If
weapons inspectors are
supposed to be checking
against the dossier's content,
how can any future claim be
verified. In effect the US is
saying trust us, and there are
many who just will
not. . .
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[Images added
by this website]
The Sunday Herald, , Sunday December 22,
2002
America
tore out 8000 pages of Iraq
dossier
By James Cusick and
Felicity Arbuthnot
THE United States
edited out more than 8000 crucial pages of
Iraq's 11,800-page dossier on weapons,
before passing on a sanitised version to
the 10 non-permanent members of the United
Nations security council.
The
full extent of Washington's complete
control over who sees what in the crucial
Iraqi dossier calls into question the
allegations made by US Secretary of State
Colin Powell (right) that
'omissions' in the document constituted a
'material breach' of the latest UN
resolution on Iraq.
Last week, Secretary General of the UN
Kofi Annan accepted that it was
'unfortunate' that his organisation had
allowed the US to take the only complete
dossier and edit it. He admitted 'the
approach and style were wrong' and Norway,
a member of the security council, says it
is being treated like a 'second-class
country'.
Although Powell called the Iraqi
dossier a 'catalogue of recycled
information and flagrant omissions', the
non-permanent members of the security
council will have no way of testing the US
claims for themselves. This will be
crucial if the US and the UK go back to
the security council seeking explicit
authorisation for war on Iraq if breaches
of resolution 1441 are confirmed when the
weapons inspectors -- this weekend
investigating 10 sites in Iraq, including
an oil refinery south of Baghdad --
deliver their report to the UN next
month.
A UN source in
New York said: 'The questions being
asked are valid. What did the US take
out? And if weapons inspectors are
supposed to be checking against the
dossier's content, how can any future
claim be verified. In effect the US is
saying trust us, and there are many who
just will not.'
Current and former UN diplomats are
said to be livid at what some have called
the 'theft' of the Iraqi document by the
US. Hans von Sponeck, the former
assistant general secretary of the UN and
the UN's humanitarian co- ordinator in
Iraq until 2000, said: 'This is an
outrageous attempt by the US to
mislead.'
Although the five permanent members of
the security council -- the US, the UK,
France, China and Russia -- have had
access to the complete version, there was
agreement that the US be allowed to edit
the dossier on the ground that its
contents were 'risky' in terms of security
on weapons proliferation.
Yesterday,
US President George W Bush
announced that a planned trip to several
African countries, scheduled for January,
had been cancelled. As he gave the
go-ahead to double the current 50,000 US
troops deployed in the Gulf by early
January, he used his weekly radio address
to say that 'the men and women in the
[US] military, many of whom will
spend Christmas at posts and bases far
from home' were the only thing that stood
between 'Americans and grave danger'.
An equally pessimistic view of the
immediate future came from the Vatican.
Pope John Paul II promised the
Catholic church would not cease to have
its voice heard and would offer prayers
'in the face of this horizon bathed in
blood'.
Despite the prayers, the US military
isn't expecting peace. Yesterday, General
Richard Myers, chairman of the US
joint chiefs of staff, was asked if US
forces were ready if called upon
immediately. General Myers simply said:
'You bet.'
The language coming from Baghdad was
equally gung ho. The Iraqi newspaper
Babel, owned by Saddam Hussein's
eldest son Uday, likened US and UK
political leaders to ruthless Mongol
conquerors of the past.
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