Th
| Democracy
Now! Wednesday December 18, 2002 Democracy
Now
!
Lists What U.S. Corporations Armed
Iraq Top-secret
Iraq Report Reveals U.S. Corporations,
Gov't Agencies and Nuclear Labs Helped
Illegally Arm Iraq HEWLETT Packard,
Dupont, Honeywell and other major U.S.
corporations, as well as governmental
agencies including the Department of
Defense and the nation's nuclear labs, all
illegally helped Iraq to build its
biological, chemical and nuclear weapons
programs. On Wednesday, December 18, Geneva-based
reporter Andreas Zumach broke the
story on the US national
listener-sponsored radio and television
show "Democracy Now!" Zumach's
Berlin-based paper Die Tageszeitung
plans to soon publish a full list of
companies and nations who have aided Iraq.
The paper first reported on Tuesday that
German and U.S. companies had extensive
ties to Iraq but didn't list names. Zumach
obtained top-secret portions of Iraq's
12,000-page weapons declaration that
the US had redacted from the version
made available to the non-permanent
members of the UN Security Council.
"We have 24 major U.S. companies listed
in the report who gave very substantial
support especially to the biological
weapons program but also to the missile
and nuclear weapons program," Zumach said.
"Pretty much everything was illegal in the
case of nuclear and biological weapons.
Every form of cooperation and supplies*
was outlawed in the 1970s." The list of U.S. corporations listed in
Iraq's report include Hewlett Packard,
DuPont, Honeywell, Rockwell, Tectronics,
Bechtel, International Computer Systems,
Unisys, Sperry and TI Coating. Zumach also said the U.S. Departments
of Energy, Defense, Commerce, and
Agriculture quietly helped arm Iraq. U.S.
government nuclear weapons laboratories
Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos and Sandia
trained traveling Iraqi nuclear scientists
and gave non-fissile material for
construction of a nuclear bomb. "There has never been this kind of
comprehensive layout and listing like we
have now in the Iraqi report to the
Security Council so this is quite new and
this is especially new for the U.S.
involvement, which has been even more
suppressed in the public domain and the
U.S. population," Zumach said. The names of companies were supposed to
be top secret. Two weeks ago Iraq provided
two copies of its full 12,000-page report,
one to the International Atomic Energy
Agency in Geneva, and one to the United
Nations in New York. Zumach said the U.S.
broke an agreement of the Security Council
and blackmailed Colombia, which at the
time was presiding over the Council, to
take possession of the UN's only copy. The
U.S. then proceeded to make copies of the
report for the other four permanent
Security Council nations, Britain, France,
Russia and China. Only yesterday did the
remaining members of the Security Council
receive their copies. By then, all
references to foreign companies had been
removed. According to Zumach, only Germany had
more business ties to Iraq than the U.S.
As many as 80 German companies are also
listed in Iraq's report. The paper
reported that some German companies
continued to do business with Iraq until
last year.
Listen
to Democracy Now's 12/18
report
United
States tore out 8,000 pages of Iraq
dossier |