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September 18, 2003 Thursday Rajab 20, 1424

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Iraq destroyed WMD a decade ago: Blix


SYDNEY, Sept 17: Former UN chief weapons inspector Hans Blix said on Wednesday Iraq had probably got rid of its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) at least 10 years ago, but Saddam Hussein pretended otherwise to deter any attack.

“I’m certainly more and more to the conclusion that Iraq has, as they maintained, destroyed all almost of what they had in the summer of 1991,” Mr Blix told an Australian radio network.

Hans Blix was chief UN weapons inspector on Iraq in the run-up to the invasion. His inspectors worked in Iraq for several months late last year and early this year, but failed to find evidence of the alleged weapons.

Asked if it was likely Iraq has not had weapons of mass destruction for at least 10 years, Mr Blix said: “Yup, that’s right.”

But the former Swedish diplomat said there had to be an explanation why the Iraqi authorities had created so many difficulties for his inspectors, suggesting it might have been a complex charade, designed precisely to prevent an invasion.

“You see, if they didn’t have anything (WMD) after ‘91, there must be some explanation why they behaved as they did. They certainly gave the impression that they were denying access and so forth,” Mr Blix said.

“I mean, you can put up a sign on your door, Beware of the Dog, without having a dog.”

Mr Blix’s suggestions, which he said were already known in the United States, called into question controversial intelligence used by Britain and the United States to justify the invasion.

On Dec 7 last year, the government of then-Iraqi president Saddam Hussein made a submission to the United Nations in which it said it did not have chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.

It was quickly dismissed as false and incomplete by the United States and Britain, which accused Baghdad of failing to disarm as required by Security Council Resolution 1441. These charges were later used by Washington and London to justify the invasion.

Since then, British Prime Minister Tony Blair has been under fire for allegedly ignoring intelligence casting doubt on the case for the occupation.

And Australian Prime Minister John Howard this week was accused of lying over a British intelligence report suggesting a strike on Baghdad would increase the likelihood of terrorist attacks against Western targets.

US officials have also been increasingly keen to downplay the significance of the search for weapons in Iraq. The US-controlled Iraq Survey Group has been scouring the country for evidence of weapons, but its hundreds of scientists have found very little.

Mr Blix pointed out that the rhetoric of official descriptions of the hunt for weapons had been progressively weakened, doubting that any would now be found.—AFP






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