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U.S. claim on Iraqi nuclear
program is called into question
By Joby Warrick
Washington - When
President Bush traveled to the United Nations in September to make his
case against Iraq, he brought along a rare piece of evidence for what
he called Iraq's "continued appetite" for nuclear bombs. The
finding: Iraq had tried to buy thousands of high-strength aluminum
tubes, which Bush said were "used to enrich uranium for a nuclear
weapon."
Bush cited the aluminum tubes in his
speech before the U.N. General Assembly and in documents presented to
U.N. leaders. Vice President Cheney and national security adviser
Condoleezza Rice both repeated the claim, with Rice describing the
tubes as "only really suited for nuclear weapons programs."
It was by far the most prominent,
detailed assertion by the White House of recent Iraqi efforts to
acquire nuclear weapons. But according to government officials and
weapons experts, the claim now appears to be seriously in doubt.
After weeks of investigation, U.N.
weapons inspectors in Iraq are increasingly confident that the
aluminum tubes were never meant for enriching uranium, according to
officials familiar with the inspection process. The International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the U.N.-chartered nuclear watchdog,
reported in a Jan. 8 preliminary assessment that the tubes were
"not directly suitable" for uranium enrichment but were
"consistent" with making ordinary artillery rockets -- a
finding that meshed with Iraq's official explanation for the tubes.
New evidence supporting that conclusion has been gathered in recent
weeks and will be presented to the U.N. Security Council in a report
due to be released on Monday, the officials said.
Moreover, there were clues from the
beginning that should have raised doubts about claims that the tubes
were part of a secret Iraqi nuclear weapons program, according to U.S.
and international experts on uranium enrichment. The quantity and
specifications of the tubes -- narrow, silver cylinders measuring 81
millimeters in diameter and about a meter in length -- made them
ill-suited to enrich uranium without extensive modification, the
experts said.
But they are a perfect fit for a
well-documented 81mm conventional rocket program in place for two
decades. Iraq imported the same aluminum tubes for rockets in the
1980s. The new tubes it tried to purchase actually bear an inscription
that includes the word "rocket," according to one official
who examined them.
"It may be technically possible
that the tubes could be used to enrich uranium," said one expert
familiar with the investigation of Iraq's attempted acquisition.
"But you'd have to believe that Iraq deliberately ordered the
wrong stock and intended to spend a great deal of time and money
reworking each piece."
As the U.N. inspections continue,
some weapons experts said the aluminum tubes saga could undermine the
credibility of claims about Iraq's arsenal. To date, the Bush
administration has declined to release photos or other specific
evidence to bolster its contention that Iraq is actively seeking to
acquire new biological, chemical and nuclear arms, and the means to
deliver them.
The U.N. inspections earlier this
month turned up 16 empty chemical warheads for short-range, 122mm
rockets. But inspectors said that so far they have found no conclusive
proof of a new Iraqi effort to acquire weapons of mass destruction in
searches of facilities that had been identified as suspicious in U.S.
and British intelligence reports. U.N. officials contend that Iraq
retains biological and chemical weapons and components it acquired
before the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
"If the U.S. government puts out
bad information it runs a risk of undermining the good information it
possesses," said David Albright, a former IAEA weapons inspector
who has investigated Iraq's past nuclear programs extensively.
"In this case, I fear that the information was put out there for
a short-term political goal: to convince people that Saddam Hussein is
close to acquiring nuclear weapons."
The Bush administration, while
acknowledging the IAEA's findings on the aluminum tubes, has not
retreated from its earlier statements. White House spokesman Ari
Fleischer reacted to the IAEA's initial report on Jan. 8 by asserting
that the case was still open.
"It should be noted,"
Fleischer said, "that the attempted acquisition of such tubes is
prohibited under the United Nations resolutions in any case."
U.N. sanctions restrict Iraq's ability to import "dual-use"
items that potentially could be used for weapons.
U.S. intelligence officials contend
that the evidence, on balance, still points to a secret uranium
enrichment program, although there is significant disagreement within
the intelligence services. Those supporting the nuclear theory said
they were influenced by "other intelligence" beyond the
specifications of the tubes themselves, according to one intelligence
official. He did not elaborate.
IAEA officials said the investigation
of the tubes officially remains open. Earlier this week, Iraq agreed
to provide inspectors with additional data about its intended use for
the tubes.
The controversy stems from a series
of Iraqi attempts to purchase large quantities -- thousands or tens of
thousands -- of high-strength aluminum tubes over the last two years.
Apparently none of the attempts succeeded, although in one instance in
2001 a shipment of more than 60,000 Chinese-made aluminum tubes made
it as far as Jordan before it was intercepted, according to officials
familiar with Iraq's procurement attempts.
Since then, the officials said, Iraq
has made at least two other attempts to acquire the tubes. The more
recent attempts involved private firms located in what was described
only as a "NATO country." In all, more than 120,000 of the
tubes were reportedly sought.
In each of the attempts, Iraq
requested tubes made of an aluminum alloy with precise dimensions and
high tolerances for heat and stress. To intelligence analysts, the
requests had a ring of familiarity: Iraq had imported aluminum tubes
in the 1980s, although with different specifications and much larger
diameter, to build gas centrifuges -- fast-spinning machines used in
enriching uranium for nuclear weapons. Through a crash nuclear program
launched in 1990, Iraq succeeded in enriching nearly enough uranium
for one bomb before its plans were disrupted in 1991 by the start of
the Gulf War, according to U.N. weapons inspectors.
By several accounts, Iraq's recent
attempts to buy aluminum tubes sparked a rancorous debate as Bush
administration officials, intelligence analysts and government
scientists argued over Iraq's intent.
"A number of people argued that
the tubes could not possibly be used as artillery rockets because the
specifications were so precise. It would be a waste of dollars,"
said one knowledgeable scientist.
Ultimately, the conclusion in the
intelligence discussion was that Iraq was planning to use the tubes in
a nuclear program. This view was favored by CIA analysts. However,
there were dissenting arguments by enrichment experts at the Energy
Department and officials at the State Department. What ultimately
swung the argument in favor of the nuclear theory was the observation
that Iraq had attempted to purchase aluminum tubes with such precise
specifications that it made other uses seem unlikely, officials said.
By contrast, in Britain, the
government of Prime Minister Tony Blair said in a Sept. 24 white paper
that there was "no definitive intelligence" that the tubes
were destined for a nuclear program.
The tubes were made of an
aluminum-zinc alloy known as 7000-series, which is used in a wide
range of industrial applications. But the dimensions and technical
features, such as metal thickness and surface coatings, made them an
unlikely choice for centrifuges, several nuclear experts said. Iraq
used a different aluminum alloy in its centrifuges in the 1980s before
switching to more advanced metals known as maraging steel and carbon
fibers, which are better suited for the task, the experts said.
Significantly, there is no evidence
so far that Iraq sought other materials required for centrifuges, such
as motors, metal caps and special magnets, U.S. and international
officials said.
Bush's remarks about the aluminum
tubes caused a stir at the IAEA's headquarters in Vienna. Weapons
experts at the agency had also been monitoring Iraq's attempts to buy
the aluminum but were skeptical of arguments that the tubes had a
nuclear purpose, according to one official who spoke on the condition
of anonymity. The IAEA spent seven years in the 1990s documenting and
ultimately destroying all known vestiges of Iraq's nuclear weapons
program, including its gas centrifuges.
After returning to Iraq when weapons
inspections resumed in November, the IAEA made it a priority to sort
out the conflicting claims, according to officials familiar with the
probe. In December, the agency spent several days poring through files
and interviewing people involved in the attempted acquisition of the
tubes -- including officials at the company that supplied the metal
and managers of the Baghdad importing firm that apparently had been
set up as a front company to acquire special parts and materials for
Iraq's Ministry of Industry. According to informed officials, the IAEA
concluded Iraq had indeed been running a secret procurement operation,
but the intended beneficiary was not Iraq's Atomic Energy Commission;
rather, it was an established army program to replace Iraq's aging
arsenal of conventional 81mm rockets, the type used in multiple rocket
launchers.
The explanation made sense for
several reasons, they said. In the 1980s, Iraq was known to have
obtained a design for 81mm rockets through reverse-engineering of
munitions it had previously purchased abroad. During the Iran-Iraq
war, Iraqis built tens of thousands of such rockets, using
high-strength, 7000-series aluminum tubes it bought from foreign
suppliers. U.N. inspectors in the 1990s had allowed Iraq to retain a
stockpile of about 160,000 of the 81mm rockets, and an inspection of
the stockpile last month confirmed that the rockets still exist,
though now corroded after years of exposure in outdoor depots.
By all appearances, the Iraqis were
"trying to buy exact replacements for those rockets," said
Albright, the former IAEA inspector.
Albright, now president of the
Institute for Science and International Security, a Washington
research group, said that even a less sinister explanation for the
aluminum tubes did not suggest Iraq is entirely innocent.
"But if Iraq does have a
centrifuge program, it is well-hidden, and it is important for us to
come up with information that will help us find it," Albright
said. "This incident discredits that effort at a time when we can
least afford it."
-- Washington Post
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