
#9
Russian Reporter Sees Nothing Untoward at 'Secret'
Iraqi Facility
Tribuna
February 11, 2003
Special correspondent Igor Razumovskiy report:
"America Is Always Lying!"
Baghdad--Our correspondent visited a secret Iraqi facility, where, according
to the assurances of US leaders, weapons of mass destruction are being
manufactured.
Not even 24 hours had passed after the speech of American Secretary of State
Powell in the UN Security Council containing new charges against Baghdad before
the Iraqi authorities were giving Russian reporters the go-ahead for visiting
previously closed military facilities that have been causing the US
Administration particular uneasiness as of late.
We drove out of Baghdad and continued our journey westward. Desert stretched
out on both sides of the highway. True, it could hardly be called lifeless.
Small farm buildings and even mud-hut dwellings of, evidently, not the most
well-to-do Iraqis were encountered now here, now there along the road. In some
places small groups of barefoot children were very professionally kicking a ball
on an improvised "field". The outlines of combat equipment:
battle-scarred tanks and armored personnel carriers and also a couple of MiG-17
fighters at a small temporary airstrip, appeared fleetingly several times
somewhere in the distance. Twice we also came across the positions of
antiaircraft gunners deployed just a couple of hundred meters from the highway.
All this prompted melancholy thoughts. With such combat equipment Iraq appears
poorly clothed, barefoot, and absolutely defenseless. Such ancient arms may be
seen more often than not as exhibits in war museums, but in no way in position.
But the Iraqis accompanying us explained in response to my bewilderment with
their characteristic optimism that the antiaircraft guns would shoot down
helicopters and unmanned aircraft, and if the worst came to the worst, they
could fire at tanks also.
We enter the grounds of a test range in the wake of a cavalcade of Toyotas,
Mercs, and Volkswagens that were occupied by a French delegation led by Jeanne
Le Pen-wife of the well-known leader of the right. Earlier considered
top-secret, this facility occupies quite impressive territory enclosed by what
is not, probably, the highest of fences. Nor could you by any means call the
security that we saw serious.
Several single-level small structures, and at the fence not far from the
entrance to the test range, a large white container. But it was by no means this
that has caused all the fuss that is incomprehensible to the Iraqis. Zakiariah
Mazen, officer in charge of the test range, shows us a building berth for
missile testing. It is in the very center of the test range on a kind of podium
and resembles the skeleton of a building under construction. About 300 meters
away is another, but older.
The construction of the new testing unit, which we approached, began last
year. There are still some things to be completed. Nonetheless, this does not
prevent tests of units of live missiles. The latest was carried out on 4
February. And, as Iraqi Army officers told us, the monitoring of the UNMOVIC
inspectors was so strict, what is more, that, even if this had been the desire,
concealing anything would have been very difficult.
But what is most interesting is that the international inspectors, who have
been turning this test range upside down since 27 November of last year, have
long had the photograph of allegedly new buildings at this facility that was
shown to the world by Powell. UNMOVIC teams were here three times in January
alone, spending about five hours at a time at the facility. And the majority of
the inspectors are by no means civilians, what is more.
The facility is managed by a flagship of Iraq's military-industrial
complex-the Al-Karama firm, which manufactures missiles with a range of up to
150 kilometers. The construction of the new building berth, according to
Brigadier (a rank between our colonel and major general) Mazen, the officer in
charge of the facility, was brought about by the need for increased security.
The "podium," on which the new testing unit is positioned, is
considerably wider than the old one, this is very important in the event of
untoward situations: the employees now have a better chance of surviving.
But the main thing is that missiles can only be tested at the completed
building berth in horizontal position. The structure itself bears missiles of no
more than five tons, short-range, that is. For testing a more powerful missile a
different structure is needed. And the UNMOVIC inspectors are perfectly well
aware of this, what is more. According to their demands, the Iraqis are to have
given notice of the date of any tests 14 days ahead of time. All the missile's
specifications andn performance characteristics need to be communicated. Not a
single test takes place without the presence of inspectors. In addition, the
Iraqis are required on the basis of the results of the testing to furnish a
detailed report with all the instrumentation data.
But even this does not appear sufficient for UNMOVIC. The inspectors are
entitled to barge into any Iraqi's private home to check it for the presence of
weapons of mass destruction. The officer in charge of the facility described
with irony how several days ago they had inspected the home of an ordinary Iraqi
family living not far from Baghdad. The international inspectors asked to be
shown the larder and kitchen and even inquired about how many plates there were
in the home. Plates also, evidently, are a very dangerous dual-use product
capable of appreciably increasing the range of the Iraqi missiles.
Incidentally
France yesterday vetoed NATO's plans to defend Turkey in the event of the
start of combat operations of the United States against Iraq. Belgium and
Germany had resorted to this veto earlier. Paris, Brussels, and Berlin believe
that the reinforcement of the armed forces of Turkey would serve as a signal
that war with Iraq had already begun. This is why they availed themselves of
NATO members' right of veto to block the decisions to reinforce Turkey's
defenses.
On 15 January the United States had requested that the NATO Council render
rear support in the event of a war against Iraq. Its proposed list includes the
use of military bases and the air space of NATO countries and the rear
infrastructure and support system and also defense of Turkey as a NATO member
against a possible Iraqi counterattack.
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