Posted on 06/27/2004 3:51:32 PM PDT by Pikamax
Evidence of Niger uranium trade 'years before war' By Mark Huband Published: June 27 2004 21:56 | Last Updated: June 27 2004 21:56
When thieves stole a steel watch and two bottles of perfume from Niger's embassy on Via Antonio Baiamonti in Rome at the end of December 2000, they left behind many questions about their intentions.
The identity of the thieves has not been established. But one theory is that they planned to steal headed notepaper and official stamps that would allow the forging of documents for the illicit sale of uranium from Niger's vast mines.
The break-in is one of the murkier elements surrounding the claim - made by the US and UK governments in the lead-up to the Iraq war - that Iraq sought to buy uranium illicitly from Niger.
The British government has said repeatedly it stands by intelligence it gathered and used in its controversial September 2002 dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programmes. It still claims that Iraq had sought uranium from Niger.
But the US intelligence community, officials and politicians, are publicly sceptical, and the public differences between the two allies on the issue have obscured the evidence that lies behind the UK claim.
Until now, the only evidence of Iraq's alleged attempts to buy uranium from Niger had turned out to be a forgery. In October 2002, documents were handed to the US embassy in Rome that appeared to be correspondence between Niger and Iraqi officials.
When the US State Department later passed the documents to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN nuclear watchdog, they were found to be fake. US officials have subsequently distanced themselves from the entire notion that Iraq was seeking buy uranium from Niger.
However, European intelligence officers have now revealed that three years before the fake documents became public, human and electronic intelligence sources from a number of countries picked up repeated discussion of an illicit trade in uranium from Niger. One of the customers discussed by the traders was Iraq.
These intelligence officials now say the forged documents appear to have been part of a "scam", and the actual intelligence showing discussion of uranium supply has been ignored.
The fake documents were handed to an Italian journalist working for the Italian magazine Panorama by a businessman in October 2002. According to a senior official with detailed knowledge of the case, this businessman had been dismissed from the Italian armed forces for dishonourable conduct 25 years earlier.
The journalist - Elisabetta Burba - reported in a Panorama article that she suspected the documents were forgeries and handed them to officials at the US embassy in Rome.
The businessman, referred to by a pseudonym in the Panorama article, had previously tried to sell the documents to several intelligence services, according to a western intelligence officer.
It was later established that he had a record of extortion and deception and had been convicted by a Rome court in 1985 and later arrested at least twice. The suspected forger's real name is known to the FT, but cannot be used because of legal constraints. He did not return telephone calls yesterday, and is understood to be planning to reveal selected aspects of his story to a US television channel.
The FT has now learnt that three European intelligence services were aware of possible illicit trade in uranium from Niger between 1999 and 2001. Human intelligence gathered in Italy and Africa more than three years before the Iraq war had shown Niger officials referring to possible illicit uranium deals with at least five countries, including Iraq.
This intelligence provided clues about plans by Libya and Iran to develop their undeclared nuclear programmes. Niger officials were also discussing sales to North Korea and China of uranium ore or the "yellow cake" refined from it: the raw materials that can be progressively enriched to make nuclear bombs.
The raw intelligence on the negotiations included indications that Libya was investing in Niger's uranium industry to prop it up at a time when demand had fallen, and that sales to Iraq were just a part of the clandestine export plan. These secret exports would allow countries with undeclared nuclear programmes to build up uranium stockpiles.
One nuclear counter-proliferation expert told the FT: "If I am going to make a bomb, I am not going to use the uranium that I have declared. I am going to use what I acquire clandestinely, if I am going to keep the programme hidden."
This may have been the method being used by Libya before it agreed last December to abandon its secret nuclear programme. According to the IAEA, there are 2,600 tonnes of refined uranium ore - "yellow cake" - in Libya. However, less than 1,500 tonnes of it is accounted for in Niger records, even though Niger was Libya's main supplier.
Information gathered in 1999-2001 suggested that the uranium sold illicitly would be extracted from mines in Niger that had been abandoned as uneconomic by the two French-owned mining companies - Cominak and Somair, both of which are owned by the mining giant Cogema - operating in Niger.
"Mines can be abandoned by Cogema when they become unproductive. This doesn't mean that people near the mines can't keep on extracting," a senior European counter-proliferation official said.
He added that there was no evidence the companies were aware of the plans for illicit mining.
When the intelligence gathered in 1999-2001 was thrown into the diplomatic maelstrom that preceded the US-led invasion of Iraq, it took on new significance. Several services contributed to the picture.
The Italians, looking for corroboration but lacking the global reach of the CIA or the UK intelligence service MI6, passed information to the US in 2001 and to the UK in 2002.
The UK eavesdropping centre GCHQ had intercepted communications suggesting Iraq was seeking clandestine uranium supplies, as had the French intelligence service.
The Italian intelligence was not incorporated in detail into the assessments of the CIA, which seeks to use such information only when it is gathered from its own sources rather than as a result of liaison with foreign intelligence services. But five months after receiving it, the US sent former ambassador Joseph Wilson to Niger to assess the credibility of separate US intelligence information that suggested Iraq had approached Niger.
Mr Wilson was critical of the Bush administration's use of secret intelligence, and has since charged that the White House sought to intimidate him by leaking the identity of his wife, Valerie Plame, as a CIA agent.
But Mr Wilson also stated in his account of the visit that Mohamed Sayeed al-Sahaf, Iraq's former information minister, was identified to him by a Niger official as having sought to discuss trade with Niger.
As Niger's other main export is goats, some intelligence officials have surmised uranium was what Mr Sahaf was referring to.
And don't miss this companion piece by the same author:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1161341/posts
BUMP
Now here's something weird - BOTH of the articles by Huband have been pulled from the FT website - or at least the links are dead. I hadn't looked for them before, because I read them from cached pages I found on Google, but they seem to be gone from FT. Does that mean they don't stand by those stories and backed away from them, or did someone get to them, or were they in danger with the UK's "Official Secrets Act" and backed away from their own reporting, or what??? Anyone know?
Sorry for the series of posts, but I'm going to park the text of both articles here (as I found it in Google cached pages) since something weird is going on with these articles and the FT website.
http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:5weGdXtMFSMJ:cshink.com/iraq_had_talks_on_uranium.htm+libya+niger+uranium&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=2
bttt
Too bad people don't even want to know the truth isn't it?
As far as the US government, my guess is we're honoring our nondisclosure agreement with the foreign intelligence agencies that generated the information.
Sure, but can't someone have the sense to go back to such sources and re-negotiate, say that it's really really important to clear this up in the public because not only has US credibility been grossly and falsely impugned but it puts a dark shadow over the credibility of all western intel agencies? It is particularly important to explain the real facts in light of ongoing dangers with Iran, North Korea, etc. and the need for the publics of various nations to know that intel agencies do have some competence. OK, I suppose if it's the French who have been promised confidentiality, well they could not care less.....
That's mainly what I was getting at. . .
Even if we twisted the French's arm on it, there'd still be concerns about not exposing, say, MI6 assets by declassifying something. There was stuff from World War II that wasn't declassified for 50 years because of this type of problem.
I think there was an attempt to get around the problem around July 2003 by leaking Martino's French connection to certain reporters in the UK. That had some effect, but unfortunately the whole story about that can't be told/verified without the French confirming Martino's work for them and declassifying their files on it, which naturally they're not going to do. I think we'd have to get a source inside French intelligence to cooperate to really get the whole story leaked out. Maybe someone in the Italian press can do it--the Italians have been doing the best job of covering this IMO.
Disagree. Wilson did not come up with any conclusive answer. In fact, according to the Senate Intelligence Report, Wilson brought back denials of any Niger-Iraq uranium sale, and argued that such a sale wasn't likely to happen. But the Intelligence Committee report also reveals that Wilson brought back something else as well -- evidence that Iraq may well have wanted to buy uranium. Wilson reported that he had met with Niger's former Prime Minister Ibrahim Mayaki, who said that in June 1999 he was asked to meet with a delegation from Iraq to discuss "expanding commercial relations" between the two countries.
Based on what Wilson told them, CIA analysts wrote an intelligence report saying former Prime Minister Mayki "interpreted 'expanding commercial relations' to mean that the (Iraqi) delegation wanted to discuss uranium yellowcake sales." In fact, the Intelligence Committee report said that "for most analysts" Wilson's trip to Niger "lent more credibility to the original Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) reports on the uranium deal."
I still say that Wilson's second trip to Niger at CIA expense was the same as the first one, i.e., a contrived boondoggle by Wilson and his wife to have the USG pay for his trip to conduct personal business. It was only after the fact that Wilson saw an opportunity to use the trip to further his own ambitions, which included helping Kerry defeat Bush. There is also no doubt that the CIA felt that they were being used as the scapegoat for 9/11 and the subsequent invasion of Iraq based on the "slam dunk" conclusion that Iraq had WMD. The Wilson trip could thus be used by the mid-level CIA types against Bush.
"Now here's something weird - BOTH of the articles by Huband have been pulled from the FT website - or at least the links are dead. I hadn't looked for them before, because I read them from cached pages I found on Google, but they seem to be gone from FT. Does that mean they don't stand by those stories and backed away from them, or did someone get to them, or were they in danger with the UK's "Official Secrets Act" and backed away from their own reporting, or what??? Anyone know?"
Thanks for posting those articles on Free Republic. What may be happening is Grampa Dave's reality warning, when we find some that can be used by our side on another web site, if legally possible, we need to post it on Free Republic. Then we need to store it on our computers and send ourselves emails with the data.
Most news sites don't keep articles indefinitely. Some move them to online archives that you have to pay a fee to get into, while others simply don't keep up articles online past a certain date.
Yeah, I figure that's the explanation - but it does seem odd to me that when editors and reporters preen themselves on writing "the first draft of history" they wouldn't take care to see that their work is easily and reliably available to researchers on the web (sometimes it's a hopelessly bad draft, but these articles seem to be important to the real historical record).
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