4/3/2005
UN Weapons Of Mass Destruction Panel Reports on Iraqi Sites
About
90 of 353 sites in Iraq containing dual-use equipment and materials
that can be used for either peaceful ends or acquiring
weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) have been looted or razed,
according to the latest report of the United Nations commission
that was in charge of disarming Iraq of such arms.
The
UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC),
which withdrew from Iraq on the eve of the United States-led
invasion two years ago, reached this conclusion based on continuing
examination of imagery from sites that were subject to monitoring,
it writes in its latest quarterly report to the Security Council.
As
part of its ongoing investigation into the removal of items,
equipment
and materials, mainly as scrap, that were subject to UNMOVIC
monitoring, the Commission notes that four of Iraq's neighbours – Jordan,
Turkey, Kuwait and Syria – have replied to its queries
on whether such materials found their way into or through their
territory, the latest being
Syria's negative response. Iran and Saudi Arabia have yet to reply.
The
report also states that the question of the continued existence
of
"
seed stock," the reference strains of micro-organisms that
can be used in the future production of biological weapons agents,
remains "part
of the
residue of uncertainty."
" Given
its unresolvable nature, the issue could best be dealt with
through monitoring to detect inter alia any possible future
activity
associated with biological weapon agent production or significant
laboratory research work," it says.