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| Thursday, 16 January, 2003, 23:08 GMT UN uncovers warheads in Iraq ![]() The warheads were in 'excellent condition' the UN says United Nations weapons inspectors in Iraq say they have found warheads designed to carry chemical weapons.
A UN spokesman says about a dozen empty warheads were discovered during a search at a military storage area. It is not clear whether the warheads ever contained banned chemicals - experts have taken away samples for testing. An Iraqi spokesman said the weapons were old discarded artillery rockets - not chemical or biological warheads. The US has threatened military action if Iraq is found to have breached a recent UN resolution which obliged it to list all its weapons. "The warheads were in excellent condition and were similar to ones imported by Iraq during the late 1980s," Mr Ueki said in Baghdad on Thursday. None of the weapons had been declared by the Iraqi Government, he added. More tests needed Mr Ueki did not elaborate on the significance of the find - but the UN office in Baghdad has since told the BBC that they did not immediately consider the discovery to be a "smoking gun".
"This is proof of the work of the inspectors," EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said. "I think we have to wait to see the results of their analysis." Mr Solana was speaking in Greece, which currently holds the EU presidency. BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Marcus says that on its own the discovery may not be a smoking gun, but it may be viewed by the US and Britain as part of a pattern of infringements by Iraq.
Much, our correspondent says, now depends on how chief weapons inspector Hans Blix assesses the discovery. The find comes shortly after Mr Blix called on Iraq to do more to substantiate its claims that it has destroyed banned weapons, or risk a US-led war. Mr Blix, briefing EU officials in Brussels, said Iraq had either to provide evidence - such as archives and budgets - that it had destroyed suspected weapons of mass destruction, or surrender what it might have for destruction. 'Important date' The chief Iraqi liaison officer, General Hossam Mohammad Amin, called the discovery a "storm in a teacup".
"These rockets are expired," he said. "They were in closed wooden boxes that we had forgotten about." The US reacted cautiously to the announcement. The US ambassador to the United Nations, John Negroponte, called the find an "interesting development" but cautioned against jumping to conclusions. "I'm sure that we will be getting further information, but I certainly can't enter into that kind hypothetical proposition without having more facts at our fingertips," Mr Negroponte said. Earlier on Thursday White House spokesman Ari Fleischer insisted that the submission of Mr Blix's progress report to the UN on 27 January is "an important date". "Beyond that, events will dictate timetables," he said. |
See also: 16 Jan 03 | Middle East 16 Jan 03 | Politics 16 Jan 03 | Middle East 15 Jan 03 | Middle East 01 Oct 02 | Middle East 14 Jan 03 | Americas Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Middle East stories now: Links to more Middle East stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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