Posted on 11/18/2002 2:41:26 AM PST by HAL9000
An advance team of United Nations weapons inspectors has arrived in Baghdad to begin implementing a tough new UN mandate aimed at disarming Iraq.Chief weapons inspector Hans Blix and Mohammed el-Baradei, his counterpart from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), are to hold a series of meetings with Iraqi Government officials.
Their 25-strong team will be trying to assess what has happened in the four years since UN inspectors left Iraq and will pave the way for fresh inspections due to start later this month.
"We are on our way to a new chapter of inspections in Iraq," Mr Blix said on Sunday, during a joint news conference with Mr El Baradei at Cyprus's Larnaca airport.
Dr Blix has said that even the best-hidden weapons can now be detected with new technology, but sceptics say that Iraq has had four years to prepare for them.
Iraq insists that all suggestions that it has developed or acquired new weapons of mass destruction are baseless.
But the US remains convinced that Baghdad has continued to import and develop chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
While Dr Blix is meeting officials, other members of his team will organise vehicles to transport inspectors around Iraq and set up a logistical and communications base in Baghdad.
The BBC's Greg Barrow, at the United Nations, says this is the easy part, and that the drama will start when inspections begin - which could be as early as next week.
When asked how sure he would be that Iraq was not concealing weapons, Mr El Baradei said: "We do not take 'no' for an answer. We have to verify a 'no' is actually a 'no'.
"This is an opportunity for peace. I hope Iraq will make full use of it," he said.
Compliance
The American Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, has indicated there will be no hasty action against Iraq.
He said the international community would wait for a pattern of behaviour to emerge before deciding what action to take.
He was responding to suggestions that Iraq's continued firing on US and British planes patrolling no-fly zones constituted a violation of the UN resolution.
Meanwhile, Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz said his government was ready to comply fully with the arms inspectors.
"We will provide immediate access," he told London Weekend Television's Jonathan Dimbleby programme on Sunday.
"We have given instructions to all responsible people and many government areas to respond immediately to any request to enter their sites and inspect them."
But Mr Aziz added that inspectors should not think they could just walk into sites.
"When you go to a site, the site has a gate. The gate has to be opened and (the person) who opens the gate should know who is coming. This is common sense," he said.
Logistics
Mr Blix said even a 30-minute delay in granting access to a suspect site would be regarded as a serious violation.
He said formal inspections start on 27 November, and he expected to have 100 inspectors in Iraq by the end of the year.
The first significant test is an 8 December deadline for Iraq to submit a full account of all its banned weapons programmes.
My read on Saddam is, "we fooled them last time and we will again"
He has never dealt with a texan before, and this one's a Ranger
Do you have to check all my arms or just this one?
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