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U.S. rivals turn on each other on
weapons search
Baghdad - The
Iraqi military base at Taji does not look like a place of global
importance.
It is a desolate expanse of bunkers
and hangars surrounded by barbed wire and battered look-out
posts.
It is deserted apart from American
sentries at the gate. Yet Taji, north of Baghdad, is the key to a
furious debate. Where are Saddam's weapons of mass destruction? Was
the war fought on a platform of lies? Taji was the only specific
location singled out by Secretary of State Colin Powell in his address
to the UN when he argued that evidence compiled by US intelligence
proved the existence of an illegal weapons programme.
'This is one of 65 such facilities in
Iraq,' Powell said. 'We know this one has housed chemical weapons.'
But The Observer has learnt that Taji
has drawn a blank. US sources say no such weapons were found when a
search party scoured the base in late April. By then it had already
been looted by local villagers. If Taji ever had any secrets, they are
long gone. That is bad news for Britain and the United States. The
pressure is building to find Saddam's hidden arsenal and time is
running out.
Last week the US flew 2,000 more
experts into Iraq. The Iraq Survey Team will join 600 experts already
there. Organisations in Iraq hunting for weapons now include teams
from the US and British armies, the CIA, the FBI and the Defence
Threat Reduction Agency. Yet at more than 110 sites checked so far
they have found nothing conclusive. It has been an exercise in false
alarms. Suspect white powder at Latifiyah was only explosives. Barrels
of what was thought to be sarin and tabun nerve agents were
pesticides. When a dozen US soldiers checked a suspect site and fell
ill, it was because they had inhaled fertiliser fumes. Each setback
ratchets up the political pressure. Infighting between government
departments and intelligence agencies is becoming vicious on both
sides of the Atlantic. Having fought a war to disarm Iraq of its
terrible weapons, neither the US nor Britain can admit that Iraq never
had them in the first place. The search for weapons of mass
destruction cannot be allowed to fail.
The search is especially vital for
The Cabal. In the brave new world of post-11 September America, this
tight group of analysts deep in the heart of the Pentagon has been the
driving force behind the war in Iraq. Numbering no more than a dozen,
The Cabal is part of the Office of Special Plans, a new intelligence
agency which has taken on the CIA and won. Where the CIA dithered over
Iraq, the OSP pressed on. Where the CIA doubted, the OSP was firm. It
fought a battle royal over Iraq and George Bush came down on its side.
The OSP is the brainchild of Defence
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who set it up after the 2001 terrorist
attacks. It was tasked with going over old ground on Iraq and showing
that the CIA had overlooked the threat posed. But its rise has caused
massive ructions in the normally secretive world of intelligence
gathering.
The OSP reports directly to Paul
Wolfowitz, a leading hawk in the administration. They bypassed the CIA
and the Pentagon's own Defence Intelligence Agency when it came to
whispering in the President's ear. They argued a forceful case for war
against Saddam before his weapons programmes came to fruition. More
moderate voices in the CIA and DIA were drowned out. The result has
been a flurry of leaks to the US press. One CIA official described The
Cabal's members as 'crazed', on a 'mission from God'.
But for the moment The Cabal and
Rumsfeld's Pentagon have won and Powell's doveish State Department has
lost. Tensions between the two are now in the open.
'Rumsfeld set up his own intelligence
agency because he didn't like the intelligence he was getting,' said
Larry Korb, director of national security studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations. 'He doesn't like Powell's approach, a typical
diplomat, too cautious.'
Former CIA officials are caustic
about the OSP. Unreliable and politically motivated, they say it has
undermined decades of work by the CIA's trained spies and ignored the
truth when it has contradicted its world view.
'Their methods are vicious,' said
Vince Cannistraro, former CIA chief of counter-terrorism. 'The
politicisation of intelligence is pandemic, and deliberate
disinformation is being promoted. They choose the worst-case scenario
on everything and so much of the information is fallacious.' But
Cannistraro is retired. His attacks will not bother The Cabal, firmly
'in the loop' of Washington's movers and shakers. Yet, even among
them, continued failure to find any weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq is a growing fear. The fallout from the war could bring them
down.
The warning was there in black and
white. Citing 'intelligence' sources, Tony Blair produced an official
dossier that concluded Iraq could fire its chemical or biological
weapons within 45 minutes of an order to do so.
It was a terrifying prospect and
ramped up the pro-war argument when the dossier was produced last
September. But cold analysis after the war tells a different story.
Iraq was abandoned by the UN weapons
inspectors, then bombed, invaded and finally brought under US and
British military control. During that entire time the 'button' was
never pressed on its weapons of mass destruction. Now both the pro-war
party and the anti-war lobby want to know why. Can this mysterious
lapse be explained or did the weapons never exist?
They could have been hidden. Iraq is
the size of California with mountains and deserts in abundance.
Ibrahim al-Marashi, an Iraqi expert whose work was heavily plagiarised
in a now infamous Downing Street dossier published on the eve of war,
has detailed a sophisticated concealment network set up in the 1990s
and headed by Saddam's son Qusay. At the heart of the operation was
Saddam's son-in-law and cousin, Hussein Kamil, who defected in 1995 to
Jordan, where he revealed the concealment techniques to Western
intelligence agencies.
But, according to al-Marashit, the
main cache of weapons of mass destruction should have been found in
Saddam's home city of Tikrit. But Tikrit has fallen and as yet nothing
has been found, leaving US officials clutching at straws. Some have
gone so far as to suggest that the weapons were hidden so well that
the Iraqis themselves were unable to use them.
A more worrying possibility is that
they were looted. Across Iraq - not just in Baghdad and Basra -
practically every government and military facility was looted long
before US or British troops were able to control them. It might be
that the weapons are now on the black market. 'It means the weapons
would now be proliferating, which is exactly what the war was meant to
stop,' said Garth Whitty, a former weapons inspector in Iraq in the
1990s.
But there are problems with that
argument. Barrels of nerve agent are not easy to sell. The war's
critics point to a more obvious conclusion - in the run-up to the war
the Iraqis were simply telling the truth. They had no weapons of mass
destruction.
A massive picture of intelligence
misuse has emerged. Aside from Downing Street's plagiarised dossier,
there are allegations that Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger. The
documents that the accusation were based on were shown to be false by
the International Atomic Energy Agency, but that had not stopped
Britain and America warning of Saddam's nuclear threat. In fact, the
forgeries were obvious. One Niger Minister, whose signature was on a
document, had been out of office for a decade when the forgeries were
produced. A US envoy sent to investigate the claims reported to the
CIA in February 2002 that they were fakes. But the OSP and the White
House ignored him.
Other selective use of intelligence
occurred. Much was made of the OSP's body of Iraqi defectors, but they
chose which defectors they wanted to listen to. Kamil's terrifying
description of Iraq's capabilities in the early 1990s and its efforts
to conceal its arsenal was touted as killer proof. The fact that Kamil
also told his interrogators the weapons had later been ordered
destroyed was suppressed.
Other defectors may have had their
own agendas. Kamil described one, Dr Khidhir Hamza, as a 'professional
liar' - but told US intelligence what it wanted to hear and said Iraq
was close to building a nuclear bomb. No one now believes that. But
Hamza has now returned to Iraq as part of a Pentagon team to rebuild
the country, in charge of atomic energy. Kamil also returned to Iraq -
but when Saddam was in power. He was executed.
Perhaps the most damning evidence is
the lack of intelligence emerging from captured Iraqi officials. The
list is impressive: Huda Ammash, known as 'Mrs Anthrax'; General
Hossam Amin, responsi ble for talks with weapons inspectors; General
Amir Saadi, Saddam's science adviser; General. Rashid al-Ubaidi, an
arms adviser; and Abdul Hwaish, believed responsible for all Iraq's
military capabilities. If anyone knows about the weapons, it is these
people. They have powerful motivation to 'cut a deal' and tell what
they know.'Why is no one coughing?' said Whitty.
In a quiet corner of Baghdad
International Airport sits a truck and trailer painted military green.
Its canvas sides have been rolled up to reveal the pipes and vats of
some form of biological fermentation machine. It was stolen in Mosul
two weeks ago then handed over to Kurdish militia when the thieves
realised it was no ordinary truck. The Kurds passed it on to the
Americans.
It is the only concrete sign that any
weapons of mass destruction may have existed. The firm which made it
has said six others were similarly kitted out. It has a strong
resemblance to the 'mobile bio-weapons labs' described by Powell to
the UN, but is it the smoking gun? Not even the most desperate
Pentagon official goes that far. No trace of biological weapons
residue has been found inside. The truck was apparently thoroughly
cleaned out with bleach before it was stolen.
Yet many experts believe something
will be found. Before the 1991 Gulf war, Iraq did have a massive
chemical and biological weapons programme. Some is probably still
lying around. If sufficient quantities can be uncovered, perhaps it
will be enough for a public eager to feel the war was worth it.
Finding nothing is unthinkable. -- Observer News
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