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To: Chaos

The Onion is not a news site.


1,584 posted on 09/23/2004 1:19:18 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

From " The Australian" :


Iraqi scientist spills secrets
From correspondents in Washington
24sep04

AN Iraqi scientist-turned-author says the most significant pieces of his country's dormant nuclear program were buried under a lotus tree in his backyard, untouched for more than a decade before the US-led invasion in 2003.


But their existence, Mahdi Obeidi writes in a new book, is evidence that the international community should remain vigilant as other countries try to replicate Iraq's successes before the 1991 Gulf war to develop components necessary for a nuclear weapon.

In The Bomb in my Garden, Obeidi details fallen Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's furious, and then abandoned, quest for a nuclear bomb.

"Although Saddam never had nuclear weapons at his disposal, the story of how close Iraq came to developing them should serve as a red flag to the international community," Obeidi writes with his co-author Kurt Pitzer.

The Associated Press obtained an advance copy of the book, to be released Sunday.

Obeidi details his research through nearly a quarter-century under Saddam, including the designs for key components and prototypes for nuclear production, buried in a plastic drum next to his rose garden.

Probably just two of Saddam's most trusted deputies knew the whereabouts of the research, he says.

While only the former president knows fully why he didn't restart his nuclear program, Obeidi believes Saddam may have realised the scope of the massive undertaking.

United Nations inspectors had dismantled the program, removed the enriched uranium stockpiles and exposed Iraq's international network of suppliers. And Saddam was making a mint off the UN's oil-for-food program, while increasing his control over a population reliant on him for basics such as flour, Obeidi says. To get caught importing components needed to produce a nuclear weapon, the scientist says, would have ended the program.

Yet Saddam kept his Iraq Atomic Energy Commission running, apparently without weapons programs, as late as 2003.

"All we had left was the knowledge in our heads and the documents buried in my garden," Obeidi writes.

In an upcoming report, US weapons inspectors with the Iraq Survey Group are expected to conclude that Saddam had intentions of reinvigorating his weapon's programs, but no stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction.

Obeidi, 60, was the creator of Iraq's centrifuge, a key component in one method of enriching bomb-grade uranium. He considers it the most dangerous piece of nuclear technology because related advances make it possible to conceal uranium enrichment programs inside one warehouse.

Obeidi and his colleagues were able to travel the world in the 1980s, collecting centrifuge research and components for their work from scholars and private companies in the United States, Germany, Switzerland, France, England and elsewhere. Then, Saddam had yet to become an enemy to the West.

By the late 1980s, Iraq was making breakthroughs. However, the international help dried up as Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990. The UN arrived after Saddam's 1991 defeat, intent on taking apart his weapons programs.

To hide signs of uranium enrichment then, Obeidi describes a massive demolition and reconstruction program he led to remove everything from the top soil to the coffee makers at his former centrifuge lab.

After the 2003 invasion, Obeidi attempted to take the nuclear secrets buried in his garden to US authorities. He describes disorganisation as the CIA and military intelligence wound up fighting over him.

Only after extensive negotiations involving former UN weapons inspector David Albright, who was in Washington, did Obeidi turn over all of his information.

Today, the US government has brought he and eight family members to the East Coast. For security, the family's location is not disclosed.

Looking back, Obeidi struggles to find words to describe how he could arm Saddam, whose government at one point kept him from his family for six months so he could work and left them fearing the walls had ears.

He says it was a matter of national pride and scientific pursuit, but more than anything, it was fear: "The idea of dozens of nuclear bombs in Saddam's hands is horrifying in retrospect."


1,585 posted on 09/23/2004 1:22:19 PM PDT by jerseygirl
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To: Cindy; All

For the people of Saudi Arabia, National Day signifies one of the most important events in their history: The foundation of the modern Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932.

Seventy-two years ago, on September 23, 1932, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was founded and named as an Islamic state, with Arabic designated as its national language and the Holy Qur'an as its constitution. Every year the Kingdom commemorates this day, recalling with pride the acts and achievements of the country’s founder, King Abdulaziz bin Abdulrahman Al-Saud.

Twenty-one year old Abdulaziz bin Abdulrahman Al-Saud left Kuwait in 1901, determined to reclaim all of the territory once held by his forefathers and to extend his protection over the Holy Cities of Makkah and Madinah. In a heroic battle, he recaptured Riyadh in 1902, which marked the beginning of the formation of the modern state of Saudi Arabia. After establishing Riyadh as his headquarters, King Abdulaziz proceeded, over the following decades, to unite the different regions into one nation of peace and prosperity.

http://aboutsaudiarabia.net/ct/Ad19djd1Ka-o/


1,630 posted on 09/23/2004 3:44:04 PM PDT by JustPiper (Jack Hensley was a father -- a good father- he was an incredible husband)
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