Like
Lord Hutton’s inquiry earlier in the year, thunderous
accusations have been of another “whitewash.” One man, who
would have enlightened Butler’s committee had they requested to speak to him—but who was
never interviewed—was just a phone call away.
Imad
Khadduri is a real “bomb maker.” He worked for the Iraqi
Atomic Energy Commission from 1968 to 1998. Holding an MS in
physics from the University of Michigan and a PhD in reactor
technology from the University of Birmingham, he rose to be one
of the most senior officials in Iraq’s nuclear program,
working on the Russian research reactor in the 1960s, the French
research reactor in the 1970s, and the weapons program and
Russian reactor in the 1980s, and with the weapons inspectors in
the 1990s.
“The
first day of the war, the Iraqi nuclear weapons program
stopped dead in its tracks and was never rejuvenated.” |
|
Khadduri
makes no secret of his pride in Iraq’s scientific achievements; he gives a compelling account of
the collapse of the country’s aspirations. At the height of
the nuclear program, he was in charge of scientific planning,
documentation, records, and purchasing.
With
Butler’s remit widened to include allegations that Iraq tried
to buy uranium from Niger—“a key element in his [the Prime
Minister’s] justification for the invasion,” according to
the Observer’s Anthony Barnett—Khadduri’s
assertions should at least bring a blush to the faces of obvious
suspects in Whitehall and Washington (no breath holding please).
According
to Khadduri, Iraq’s key facilities were Tarmiyah and Al-Fajr (the dawn), near
the ancient city of Al-Sharqat in northern Iraq. Al-Fajr was designed to house cauldron separators—similar to
those used in the US Manhattan project. “The most important
plant for design was Al-Atheer. The first UNSCOM head, David
Kaye, found many documents, reports, and plans from there in
1991. The first two plants were totally destroyed in the [first]
Gulf War, and UNSCOM destroyed Al-Atheer.”
When
the northern plants were bombed, he and his family, “along
with most of the prominent nuclear scientists and top
management, were in the nearby housing complex.” They survived
the bombing; the program died. “The first day of the war, the
Iraqi nuclear weapons program stopped dead in its tracks and was
never rejuvenated.”
“After
the war, all scientific expertise was transferred to rebuilding
basic infrastructure—oil facilities, telecommunications,
water, sanitation, and electricity.” Subsequently, “many
scientists and engineers became unemployed, scratching a living,
trying to survive the ongoing consequences of allied bombings,
intrusions of
the weapons inspection teams, infrastructure demolition. Nuclear
hopes were in the rubble.”
An
inspector implied that the problem was that the
scientific expertise was still around. One scientist
retorted, “What do you want us to do? Commit
suicide?” |
|
The
behavior of the weapons inspectors was as hard to endure as the
sanctions, deprivation, destruction and continual illegal
bombing by the US and UK. Arrogance and humiliation were heaped on highly educated and
proud experts. Inspectors who knew neither the culture nor the
language compounded the problem. Crèches, convents, churches,
mosques, orphanages, schools, and soukhs (markets) were
intrusively searched.
Much
was made of the science lab at Baghdad University. In fact, the UNSCOM video shows the inspectors laughing at its
pathetic postwar state then slinging out the few remaining
books.
One
inspector implied that the problem was that the scientific
expertise was still around. One scientist retorted, “What do
you want us to do? Commit suicide?” Khadduri asserts that,
ironically, far from being told to conceal, scientists were made
(by Saddam’s regime) to sign a declaration that they had to
tell UNSCOM anything they wanted to know; failure would result
in imprisonment, or even death. The regime did not want another
blitz on its wounded nation.
In
1994, senior inspectors returned to Baghdad, angrily inquiring about an undeclared Iraqi report indicating
that Iraqis were still manufacturing a nuclear bomb. Bewildered,
Khadduri looked through it, then pointed out that it was well
done, but the phraseology was Iranian, not Iraqi Arabic. After
checking with an Iranian-Arabic dictionary, the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) never referred to the report again.
Accusations
continued, and in 1998, Khadduri quietly left his home, homeland
and life’s belongings with his family for Canada, his residency request enhanced by references from his former
professors at Birmingham University, who held him in high esteem. He decided to embrace academia
and a quiet, normal life.
Then
in August 2002, President Bush claimed that Iraq
was harboring a rejuvenated nuclear program. The war drums were
banging again and Khadduri could not bear it. He “embarked on
a lonely six-month battle to counter the disinformation
campaign.” He wrote, requested airtime, and contacted the Iraq
team at the IAEA. For weeks no one responded to the man who
really knew. “And suddenly my computer kept crashing.”
Khadduri,
however, persevered, finally disproving allegations coming thick
and fast. In December, he received confirmation from the IAEA
that they agreed with him. In January 2003, Khadduri’s IAEA
contact told him that “US and UK intelligence had provided twenty five new sites—on ultra hush.
These had been visited and absolutely no evidence found of any
nuclear ... program.” Yet in his report to the Security
Council on January 27, Hans Blix never mentioned the lack of
findings. “He did mention a program, which was terminated in
1988, as new evidence,” Khadduri remarks. His IAEA contact
said in despair, “I guess no one is really serious about
preventing a war. I have tried to be technically rigorous. I
guess we got swallowed up by the politicians.”
So
what about the Niger uranium? “In the 1980s we were determined to be
self-sufficient. I was given a team of fifty and we traveled Iraq
looking for deposits.” They found them in the north, where
there were significant amounts. “We found numerous items of
rusted, drilling equipment.” They asked nearby villagers about
its origins. “They said it was when the British were
prospecting there in the 1950s.” What about the five tonnes of
yellowcake at the Tuwaitha facility sealed by the IAEA
Inspectors and allowed by US soldiers to be looted at the time
of the invasion? “It came from a site in the western
desert,” Khadduri replied without hesitation. Further, why
would Iraq buy uranium at the end of the 1990s? “Electricity,
communications, scientific infrastructure, buildings were all
gone. How could they use it? I truly question the intelligence
of the Intelligence.”
Iraq’s last gargantuan effort to prove the state of its
non-existent program was an 11,000-page document, delivered to
the new inspection team office in the United Nations at the end
of 2002.
US
officials—in what numerous diplomats described as an
unprecedented occurrence—took the document and returned it to
the Security Council delegates with 8000 pages missing. The
remaining 3000 pages were so heavily and extensively blacked out
that they became “incomprehensible”; the deletions rendered
what remained mostly nonsensical, one UN ambassador told this
writer. Iraq had again “failed to comply.”
The
CIA bleats of global intelligence failures and not having
intelligence on the ground. They had and were being told the
truth by many all along. Informed Western visitors to Iraq, politicians, analysts, streetwise NGOs, and journalists were
dismissed as “dupes of Saddam.” There are none so deaf as
those who wish not to hear. Washington and Whitehall put their faith in Armani clad warriors, such as Ahmed Chalabi,
and are paying the price: a deficit of intelligence indeed.
Beware
of politicians bearing dossiers.
Imad Khadduri's book Iraq’s Nuclear Mirage, in English and Arabic, can be purchased
from: Springhead@rogers.com
Felicity
Arbuthnot is
a journalist and activist who has visited Iraq on numerous occasions since the 1991Gulf War. She has written
and broadcast widely on Iraq, her coverage of which was nominated for several awards. She
was also Senior Researcher for John
Pilger's award-winning documentary Paying
the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq.