No, no. I dont think so, Diatta said. Our prime minister said to a journalist from the British Telegraph that it was impossible that the forgery was made in our embassy in Rome, he added, referring to the Embassy of Niger in Rome, which has been mentioned as a suspect because the first page of the forged documents appears to be a genuine letter from the embassy advising Nigers government of a visit to the country by the Iraqi ambassador to the Vatican. --- "Uranium Controversy Raises Nigers Profile," by Sean ODriscoll, Sept 2003, http://www.washdiplomat.com/03-09/a2_03_09.html as retrieved on Jun 14, 2004 10:48:06 GMT by Google
The middleman, an Italian who uses the name Giacomo, is a small-time tipster said to have worked for Italys armed forces and intelligence services. He says Sismi, the Italian foreign intelligence service, used him to disseminate fake documents purporting to show Saddam had tried to buy uranium for nuclear bombs from Niger.
I received a call from a former colleague in Sismi, Giacomo said. I was told a woman in the Niger embassy in Rome had a gift for me. I met her and she gave me documents. Sismi wanted me to pass on the documents but they didnt want anyone to know they had been involved.
He came into possession of a bundle of telexes, letters and contracts that appeared to show Saddam had struck a deal with Niger for 500 tons of uranium ore, enough when refined to make several weapons.
Giacomo said he regretted the hoax but had believed the documents were genuine when he passed them to intelligence contacts and a journalist. The hoax had far-reaching effects. Presenting his dossier on Iraqs weapons in September 2002, Blair accused Saddam of seeking significant quantities of uranium from Africa.