Iraq Special Collection
IAEA and UNSCOM reports to UN Security Council
IRAQ NEWS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1998
I. ANNAN LETTER TO UNSC PRESIDENT ON UNCSCOM/IAEA REPORTS, DEC 15
II. IAEA REPORT: IRAQ COOPERATED, DEC 14
III. UNSCOM REPORT: IRAQ DID NOT COOPERATE, DEC 15
I. ANNAN LETTER TO UNSC PRESIDENT ON UNCSCOM/IAEA REPORTS
The Secretary General
15 December 1998
Excellency,
I have the honour to submit for your consideration reports from the
Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) dated
14 December 1998, and the Executive Director of the United Nations
Special Commission (UNSCOM) dated 15 December 1998, concerning their
work in Iraq, as called for in the letter to me from the Security
Counci1 President, dated 30 October 1998.
The reports cover the period since 17 November 1998.
The report from the IAEA states that Iraq "has provided the necessary
level of cooperation to enable the above enumerated activities to be
completed efficiently and effectively."
The report from UNSCOM includes material that relates to the period
prior to 17 November 1998. With regard to the period since, the report
presents a mixed picture and concludes that UNSCOM did not enjoy full
cooperation from Iraq.
In light of the findings and conclusions contained in the reports,
taken together, the Council may wish to consider three possible options.
1. That the experience over the period since 17 November 1998 does
not provide a sufficient basis to move forward with a comprehensive
review at this time.
2. That Iraq has not provided full cooperation but that it should be
permitted additional time to demonstrate its commitment to do so.
3. That the Counci1 may wish to proceed with a comprehensive review
on the premise that it is sufficient1y important to know precisely what
has been achieved in the area of disarmament over the entire period
since 1991.
I stand ready to assist the Council in whatever manner it deems best.
Please accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.
[Signed] Kofi A. Annan
His Excellency
Mr. Jassim Mohammed Buallay
President of the Security Council
New York
II. IAEA REPORT: IRAQ COOPERATED
International Atomic Energy Agency
The Director General
14 December 1998
Dear Secretary-General,
Further to your letter of 25 November I wish to report that, since
its return to Iraq on 17 November, the IAEA Nuclear monitoring Group
has, to date, carried out the following activities:
28 inspections at previously inspected sites-initially following an
intensified programme to restore continuity of knowledge of the status
of Iraq's relevant status.
11 inspections at new sites-jointly with UNSCOM, as part of an ongoing
programme of inspections at "capable sites," including four repeat
inspections.
113 visits to locations for the collection of environmental monitoring
samples
15 road vehicle based radiation surveys
3 interviews of personnel known to have been formerly employed in key
position within Iraq's clandestine nuclear programme.
5 discussion sessions with the Iraqi counterpart to clarify technical
matters related to Iraq's clandestine nuclear programme
2 site visits, each of several days duration, to maintain and
extensively update IAEA video surveillance systems
1 site visit of several days duration to install and commission a
meteorological data collection station in connection with the IAEA wide
area environmental monitoring programme.
The Iraqi counterpart has provided the necessary level of
co-operation to enable the above-enumerated activities to be completed
efficiently and effectively.
In addition, an IAEA team visited Iraq from 9 to 13 December to
discuss with the Iraqi counterpart the status of the few remaining
questions and concerns related to Iraq's clandestine nuclear programme.
During the discussions the Iraqi counterpart expressed its intention
to continue to co-operate with the IAEA in the resolution of those
matters.
Yours sincerely,
Mohamed ElBaradei
III. UNSCOM REPORT: IRAQ DID NOT COOPERATE
United Nations
UNSCOM
The Executive Chairman
15 December 1998
Dear Secretary-General,
I refer to the Press Statement by the President of the Security
Council (SC/6596) of 15 November 1998, in which the Council noted, on
the basis of communications of 14 November 1998 received from the Deputy
Prime Minister of Iraq and the Ambassador of Iraq, "that Iraq has
decided, clearly and unconditionally, to cooperate fully with the
Special Commission and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
that this decision constitutes a rescinding of the decisions of 5 August
and 31 October and that Iraq's cooperation with the Special Commission
and the IAEA will allow the return of inspectors" to resume all their
activities on an immediate, unconditional and unrestricted basis, in
accordance with the relevant resolutions and with the Memorandum of
Understanding of 23 February 1998."
In the same Statement, "Counci1 members reaffirmed their readiness to
proceed with a comprehensive review, once the Secretary-General has
confirmed, on the basis of reports from the Special Commission and the
IAEA, that Iraq has returned to full cooperation, on the basis of
resolution 1194 (1998) and the Council President's letter of 30 October
to the Secretary-General."
The present letter provides the report called for from the Special
Commission. It is guided, in particular, by the provision in the Press
Statement to the effect that: "Council members underlined that their
confidence in Iraq's intentions needs to be established by unconditional
and sustained cooperation with the Special Commission and the IAEA in
exercising the full range of the activities provided for in their
mandates in accordance with the relevant resolutions and the Memorandum
of Understanding of 23 February 1998."
Before providing an account of the Commission's experience during the
past month, I believe it is essential to provide, briefly, some
background contextual material which, in addition, provides explanation
for the range of activities which the Commission chose to follow since
17 November 1998.
From the inception of the Commission's work in Iraq, in 1991, Iraq's
cooperation has been limited. Iraq acknowledges that, in that year, it
decided to limit disclosure for the purpose of retaining certain
prohibited weapons capabilities. Three main Iraqi policies ensued:
(a) its disclosure statements have never been complete;
(b) contrary to the requirement that destruction of prohibited
capabilities be conducted under international supervision, Iraq
undertook extensive, unilateral, secret destruction; and
(c) it also pursued a practice of concealment of proscribed items,
including weapons.
This situation, created by Iraq, in particular through the inadequacy
of its disclosures, has meant that the Commission has been obliged to
undertake a kind and degree of forensic work which was never intended to
be the case. The work of the verification of Iraq's disclosures should
have been far easier and been able to be undertaken far more quickly
than has proven to be the case.
In addition, these circumstances have meant that, in spite of the
years that have passed and the extensive work that has been undertaken,
it has not been possible to verify Iraq's claims with respect to the
nature and magnitude of its proscribed weapons programmes and their
current disposition.
With respect to this latter point, two comments are apposite.
First, Iraq's current claims that it has fulfilled all of its
disarmament obligations in each weapons area; ceased concealment
policies and actions; and that it has neither proscribed weapons nor the
ability to make them, cannot be accepted without further verification.
Secondly, documents or records available in Iraq in which relevant
details of its proscribed programmes and actions are reported:
production records; records of disposition of weapons; and, records of
claimed destruction, relevant policy decisions and decisions on
termination of concealment, would be invaluable in helping to close
remaining gaps and achieve acceptable confidence in Iraqi declarations.
The Security Council recognised these two aspects in resolution 707
(1991) when it demanded Iraq provide immediate and unconditional access
to, inter alia, records, and, demanded that Iraq cease attempts to
conceal prohibited materials.
In response to the Commission's requests for relevant documents, Iraq
has repeatedly claimed that they no longer exist or cannot be located, a
claim which very often has been shown to be false, either because
inspection activities have in fact located precisely such documents or
because Iraq has reversed its stated position and then produced relevant
documents. The Commission briefed the Council on its assessment of the
existence and importance of documents in June 1998. The Commission has
assessed since the "chicken farm" event of 1995 that only selected
categories of documents were provided and that other categories were
retained by Iraq. It remains the Commission's strong view that under the
present circumstances, relevant documentation must exist in Iraq and
that provision of such documentation is the best hope for revealing the
full picture, as required by the relevant resolutions.
On 17 November 1998, the Commission began to resume its work in Iraq
across the full range of its activities. Accordingly, that work was
focussed on four main areas, pursuant to the Commission's mandate:
requests for information through access to documents and interviews of
Iraqi personnel; monitoring inspections; inspection of capable sites;
and, disarmament inspections relating to proscribed weapons and
activities.
The following is a summary of the Commission's experience in each
category, from 17 November 1998 to date;
Requests for access to information through documentation and interviews
of Iraqi personnel
On a number of occasions, the Security Council has demanded that Iraq
allow immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access to documents and
records relevant to the Commission' s activities. On 17 November 1998,
the Commission requested Iraq to provide certain documentation related
to the chemical weapons and missile areas. The purpose of this request
was to increase the Commission's level of verification in these areas.
It comprised a selection of 12 particular sets of documents and a
request for access to the relevant archives of Iraq's Ministry of
Defense and Military Industrialization Corporation and other Government
departments.
Iraq provided documents in response to one of the Commission's
requests. It gave some 64 pages related to Missile Unit 223. These pages
are currently under translation and examination. A preliminary
assessment indicates that they do not contain the information sought by
the Commission.
The Commission reiterated its request for the document found by an
inspection team at the Headquarters of the Iraqi Air Force in July 1998.
The Security Council has asked Iraq to return the document to the
Commission. This document details Iraq's consumption of special
munitions in the 1980s, and therefore, is directly related to
verification of the material balance of Iraq's chemical munitions. Iraq
refused to return the sealed envelope with the document to the
Commission and stated that it is ready only to "consider" with the
Commission's experts the relevant portions of this document in the
presence of the Special Representative of the Secretary General.
Iraq stated that the remainder of the requested documents either do
not exist, could not be found or are not relevant to Commission's
activities.
With respect to archives, Iraq did not respond to the suggestion made
by the Commission. It did not deny the existence of the archives, but
stated that the Ministry of Defence and Military Industrialization
Corporation had been inspected by the Commission. The teams did not find
any relevant archives at the above mentioned sites during the
inspections.
During the reporting period a biological inspection team requested
Iraq's authorities to provide access to a number of specific documents.
One document had already been seen by the Commission in 1995. These
documents were not given to the inspection team.
On 19 November 1998, Iraq was requested to provide explanations and
clarifications on outstanding disarmament issues in the chemical weapons
and missile areas. Furthermore, Iraq was requested to allow the removal
for analysis of a number of missile engine components produced by Iraq.
In the chemical weapons area, Iraq provided, as requested, a report
on its analysis of the samples from the special missile warhead
fragments. On the issue of VX, Iraq for the first time claimed that the
contamination of the warhead fragments had been the result of a
deliberate act of tampering with the samples taken to the United States.
Iraq made this statement despite the conclusions drawn by three
international expert teams, which confirmed that all analytical results
were valid and conclusive.
In the missile area, Iraq provided some clarifications sought by the
Commission. On other requests, Iraq, in essence, reiterated its known
positions, which did not advance the verification process.
With respect to the Commission's request to allow the removal of
missile engine components, Iraq has refused to do so stating that this
request is not justified on "technical or scientific grounds".
On 18 November 1998, the Commission requested Iraq to provide new
substantial information on its biological weapons activities that would
enable the Commission to achieve an enhanced level of verification and
to rectify inconsistencies in Iraq's current declarations. No new
information or documents have been presented by Iraq in response to this
request.
Inspection teams--resident and non-resident--encountered several
problems with the questioning of personnel on site. The National
Monitoring Directorate (NMD) representatives repeatedly intervened when
a biological team attempted to question PhD and MSc students stating
that UNSCOM was not allowed interview students at university sites even
though declarable research has taken place at such sites. NMD routinely
interrupted and prompted site personnel answering questions.
Monitoring inspections
In statistical terms, the majority of the inspections of facilities
and sites under the ongoing monitoring system were carried out with
Iraq's cooperation. Problems arose which indicated that the limitations
Iraq had imposed on the monitoring system, on 5 August 1998, have not
been fully rescinded. Specific instances are given below.
During the reporting period, the Commission requested, on several
occasions, access to specific data collected by Iraq during its tests of
indigenously produced missiles and rocket engines. Prior to 5 August
1998, Iraq had provided such data. In response to the Commission's
recent requests, Iraq stated that it is meeting its obligations with
respect to the provision of data on its testing activity and denied
access to the particular information requested by the Commission. In
relation to the Commission's most recent requests, on 6 December, Iraq
stated it would reconsider its decision. It has not yet provided the
data requested.
During a chemical monitoring inspection on 5 December, the National
Monitoring Directorate (NMD) representatives placed unacceptable
conditions on the photography of bombs, citing national security
concerns. No photographs were taken.
During the reporting period, undeclared dual-capable items and
materials subject to chemical and biological monitoring, were also
discovered.
On 11 December the chemical monitoring group was told by the NMD
representative that they would not be able to conduct an inspection at a
specific monitoring site on that day because it was a Friday. The
inspection group was not able to inspect the inside of the site. This
incident underlined the position stated earlier that Iraq would
facilitate entry to buildings "during the working days of the work,
except Fridays".
Inspections of capable sites
Identification of the nature of activities at locations where
undeclared dual use capabilities may exist is an important aspect of
monitoring activity. During the reporting period, teams conducted
no-notice inspections at a number of sites that had not been declared by
Iraq. Access to these sites was provided and inspections took place
with one exception which was at a facility occupied by the People's
Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI). The site of this facility was
dec1ared as being not under the authority of Iraq.
Discussions over
access were left to the Commission and that organization. A dialogue has
begun on this matter and the PMOI has accepted, in principle, that its
sites are subject to access by the Commission.
During the recent period, a series of inspections were conducted
which served both the purpose of searching for material related to
prohibited programmes and investigation of possible ongoing prohibited
activities. The team conducting these missions went to six locations. At
the first two sites, (Taji military facility and a special security
organization cable office), Iraq declared the sites to be sensitive, but
offered no objections nor claimed any conditions on access.
The next site, designated for inspection on the basis of solid
evidence presented to UNSCOM of the presence of proscribed materials,
was declared by Iraq to be a Ba'ath Party Headquarters. Iraq initially
declared it to be sensitive and therefore subject to special procedures
issued by the former Executive Chairman, Ambassador Ekeus, to his
inspectors in 1996. The Chief Inspector was instructed to conduct his
inspections according to the requirements he assessed he needed for a
credible and timely inspection. Experience since 1996 had proven that
the limited access procedures of 1996 did not allow effective
inspections. Subsequent discussions between the Executive Chairman and
the Deputy Prime Minister had addressed this point (as reported to the
Security Council in a letter dated 17 December 1997 (S/1997/987) and new
modalities had been agreed. Protracted discussions between the Chief
Inspector and his Iraqi counterpart failed to yield satisfactory access.
During the discussions, Iraq had introduced various new requirements,
including a formal letter of request, indicating what was being sought
at the site.
At a fourth site, while Iraq declared it to be sensitive,
arrangements were ultimately agreed for the inspection. Iraq stated that
this had been the former Headquarters of the Special Security
Organization, claiming that it had now been moved to a new location. The
building had been emptied of any relevant materials. Iraq would not
disclose where those materials were now held.
A fifth site appeared to be a private residence and, with the
permission of the residents, two female Inspectors made a brief walk
through to confirm the nature of the site.
The final site, the management offices of the Military
Industrialization Corporation (MIC), was also declared sensitive by
Iraq. However, agreement on access by a small team was achieved. This
site, too, had been prepared to avoid any disclosure of relevant
materials and the team assessed Iraq had expected their arrival.
In light of the clear evidence that Iraq had taken advance actions at
certain of the locations planned for inspection in order to defeat the
purposes of inspection, the Executive Chairman decided not to conduct
the full range of inspections the team had planned. No inspection of
presidential sites took place.
National Implementation Measures
Both the Special Commission's and the IAEA's Plans for ongoing
monitoring and verification, which were approved by Security Council
resolution 715 (1991), provide that Iraq shall adopt the measures
necessary to implement its obligations under section C of resolution 687
(1991), resolution 707 (1991) and the Plans. In particular, Iraq is
required to adopt legislation prohibiting all natural and legal persons
under its jurisdiction from undertaking anywhere any activity prohibited
by the relevant resolutions and the Plans, and to enact penal
legislation to enforce the aforesaid prohibitions. Such legislation was
required by the Plans to have been enacted within 30 days of their
adoption by the Security Council on 11 October 1991. To date, the
legislation has not been enacted.
This is an issue on which Iraq's cooperation has been sought since
1991. It would have been an indication of full cooperation had Iraq
taken action on this issue in the period under review.
Conclusion
As is evident from this report, Iraq did not provide the full
cooperation it promised on 14 November 1998.
In addition, during the period under review, Iraq initiated new forms
of restrictions upon the Commission's work. Amongst the Commission's
many concerns about this retrograde step is what such further
restrictions might mean for the effectiveness of long-term monitoring
activities.
In spite of the opportunity presented by the circumstances of the
last month, including the prospect of a comprehensive review, Iraq's
conduct ensured that no progress was able to be made in either the
fields of disarmament or accounting for its prohibited weapons
programmes.
Finally, in the light of this experience, that is, the absence of
full cooperation by Iraq, it must regrettably be recorded again that the
Commission is not able to conduct the substantive disarmament work
mandated to it by the Security Council and, thus, to give the Council
the assurances it requires with respect to Iraq's prohibited weapons
programmes.
Accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.
[Signed] Richard Butler
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