UNSCOM and weapons inspections in the Republic of Iraq
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- Iraq Says U.N. Arms Monitors Can
Return
- By Hassan Hafidh, Reuters, Thursday 20 November
1997. Iraq has agreed with Russia that U.N. arms
inspectors, including the Americans, will return to Iraq
to resume work, apparently defusing a three-week-old
crisis. The standoff began on October 29 when Iraq ordered
the expulsion of Americans working in U.N. arms inspection
teams in charge of dismantling Iraq’s weapons of mass
destruction under the 1991 Gulf War ceasefire, accusing
them of espionage.
- Iraq seeks Egypt's help at U.N.
- UPI, 21 November 1997. Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tareq
Aziz has asked Egypt to help bring about a peaceful
solution to the current crisis with the United Nations
over arms inspections when the U.N. Security Council meets
to decide on a Russian proposal on the issue. Cairo is
satisfied to see the crisis winding down with the start of
the return of the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) weapons
inspectors, which has a mandate to eliminate weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq.
- UN inspections won’t harm Saddam’s
bio-warfare ability
- By Jay Bushinsky, Jerusalem
Post, 7 December 1997. An Israeli view that
seeks to discredit the work of UNSCOM. Hussein is charged
with building up secret stockpiles of weapons which will
enable him to wage germ warfare on a vast scale, while
retaining such delivery systems as Scud missiles despite
the renewed presence of UN arms inspectors in Iraq.
- The ugly American returns to Baghdad
- South News, 19 December
1997. US weapons inspectors Colonel Scott Ritter arrived
back with an ugly vengeance. Ritter heads a new 15 man
inspection team and immediately did a surprise search in
disregard of protocol. The team has found nothing. Iraq
had accused Ritter of being an American spy wanting to
create problems.
- IAC Condemns US provaction Against Iraq
- International Action Center press release, 12 January
1998. International Action Center condemns U.S.-British
dominated weapons inspection team as “a provocation
meant to serve as justification for a new military strike
against Iraq”. The United Nations Security Council is
totally under the domination of Washington.
- Washington Pushes For ‘Unconditional’
Inspections In Iraq
- By Maurice Williams, The Militant, 12 January
1998. Washington has not let
up in its campaign of war threats against Iraq, pushing
the United Nations Security Council to demand
unconditional access, a clear violation of relevant
resolutions and a pretext it could to use to justify a new
military attack.
- US Rejects Iranian and Cuban UN Arms
Inspectors
- By Thalif Deen, IPS, 4 February 1998. The U.S. struck
out the names of Cuban and Iranian nationals from a
U.N. arms inspection team. Ironically, the U.S. is
exercising the same right it refuses to concede to the
Iraqis. How inspectors are chosen. Accusation that some of
the U.N. inspectors are working for the U.S. CIA. The
44-member team led by Ritter includes 28 who are
classified as arms inspectors, of which, besides Ritter
himself, 10 are US nationals, 5 are Britons, 2 are
non-Europeans.
- Iraqi Envoy Says News Report Proves U.S.
Influence
- Xinhua, 14 August 1998. A report by the Washington Post
proves that the U.S. has
too much influence
on
U.N. arms inspections in Iraq. This is why Iraq has
requested in the past that there should be a major change
in the whole infrastructure UNSCOM. Iraq has repeatedly
accused UNSCOM of being influenced by the U.S. to prolong
the disarmament process so that sanctions imposed on Iraq
since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait remain in force
indefinitely.
- Butler should go: says Egypt
- South News 21 December 1998. Egypt says that the UN chief
arms inspector in Iraq, Richard Butler, had lost his
credibility and should be replaced. It is in
everybody’s interest to end Butler’s
mission. UNSCOM was not up to the responsibilities
specified for it by the Security Council and the
U.N. charter. An investigation of the failure
needed.
- U.S. Spied on Iraqi Military Via U.N.
- By Barton Gellman, Washington Post, 2 March
1999. US intelligence services
infiltrated agents and espionage equipment for three years
into United Nations arms control teams in Iraq to
eavesdrop on the Iraqi military without the knowledge of
the U.N. agency that it used to disguise its work. The US
rigged UNSCOM equipment and office spacewithout
permissionto intercept ordinary Iraqi military
communications of value to U.S. military planners but
generally unrelated to UNSCOM's mandate.
- US ‘provoked clashes with
Iraq’
- BBC News, 19 July 2001. The former UN weapons inspector,
Scott Ritter, has accused the US of deliberately provoking
confrontations with Iraq, which, he says, was almost fully
disarmed by 1995. The US undermined the work of UNSCOM and
used the issue to push Iraq towards conflict with the
West.