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Hunt for Iraqi Arms Erodes Assumptions
By Barton Gellman CAMP DOHA, Kuwait -- With little to show after 30 days,
the Bush administration is losing confidence in its prewar belief that it had
strong clues pointing to the whereabouts of weapons of mass destruction
concealed in Iraq, according to planners and participants in the hunt.
After testing some -- though by no means all -- of their best leads,
analysts here and in Washington are increasingly doubtful that they will find
what they are looking for in the places described on a five-tiered target list
drawn up before fighting began. Their strategy is shifting from the rapid
"exploitation" of known suspect sites to a vast survey that will rely
on unexpected discoveries and leads.
Late last week, the U.S. Central Command began moving urgently to expand
security around a wider range of facilities in an effort to preserve evidence
that defense officials fear is melting away. That imperative grew from
intelligence suggesting that Iraqi insiders have stolen files, electronic data
and equipment from nonconventional arms programs under the cover of recent
looting. Analysts said they believe that former Iraqi officials hope to conceal
their culpability, barter for status with the U.S. military government or sell
the technology for private gain.
If such weapons or the means of making them have been removed from
the centralized control of former Iraqi officials, high-ranking U.S. officials
acknowledged, then the war may prove to aggravate the proliferation threat that
President Bush said he fought to forestall.
"It's a danger," Douglas J. Feith, the undersecretary of defense
for policy, said in a telephone interview. There are signs, he said, "that
some of the looting is actually strategic." Former Baath Party and Iraqi
government officials appear to be "doing at least some of the looting"
of government facilities, he said, "including those that might have records
or materials" relating to weapons of mass destruction.
Bush launched and justified the war with a flat declaration of knowledge
"that Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction." Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell, who took the lead public role in defending that
proposition, said, among other particulars, that "our conservative estimate
is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between 100 and 500 tons of chemical
weapons" agents.
Political appointees and career analysts alike, including some who were
privately skeptical of the need for war, continue to express confidence that
U.S. forces eventually will find stocks of chemical and biological arms,
ballistic missile components and equipment and plans for uranium enrichment. A
top planner said they have many leads left to pursue, including "tens"
of the roughly 100 targets on the U.S. government's top tier of a five-tiered
list. But arms hunters now pin their best hopes on what they call "ad hoc
sites," to be discovered by happenstance or with help of Iraqis who
volunteer information or divulge it under interrogation.
One such example came over the weekend, officials here said, when
investigators interviewed an Iraqi scientist south of Baghdad. They said the
scientist told them he took part in chemical weapons development and that Iraq
had destroyed some weapons only days before the war began. He led them to
samples of chemicals that the U.S. search team described as ingredients for
lethal agents. But military officials would not identify the scientist, the
lethal agents or the ingredients that were found. They did not permit a New York
Times reporter, who was accompanying the search team and was the first to report
the discovery, to interview the scientist.
Without further details of the find, experts said, its significance cannot
be assessed. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was careful yesterday to draw
no conclusion about it, saying he had "nothing to add" to the field
report and that investigators have an "obligation of analyzing things and
doing it in an orderly, disciplined way." Experts said nearly any
ingredient for a chemical weapon can also be used for civilian purposes.
Because ad hoc discoveries might occur anywhere, the U.S. military is
racing belatedly to lock down files and equipment at scores of potentially
sensitive facilities in Baghdad that went unguarded in the chaotic days
immediately after the fall of Hussein. Beginning late last week, U.S. combat
forces in the Iraqi capital moved to take custody of all 23 government
ministries and more than two dozen other locations they said might yield
valuable intelligence.
Senior U.S. officials with responsibility over postwar Iraq were highly
critical of the delay in securing those facilities. One official interviewed in
Kuwait described it as "the barn-door phenomenon." He said retired Lt.
Gen. Jay M. Garner, the occupation governor of Iraq, sought special protection
for 10 Iraqi ministries, identifying them as potential repositories of weapons
data, but that only the Oil Ministry remained intact after U.S. ground forces
took possession of Baghdad. Combat commanders, the official said, gave
"insufficient priority to getting into these places," and "there
wasn't enough force to accomplish that initial sequestering of buildings and
records."
Defense Department planners, meanwhile, are diverting some of their best
investigative resources away from the target sites they came to Iraq to explore.
Two of the four mobile exploitation teams, or METs, have been removed from the
hunt for weapons of mass destruction and been assigned instead to the laborious
task of screening what officials call "non-WMD sites." These are
facilities with voluminous records that might prove enlightening on such issues
as terrorism and prisoners of war. Because there are so many such sites, the
teams are engaged in what one knowledgeable officer described as triage, trying
to decide which ones are worth more thorough inspection. "The focus of main
effort has changed," said a military officer who works directly in the arms
hunt. "Because of all the looting, coupled with [the fact that] they're not
coming up with anything on weapons, we've got to get these other sites secured.
They can't afford to have stuff walking off because the clues we have right now
are not leading us anywhere."
Now that U.S. forces control Baghdad, the nucleus of Iraq's arms industry,
some leading team members have expressed frustration about the shift of focus.
As recently as last Wednesday, Defense Department officials were predicting that
the war's end would permit the teams to intensify their work and to reach
high-priority weapons sites in significant numbers.
Wing Cmdr. Sebastian Kendall, a British Royal Air Force officer who leads
the site exploitation planning center at Camp Doha, said "there has been no
conscious decision to reduce the number of teams devoted to weapons of mass
destruction." But, he added, "it's true to say that the environment is
changing based on reality."
"We are now in and around Baghdad and there is an imperative to
contain the situation as much as possible," he said. Ground forces have
been ordered "to secure more sites, but also to exploit them quicker so we
can release those forces.
"We will be methodically working our way through the list from top to
bottom," he said. And though many of the additional sites have no known
relationship to concealed arms programs, he said, some of them "could be
WMD-related because the intellectual knowledge may be there or the documents may
be there."
The mobile exploitation teams were staffed and equipped to provide more
sophisticated analysis after others had identified and surveyed a weapons
facility. They carry complex field equipment -- including gas chromatographs,
mass spectrometers and portable isotopic neutron spectroscopes -- and are the
only investigators in Iraq trained to safely transport samples of lethal
material.
Army Lt. Col. Michael Slifka, an experienced arms inspector who directs
night operations at the planning center, said "there's not much just now
for the METs to do" with those capabilities. Most of the weapons work at
present, he said, is sifting unevaluated clues.
Tens of thousands of soldiers and Marines in Iraq have a copy of the
pocket-sized "WMD Facility, Equipment and Munitions Identification
Handbook." The troops have made hundreds of excited reports. It falls to
one of four "site survey teams," two each assigned to the Army and
Marines, to assess those tips. None, as yet, has led to a confirmed finding.
Even the estimated 50 facilities now being protected by U.S. forces
represent a tiny fraction of the many thousands of government and Baath Party
offices, state enterprises, prisons, barracks, camps and private homes of senior
Iraqi officials -- all of them types of places where Iraq has a history of
concealing evidence of nonconventional arms. The ministry of industry and
minerals, for example, oversaw more than 600 Iraqi state enterprises and 100,000
employees. U.N. arms inspectors once found more than a million pages of
weapons documents on a chicken farm.
"There's a common assumption that if you know they have chemical or
biological weapons, then your intelligence should be good enough to know where
they are," said Feith. "But you may hear people talking, referring to
specific substances or items, so you know from that that they have those
substances or items" but may not know where the items are.
With site-specific intelligence less productive than hoped, Defense
Department officials have concluded that the weapons hunt needs substantial
reinforcement. That will come from the eventual deployment of more than 1,000
military and civilian analysts under the auspices of the Defense Intelligence
Agency.
The Iraq Survey Group, to be commanded by the DIA's deputy director for
intelligence operations, plans an immense catalog of Iraqi government records --
an intelligence task rivaled in recent times only by the joint U.S.-German
effort in the former East German archives in Berlin. Maj. Gen. Keith Dayton, a
career Russian specialist, will supervise the screening of Iraqi records.
Weapons of mass destruction will be a part, though not predominant share,
of Dayton's responsibilities. Even so, officials said, the number of arms
investigators in Iraq should triple or quadruple by the time the DIA group is
fully in place in about three months.
Kendall, the British officer who now directs planning for the arms hunt,
said a search even on the present scale is without precedent.
"It's very young," he said. "It's in its infancy."
"Tomorrow will be one month into the campaign," he added,
"and we've got some way to go is what I'd say."
Staff researcher Robert Thomason contributed to this report.
Washington Post - http://www.washingtonpost.com
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