Tests Confirm Sarin Gas in Baghdad Bomb
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, May 25, 2004
WASHINGTON Comprehensive testing has confirmed the
presence of the chemical weapon sarin in the remains of a roadside
bomb discovered this month in Baghdad, a defense official said
Tuesday.
The determination, made by a laboratory in the United States
that the official would not identify, verifies what earlier,
less-thorough field tests had found: The bomb was made from an
artillery shell designed to disperse the deadly nerve agent on the
battlefield.
The origin of the shell remains unclear, and finding that out is
a priority for the U.S. military, the defense official said,
speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Some analysts worry the 155-millimeter artillery shell, found
rigged as a bomb on May 15, might be part of a larger stockpile of
Iraqi chemical weapons that insurgents can now use. But no more
have turned up, and several military officials have said the shell
might have been an older one that predated the 1991 Gulf War.
It likewise is not known whether the bombers knew they had a
chemical weapon. Military officials have said the shell bore no
labels to indicate it was anything except a normal explosive shell,
the type used to make scores of roadside bombs in Iraq.
No one was injured in the shell's initial detonation, but two
American soldiers who removed the round had symptoms of low-level
nerve agent exposure, officials said last week.
The shell was a binary type, which has two chambers containing
relatively safe chemicals. When the round is fired from an
artillery gun, its rotation mixes the chemicals to create sarin,
which is supposed to disperse when the shell strikes its target.
Because it was not fired from a gun but was detonated as a bomb,
the initial explosion on May 15 dispersed the precursor chemicals,
apparently mixing them in only small amounts, officials said then.
In battle, such shells would have to be fired in great numbers to
effect a large body of troops.
Iraq's first field-test of a binary-type shell containing sarin
was in 1988, U.S. defense officials have said.
Saddam's government disclosed the testing and production only
after Iraqi weapons chief Lt. Gen. Hussein Kamel al-Majid, Saddam's
son-in-law, defected in 1995. Saddam's government never declared
any sarin or shells filled with sarin remained.
Saddam's alleged stockpile of weapons of mass destruction was
the Bush administration's chief stated reason for invading Iraq.
U.S. weapons hunters have been unable to validate the prewar
intelligence.
Some trace elements of mustard agent, an older type of chemical
weapon, were detected in an artillery shell found in a Baghdad
street this month, U.S. officials said previously. The shell
was believed to be from one of Saddam's old stockpiles.
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