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No role for UN in weapons hunt
Baghdad -
The United Nations is to be cut out of any involvement in the hunt for
weapons of mass destruction 'for the foreseeable future', after
Washington made it clear it sees no role for Hans Blix or the Unmovic
inspections team.
UK Government sources told The
Observer the central question of verification of any finds of WMD
would be left to a third country outside the coalition, such as the
Netherlands. Discussions are under way to establish which country can
offer the greatest expertise and is willing to take on the task of
overseeing US and British operations.
It was revealed last week that a
1,000-strong Anglo-American task force was being prepared to search
for WMDs at up to 150 sites across Iraq. Former UN weapons inspectors
have been hired to help in the search, which has so far produced some
pieces of evidence but no 'smoking gun'.
Whitehall sources told The Observer
the hunt for WMD would continue and that getting the Unmovic weapons
inspection team into Iraq would be too complex.
One official said it would be 'months
at least' before there was any UN role agreed on WMD and that by then
Blix, the head of the Unmovic team, would have retired.
'There is no way the UN can be
involved in the immediate search,' the source said. 'There are the
practical issues of the security situation and the longer-term issues
of the role of the UN in the reconstruction. We are not committed to
Unmovic returning.'
The move will be greeted with dismay
by Labour MPs who have demanded 'proof' that the weapons exist. Doug
Henderson, the former Defence Minister, said if there was no discovery
of WMD the war would be deemed illegal.
Many backbench MPs opposed to the
conflict believe the UN is the only 'honest broker' that can be
trusted to provide an incontrovertible answer to whether Iraq had WMD.
Downing Street is nailing its
reputation on a discovery, even though officials warn it may take
months or even a year to complete the search.
A former senior analyst for the CIA,
Professor Mel Goodman, told The Observer on Friday that the agency and
administration 'stretched the evidence' it presented to the world on
Iraq's possession of WMD as a reason to go to war.
Goodman said the basis for assuming
Iraq had such weapons was part of what he called a 'shoot the
messenger syndrome', whereby 'the Bush administration heard what it
wanted to hear', and ensured the right information reached its ears
through 'the politicisation of intelligence'.
'The credibility of the Bush
administration and the intelligence community will be put at risk if
weapons of mass destruction are not soon found in significant
numbers,' he said.
Yesterday, American troops uncovered
a massive cache of hidden money, valued at close to $650 million, in a
sealed-up villa close to the Tigris river. The haul came as US forces
announced Iraq's new police, who operate under their command, had
arrested Saddam's former Finance Minister Hikmat Mizban Ibrahim al-Azzawi,
and turned him over to US Marines.
Al-Azzawi, 70, who also served as a
Deputy Prime Minister, was apprehended on Friday in Baghdad, according
to a statement released by US Central Command in Doha, Qatar.
The discovery of the money came as
two Army sergeants went searching for saws on Friday to clear away
branches that were blocking their Humvees and instead stumbled on the
villa containing the money in boxes.
The discovery of the cash confirms
suspicions that Saddam Hussein - whose fate and whereabouts still
remain a mystery - and senior members of his family had squirrelled
away massive stashes of ready cash in sites across the country, with
the acquiescence of figures such as al-Azzawi, whose job was
effectively that of a private chancellor to Saddam's regime.
Al-Azzawi's arrest follows that of
other senior figures on America's most-wanted list, including Saddam's
top science adviser, Lt. Gen. Amer al-Saadi; Saddam's half brothers
Watban Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti and Barzan Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti;
and Samir Abd al-Aziz al-Najim, a senior leader of Saddam's toppled
Baath party.
The latest arrest came as US Marines
started pulling out of the Iraqi capital yesterday, handing over
control to US Army units as the military's mission moves from combat
to policing. --
Guardian News
Brudirect.com
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