Photos Prove Iraq Violated U.N. Weapons Ban
Charles R. Smith
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2003
French Weapons Dated 2001
NewsMax has obtained exclusive photographs proving that Iraq violated a U.N. Security Council ban on importing weapons. The photographs show a wide variety of imported weapons with production dates as recent as 2001.
A U.S. military inspection team that visited an Iraqi air force munitions site in late September 2003 took the photographs. The site, located in the Suni triangle near Baghdad, has at least 13 concrete bunkers filled with missiles, bombs and bomb-fusing devices.
U.S. military teams uncovered several examples of U.N.
violations, including a number of French bomb fuses with a
production date of "2001-Sep-5."
The French-made aerial bomb fuses had
documentation noting that the devices were produced in 2001.
The French bomb fuses were stored in a box stating the
manufacture date was 1985 in an apparent effort to mislead U.N.
and U.S. inspectors.
Cluster Bombs
Another series of photos shows that U.S. inspection teams discovered a cache of South African CB470 cluster bombs. According to the declaration made in November 2002 by Saddam Hussein, Iraq had no such weapons.
Saddam denied that he had cluster bombs but U.S. State Department photos prior to Operation Iraqi Freedom showed that Iraqi Air Force engineers were working on modifying conventional cluster bombs into chemical weapons.
Cluster bombs carry a large number of "bomblets" or "sub-munitions," small, softball-sized grenades that separate from the main bomb unit. The falling bomblets then shower a large area with explosions.
Cluster bomb technology can be adapted to chemical or biological warfare by replacing the conventional explosive submunitions with biotoxin-armed bomblets.
Russian Bombs
Another example was a large quantity of KMG-U cluster bomb dispensers developed in Russia by the Spetztekhnika Vympel NPO in Moscow and manufactured by Bazalt State Research and Production Enterprise.
The Iraqi KMG-U dispensers were armed with the PTAB2.5 anti-tank bomblets and AO2.5 bomblets. According to the Russian manufacturer, the KMG-U dispenser and submunitions were not available for export until 1993. However, there are no reported export sales.
The U.S. teams also found fully active Russian-made AA-8 air-to-air missiles, French-made Durandal anti-runway rocket bombs, Russian anti-personnel cluster bomblets and huge quantities of unguided rockets. Many of the munitions were piled into large heaps or simply scattered over the open countryside.
The condition of the find illustrates the huge task faced by U.S. forces as they try to disarm Iraq. Saddam loyalists could easily obtain and use the munitions found lying in the open desert against American forces.
Moreover, the discrepancies between documentation, box markings and actual items found show that an intentional effort was made by Iraqi troops to mislead U.N. inspection teams. In some cases false shipping documents written in English were discovered with the weapons.
In addition, the effort to find chemical or biological weapons is being hampered by the vast quantity of conventional munitions stored in dangerous conditions. The Iraqi army was well-known for storing chemical weapons with its conventional explosives.
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RADIO AND TV SCHEDULE
KPDQ in Portland Oregon, on Thursday, 10/23/03, at 7 p.m. Eastern time.
The American Freedom Network with NewsMax contributor Dr. James Hirsen on
Friday, 10/24/03, at 11 a.m. Eastern time. Show information at
http://www.amerifree.com.
The Jerry Hughes show on Friday, 10/24/03, at 3 p.m. Eastern time. Show
information at http://www.cilamerica.com.
The Phil Paleologos "American Breakfast" show on Tuesday, 10/28/03, the
Langer Broadcast Network, at 8 a.m. Eastern time. Show information at
www.dinershow.com.
Editor's note:
The Iraqi "Deck of Death" playing cards – Get yours today!
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