, is virtually identical to the 
one
submitted to UN inspectors on Dec. 7, according to UN officials. The reports have not 
been
made public to prevent nuclear know-how from falling into the wrong hands and also to
protect the names of companies that wittingly or unwittingly supplied Iraq with the 
means
to make nuclear weapons.

UN officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the only difference between 
the two
reports is that the latest has a 300-page section in Arabic on civilian nuclear 
programs and
a slightly larger typeface that stretches it to 2,100 pages.

That foreign companies helped Iraq has long been known, and some of them have been
identified before, but the Iraqi accounting adds up to the most exhaustive list so far 
of
companies involved.

Iraq's report says the equipment was either sold or made by more than 30 German
companies, 10 American companies, 11 British companies and a handful of Swiss,
Japanese, Italian, French, Swedish and Brazilian firms. It says more than 30 countries
supplied its nuclear program.

It details nuclear efforts from the early 1980s to the Gulf War and contains diagrams, 
plans
and test results in uranium enrichment, detonation, implosion testing and warhead
construction.

In one chapter, Iraq admits to having a pilot plan in September 1990 - one month after 
it
invaded Kuwait - to increase the enrichment of recovered uranium to 93 per cent using
centrifuges. The process is a complicated extraction and purification method that at 
full
scale requires thousands of connected, high speed centrifuges.

According to Iraq's report, the most detailed accounting of its former nuclear weapons
program, it was also pursuing electromagnetic isotope separation as another method to
enrich uranium, the key ingredient for an atomic explosion.

The Iraqis had everything they needed to make nuclear weapons, said Gary Milhollin,
director of the Wisconsin Project, a Washington-based think-tank on nuclear arms 
control.
"They weren't missing any components or any knowledge," he said in a phone interview. 
"It
was simply a matter of time."

Milhollin said that had it not been for the 1991 Gulf War, Iraq would have had nuclear
weapons by now, thanks to hundreds of suppliers who sold it an impressive array of
equipment and expertise, often with their government's approval and without being aware
of the ultimate purpose. According to the Iraqi accounting, induction and electron beam
furnaces, which could be used in shaping uranium parts for an atomic bomb, came from
Consarc Corp. of Rancocas, N.J. The company says the items were never delivered,
however.

Newport Corp. of Irvine, Calif., is listed as a supplier of optical fibre, a product 
with uses
ranging from communications to medical equipment. But the company said it doesn't carry
the model listed in the declaration.

EEV Inc., based outside New York City, is listed as a supplier of a thyratron, which 
the
company says is used in medical imaging equipment. It could not immediately verify the
sale of the item.

Motorola Inc., was listed as the seller of fast photodetectors, but company spokeswoman
Jennifer Weyrauch said she found no record to support the claim. "A photodetector 
product
is not part of Motorola's current portfolio."

Most of the sales were legal and often made with the knowledge of governments. In 1985-
90, the U.S. Commerce Department, for example, licensed $1.5 billion US in sales to 
Iraq of
American technology with potential military uses. Iraq was then getting western 
support for
its war against Iran, which at the time was regarded as the main threat to stability 
in the
Persian Gulf region.

But inspectors have discovered over the years that Iraq often obtained supplies through
middlemen or by lying to companies about the products' intended use.

"It was useful in the past and it will be useful in the future to go to companies and 
ask them
questions," said Ewan Buchanan, spokesman for the UN weapons inspectors. While the
Iraqi declaration provides a lot of important information, the companies can often give
inspectors insight into the real extent of Iraq's programs.

Since the Gulf War, dozens of companies have either admitted to sales or were 
prosecuted
in Europe for helping arm Iraq. Several no longer exist.

"Revealing company names can discourage other companies from getting involved in deals
with countries like Iraq where you don't really know the true end-use of your 
products,"
said David Albright, an American nuclear expert and a weapons inspector in 1996.

According to Iraq's accounting, the real help came from German experts and companies, 
in
particular H&H Metallform, which sold the Iraqis old designs for centrifuges.

German companies allegedly involved in other aspects of Iraq's former weapons programs
were named in a report Tuesday in the German daily Die Tag. The report also said
companies such as DaimlerChrysler, Siemens and Preussag sold items to Iraq which were
diverted to the weapons programs.

The companies either declined to comment on the report, or said the deliveries had 
nothing
to do with weapons, such as trucks or auto parts from DaimlerChrysler.

Some of Iraq's nuclear materials were destroyed during previous UN inspections, and 
Iraq
is now banned from repurchasing much of it. But reconnaissance photos released by the
Bush administration in October indicate the Iraqis have been rebuilding sites 
previously used
for nuclear development. A recent U.S. intelligence report says Iraq may have nuclear
weapons by 2010.

Iraq acknowledged to inspectors last month that it was importing aluminum tubes which 
it
said were for conventional weapons. The Bush administration said the tubes could be 
used
to construct centrifuges for uranium enrichment. But nuclear experts differ on whether 
the
tubes are of the proper size and material.

What Iraq still has, however, is the expertise to start again.

Albright said the new evidence, coupled with long-running suspicions "that Iraq 
continued
its nuclear weapons program even while inspectors were on the ground in the '90s," is
what makes the latest declaration such a disappointment.

Mohammed ElBaradei, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said last week 
that
the new submission amounts to a rehash of the 1996 report and covers "material we
already had before."

© Copyright  2002 The Canadian Press





Copyright © 2002 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest Global Communications Corp.
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