CIA finds papers, parts in Iraq for
enriching uranium
![]()
![]()
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
![]()
The CIA has uncovered components of a gas centrifuge
used to enrich weapons-grade uranium, and a stack of nuclear arms documents in
the back yard of an Iraqi scientist, an indication Baghdad was hiding its arms
program for future use, a U.S. intelligence official said yesterday.
Iraqi scientist Mahdi Shukur Obeidi, who came forward
with the documents and components in late May, hid the items in his back yard
under a rosebush 12 years ago, said an official familiar with details of the
discovery. Officials confirmed the discovery after it was first reported by
CNN.
"These documents and components were deliberately
hidden at the direction of Iraq's senior leadership with the aim of preserving
the regime's capacity to resume construction of a centrifuge that at some point
could be used to enrich uranium for a nuclear device," the intelligence
official said.
The official said that the discovery was "not a
smoking gun" indicating that Iraq had nuclear weapons, only that it
planned to develop them once United Nations sanctions barring Iraq from
operating a nuclear-weapons program were lifted. The sanctions were imposed
after the Persian Gulf war.
"Their existence validates our long-standing view
that Iraq had hidden nuclear technology," the official said. "And
this new evidence indicates that the Iraqis concealed proscribed documents and
examples of critical centrifuge components, some of them extremely difficult to
manufacture, in contravention of U.N. Security Council resolutions."
David Kay, a former U.N. weapons inspector now working
as an adviser to the CIA, said the finding in Iraq "begins to tell us how
huge our job is."
"Remember his material was buried in a barrel
behind his house in a rose garden," Mr. Kay told CNN. "There's no way
that that would have been discovered by normal international inspections. I
couldn't have done it. My successors couldn't have done it."
The centrifuge components were part of Iraq's pre-1991
uranium-enrichment program, the official said.
"Doctor Obeidi told us [the documents] represent a
complete set of what would be needed to rebuild a uranium-enrichment
program," the official said.
The scientist also disclosed to U.S. intelligence that
the concealment of the components and documents were "part of a secret
high-level plan to reconstitute the nuclear weapons program once sanctions
ended," the official said.
The components include some of the most difficult parts
of a centrifuge to produce. Centrifuges require high-strength steel and special
bearings because of the high speeds involved in the spinning process.
The disclosure comes as U.S. intelligence agencies are
under fire from critics in Congress who said intelligence on Iraq's hidden
weapons of mass destruction were exaggerated to support the policy of going to
war.
So far, no hidden stocks of weapons have been found,
but two mobile vans were found. U.S. intelligence analysts believe the vans
were part of Iraq's hidden biological-weapons program.
"I don't want this to proliferate because of the
potential consequences if it falls in the hands of tyrants and the hands of
dictators or of terrorists," Mr. Obeidi told CNN.
Officials said Mr. Obeidi and his family were relocated
out of Iraq to a third country.
Iraq secretly developed a gas-centrifuge program in the
early 1990s that was kept secret from U.S. intelligence until shortly before
the start of the 1991 Persian Gulf war. The disclosure showed that before that
war, Iraq was close to producing a nuclear bomb.
Gas centrifuges are used to spin gaseous uranium
hexafluoride that is enriched into the fuel of a nuclear bomb.
Centrifuges were used to make the first U.S. atomic
bombs and the technology is considered the earliest method of making the
fissionable material for a bomb. The centrifuges have no other purpose but
uranium enrichment.
Army Lt. Gen. John P. Abizaid, the nominee to be the
next commander of the U.S. Central Command, said during his Senate confirmation
yesterday he believes Iraq's weapons eventually will be found.
Gen. Abizaid told the Armed Services Committee that he
is confident that evidence "at some point ... will lead us to actual
weapons of mass destruction."
The general told senators that at one point recently he
called his top staff together and asked if anyone believed no weapons would be
found. "And to a man and to a woman, they all said we would find it,"
he said. "So the confidence of the intelligence professionals and my
confidence in them was high, and actually it remains high."