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To: MilleniumBug
From your last link:

Based on this bootleg FT excerpt, Libya had 2,600 tons of yellowcake from Niger, even though the COGEMA records and controls in which Joe Wilson put such faith showed only 1,500 tons had been shipped from Niger to Libya.

Here is the missing piece of the puzzle they were looking for:

Iraq and four other countries were attempting to purchase uranium from Niger as far back as 1999, European intelligence officials told the Financial Times. The unidentified sources told the newspaper illicit sales were being negotiated at least three years before last year's U.S.-led invasion.

They said between 1999 and 2001, uranium smugglers planned to sell the ore or refined ore called yellow cake, to Iran, Libya, China, North Korea and Iraq.

An official said meetings between Niger officials and would-be buyers from the five countries were held in several European countries. Intelligence officers were convinced that the uranium would be smuggled from abandoned mines in Niger, circumventing official export controls.

Washington Times

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.

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.

Human Events

24 posted on 12/09/2005 6:35:19 AM PST by ravingnutter
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To: ravingnutter

Thanks! There is some great information there--puts some things together.


26 posted on 12/09/2005 8:40:13 AM PST by Fedora
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To: ravingnutter
Everyone has heard about the break-in at the Nigerean embassy in Rome:
This story... begins with a burglary--the fifth-floor apartment in No. 10 Via Antonio Baiamonti in Rome’s Mazzini Quarter. The thick steel-plated door defends the offices of the Embassy of Niger. ... On a night sometime between 29 December 2000 and 1 January 2001, the usual “persons unknown” are frantically searching for something, turning the embassy inside-out. Papers are strewn everywhere and file cabinets have been opened. When early on January 2, the Second Secretary for Administrative Affairs, Arfou Mounkaila, reports the theft to the Carabinieri in the Trionfale precinct...

http://nuralcubicle.blogspot.com/2005/07/niger-yellowcake-story-italian-version.html


But the story of a more serious attack on US Embassy personnel in Niger a few days before the Rome breakin is not widely known:
Stars and Stripes
In December, a Marine assigned to protect the American embassy in Niger was shot in the arm during a robbery in the community. A civilian employee was killed in the attack.
http://ww2.pstripes.osd.mil/01/apr01/ed041501i.html


The Military Attaché to the US Embassy in Niamey Assasinated by Men in Turbans, PANA 23 December 2000
http://www.friendsofniger.org/localnews/NewsArchives.htm


Master Sergeant William W Bultmeier, USA, Ret.Defense Attache Office, Niamey11 February 1949 - 23 December 2000
William W. Bultmeier was killed during a carjacking in Niamey, Niger on 23 December 2000. Bultmeier, a retired U.S. Army master sergeant, was leaving a restaurant with embassy staff members when the attack took place. A U.S. Marine staff sergeant was also wounded in the incident. Mr. Bultmeier had been in Niger since July 2000 serving as the Defense Attaché System (DAS) Operations Coordinator establishing a new Defense Attaché Office in Niger. Officials stated that the attack was not politically motivated and appeared to be a random act of violence aimed at the theft of Bultmeier’s four-wheel-drive vehicle.Sergeant Bultmeier was born in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. He entered the U.S. Army in May 1967 and served as an attack helicopter door gunner in Vietnam. After a break in service to attend St. Francis College in Indiana, he rejoined the U.S. Army in July 1971 and served in a variety of assignments in trouble spots around the world. During the 1980s, Sergeant Bultmeier served as an operations coordinator in U. S. Defense Attaché Offices (USDAOs) in Brazil, Finland, and Mozambique. After retirement in 1990, He served as a civilian with the Department of State at American embassies in Greece, Hungary, and Mauritania. He returned to the DAS in May 1999 as a civilian contractor, and had served at the USDAO in Singapore prior to his untimely death in Niamey
.
http://www.dia.mil/history/patriots/biographies.html

The attack occurrred on U.S. embassy staff while en route to the US Embassy in Niamey, Niger.  But the articles do not exclude the possibility that the Embassy itself might have been entered.  And materials may have been stolen from embassy personnel during the "carjacking".
28 posted on 12/09/2005 11:22:08 AM PST by MilleniumBug (French consortium)
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