Posted on 03/17/2003 8:01:37 PM PST by A_Niceguy_in_CA
UNITED NATIONS - Chief UN arms inspector Hans Blix produced a "to do" list of 12 disarmament tasks Iraq should fulfill as he began to withdraw his inspection ahead of a likely war.
Blix's "key remaining disarmament tasks" are required under a 1999 resolution that calls for a work programme Iraq is to undertake. The 83-page report was distributed to UN Security Council members today and obtained by Reuters.
Blix asks for explanations from Iraq in the following areas: Scud missiles and associated biological and chemical warheads; SA-2 missile technology; research and development of all missiles and their components; munitions for chemical and biological agents; and spray devices and drones.
On chemical and biological arms he asked for information on the deadly chemical VX gas and its precursors; mustard gas and its precursors; sarin, cyclosarin and their precursors; and any remaining stocks of anthrax and undeclared biological agents, including smallpox.
The report did not say Iraq was still harbouring dangerous arms but indicated clearly that inspectors were not satisfied with information Baghdad had given on its weapons of mass destruction.
Blix last week, in a fuller report on the outstanding questions, criticised Iraq for not declaring a drone some US officials say may be a "smoking gun." But he said his disarmament teams still had to determine if it was legal.
UN arms inspectors had said they discovered an undeclared Iraqi drone with a wingspan of 7.45m, suggesting an illegal range that could threaten Iraq's neighbours with chemical and biological weapons.
Blix also recently disputed Iraq's claim to have destroyed 21,000 litres of biological-warfare agents, including anthrax, 12 years ago.
The report, drawn up by Blix's UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, came on the day UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan announced he was pulling all UN staff out of Baghdad, including more than 100 inspectors, many of whom were seen packing their bags.
Earlier the United States, Britain and Spain gave up diplomacy at the United Nations, withdrew a UN Security Council draft resolution authorizing force and blamed France for not being able to get the minimum nine votes needed for adoption.
By EDITH M. LEDERER, Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS - Chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix spelled out exactly what Iraq (news - web sites) must do to prove it has disarmed and avoid U.S.-led military action, even as war looms.
In a report to the Security Council Monday, Blix said if Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) cooperates, the dozen key remaining disarmament issues could be resolved in months.
France, Russia and Germany have seized on Blix's presentation of the disarmament tasks to call for a council meeting Wednesday to set a "realistic" timeline to complete the tasks.
But with efforts to disarm Iraq peacefully apparently at an end, the exercise appeared futile to many diplomats. In a televised address Monday evening, U.S. President George W. Bush (news - web sites) gave Saddam a 48-hour deadline to flee Iraq or face a U.S.-led invasion.
Blix whittled down a 173-page dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, which he gave to the council earlier this month, to pick a dozen key remaining disarmament tasks, each with questions Iraq must answer.
The chief inspector was required to produce the list before the end of March but speeded up its presentation at the request of France, Germany and other council members.
The list, obtained by The Associated Press, includes many of the key issues in the dossier anthrax, VX nerve agent, mustard gas, missiles, chemical and biological munitions and warheads, drones and Scud missiles.
Blix said inspectors would pursue Iraq's fulfillment of the disarmament requirements "simultaneously and with the same priority" once they are approved by the council.
He listed the following tasks and actions that Iraq can take to resolve them:
_ Present any Scud missiles and associated biological and chemical warheads or explain what happened to them.
_ Provide information on SA-2 missile technology and related projects, and present any remaining Fahad missiles.
_ Present all materials related to missiles capable of going beyond the U.N. limit of 93 miles (150 kilometers), and their components.
_ Present any remaining chemical and biological munitions, including aerial bombs, rockets or missile warheads, artillery shells, cluster munitions and production equipment, and provide "credible evidence" about these programs.
_ Provide details of any drones or equipment for them, and present any spray tanks or other devices that could be used for chemical or biological warfare.
_ Present any remaining VX nerve agent and provide "credible evidence" to support any quantities of VX that were produced, consumed, destroyed or spoiled.
_ Present any remaining mustard gas and similar credible evidence.
_ Present any remaining Sarin nerve agent and similar credible evidence.
_ Present any remaining stocks of anthrax or provide evidence for its destruction and provide information on any work to dry anthrax.
_ Present any remaining stocks of botulinum toxin, a biological warfare agent, and complete production records since 1989 as well as evidence on the numbers of weapons filled with the toxin.
_ Present any stocks of undeclared biological warfare agents, and all information on research or production of smallpox after 1972.
_ Present any banned chemical or biological agents, precursors, missiles, mobile and underground facilities for chemical and biological weapons that have been acquired since 1998 when U.N. inspectors left Iraq.
Blix definitely does not get the picture.
Even without the stinking French Ba$tards support!
Best Regards!
LOL - great ! I'll steal it
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