Posted on 09/20/2002 4:44:04 PM PDT by Pokey78
US intelligence experts are examining a top secret document sent to Iraqi military commanders on Saddam Husseins orders that appears to confirm that they have a chemical arsenal and are prepared to use it. The 23-page military order allegedly instructs local commanders that, in the event of the Iraqi regime facing defeat in a war, the officers are free to use their own initiative and unleash chemical weapons. Signed by the head of the Iraqi Navy, it talks of preparations that must be made for a chemical battle between Iraqi and US forces. It also allegedly includes details of the radio-coded messages for the use of chemical weapons. If intelligence specialists authenticate this document, it will provide evidence that can be shown to the United Nations of how Saddam Hussein has lied about stockpiling chemical weapons and his willingness to see his forces use them. US officials have not yet decided whether to include this document in the dossier they are preparing for President Bush to show Iraqs continuing deception over its weapons of mass destruction. Parliament is being recalled next week when Tony Blair will reveal to MPs what British Intelligence has discovered about Saddams chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. It is not known if this document has been passed to British experts for analysis. Last night a senior US official in Washington said: We are taking this very seriously. He confirmed to The Times that intelligence specialists were still investigating the document and what it revealed about Saddams chemical capabilities. We are studying the contents very carefully to see what it tells us about Saddams military contingency planning, the source said. The document was handed to the White House last month when Iraqi Opposition leaders were invited to Washington. Dick Cheney, the Vice-President, took part in the meeting on a video link from his ranch and instructed senior officials to carefully examine the intercepted military order. Senior officials from the State and Defence Department were present at these talks. Reportedly sent in March, it details the five military zones inside Iraq and the circumstances in which military commanders of these areas will be free to use their initiative on using the chemical weapons they have at their disposal. It is allegedly signed by Staff Lieutenant General Yahiya Taha Huwaish, the commander of the Iraqi Navy. Below his signature is that of Chemical Lieutenant Colonel Qasim Hamoud Slayih, Staff Chemical Officer of the naval forces. The Iraqis are careful in the communiqué not to talk about the specific chemical toxins they have in their arsenal. Experts say the reference to preparations and the use of the word battle rather than attack suggests Saddam could have been readying his chemical weapons for deployment as far back as March. One of those who attended the White House meeting in August was Dr Hamid Bayati, London representative of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution. He was a member of his groups three-man team led by Abdul Aziz Hakim that was part of a large Iraqi Opposition delegation who briefed Dick Cheney. They included representatives from Dr Ahmed Chalabis Iraqi National Congress, Ayad Alawis Iraqi National Accord and the two Kurdish parties the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, led by Jalal Talebani, and the Kurdish Democratic Party, led by Masoud Barzani. Also present was Sharif Ali, head of the Iraqi Constitutional Monarchists group. Dr Bayati said: The document is marked top secret, then it says Navy Forces Command Training Department. It lists the military units this order should be distributed to. US officials will want to ensure the accuracy of the communiqué before using it to persuade sceptical members on the UN Security Council that it is reason not to trust Iraq over its apparent compliance with weapons inspectors. Intelligence chiefs will also want to discover if this document provides any clues as to where these weapons might be found, which UN inspectors could then demand to visit. Despite the efforts of UN inspectors from 1991 until they were expelled in December 1998, Saddam is believed to have secretly hidden his stores of deadly nerve gas, such as sarin and tabun, as well as mustard gas. According to Iraqi defectors, production of these three agents was resumed immediately after the expulsion of the inspectors. What is most alarming is the addition of sufficient quantities of another and even more deadly nerve agent, VX. Saddam had about 250 tonnes of precursor chemicals to make VX and refused to hand them over to the UN inspectors, said Dr Hussain Shahristani, a former chief scientific adviser to the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission who now heads the Iraqi Refugee Aid Council in London.
If I was one of those officers I would say screw you Saddam this is your war not mine. I don't want to get nuked.
If true, then more folks than Saddam have the "go codes" for the WMDs.
I believe this account is close to the mark. Whatever Saddam's internal paranoia, his hatred and megalomania compel him to have doomsday scenarios if anything should happen to him. Absurd as it may seem, he would embrace such a legacy.
Saddam Hussein didn't make a life's work of acquiring WMDs only to die without them being used against his enemies.
And then there are Uday and Qusay Hussein, who went from diapers to maniacal despots-in-waiting.
I doubt that any would risk it, if they saw the war was being lost anyway.
US officials will want to ensure the accuracy of the communiqué before using it to persuade sceptical members on the UN Security Council that it is reason not to trust Iraq over its apparent compliance with weapons inspectors. Nonsense. There is no way to prove the authencity of something like this. Those who wish to dismiss it will do so. Only the deaths of tens of thousands will persuade the ideological doubters that there is any threat at all. We will have to make our own assessment of this, and proceed accordingly. It does not matter what a bunch of perfumed princes at the UN think about it. |
Hey, I want to hear from more Libertines and AntiWar.Com people about how Bush has no proof, he's reckless, blahblahblah.
Hey, anyone remember the big American anti-war movement before Pearl Harbor? It WAS pretty vociferous, but don't feel bad you haven't really heard anything about it.
That's what happens when you're not only irrelevant, but dead WRONG.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.