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COMMENTARY OCTOBER 2002

the days when UNSCOM was conducting inspections, this mobility was revealed graphically in U-2 photos of a suspect site. The pictures were taken in sequence as soon as an inspection team left its headquarters. The first photos show no activity at the site; a slightly later sequence reveals a large number of vehicles leaving the site; then there is again no activity; and then the vehicles of the inspectors arrive.

UNMOVIC has not yet indicated whether it will conduct surprise inspections, but it is hardly likely to do better at them than UNSCOM, and will almost certainly do worse. The same goes for regular, scheduled inspections. Most UNMOVIC inspectors have little or no experience in Iraq, and, worse, little or no experience in handling or evaluating intelligence information. In effect, this will be a team of rookies going to bat against a world-class intelligence organization highly practiced at foiling inspections.

UNMOVIC's recruitment procedures do not help. In assembling staff for an inspection team, UNSCOM looked for experts who had actually worked on the specific technology it was targeting-not just, say, a person familiar with missile or rocket design but one who knew Scuds specifically. To accomplish this, UNSCOM recruited from countries that had already built advanced missiles, or whose expertise was derived from military programs. UNMOVIC, by contrast, has chosen not to work this way. In order to achieve "geographic balance," UN-style, it hires staff from around the world, including from countries that do not themselves possess relevant weapon programs or expertise.

The results are predictable, and are likely to reverberate down the line, not just in planning and carrying out no-notice inspections (or inspections of any kind) but in generating new "baseline" information on the numerous Iraqi sites and in setting up a proper monitoring regime. In one way or another, UNMOVIC's inexperience will make itself felt in the myriad small signals that will tip off the Iraqis to its intentions.

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principle of immediate, unconditional, and unrestricted access that is essential to effective inspections, and render inspection of these sites virtually impossible.

Iraq initially designated eight such presidential sites each a swath of land large enough to conceal entire factories as well as mobile equipment or laboratories. It also retained the prerogative to designate new sites at any time, and to decide just how many sites there are, where they are, how big they are, and what they include. All such locations, in effect, create refuges for mobile items. If Iraq chooses to use them aggressively, they could be a loophole large enough to defeat any inspection effort.

Finally, one must consider that any new inspections in Iraq will be occurring under the threat of imminent American military action. President Bush has emphasized that the United States is determined to use "all the tools at our disposal" to remove Saddam Hussein from power; under such conditions, any announcement by UN arms inspectors that Iraq is not cooperating is likely to be viewed as a casus belli. But UN organizations do not normally like to trigger wars. How can this not inhibit the readiness of UNMOVIC to issue any such damning report, regardless of Iraq's actual behavior?

Besides, UNMOVIC's staff has spent more than two years in New York getting ready to return to Iraq, and will hardly be eager to admit that it has failed to secure Iraq's cooperation. Rather, there will be every incentive to define inspection tasks narrowly-thus making it easier for Iraq to comply, at least nominally-and to avoid any aggressive inspection activity. UNMOVIC's executive chairman, Hans Blix, is fully empowered to set policy in this regard; in his previous career as director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Blix usually avoided confrontation (except when dealing with North Korea) and also missed Iraq's vast clandestine effort to build nuclear weapons.

What Blix would do now in Iraq is unknown-although, if he were to choose nonconfrontation, he would admittedly have one or two arguments on his side. Even nonconfrontational inspections are disruptive to a degree, and even when UNSCOM was not surprising the Iraqis, it was forcing them to mount a large concealment effort and move key equipment from one site to another, which made it harder to run illicit programs. Nonconfrontational inspections also yielded much essential information about Iraq's actual progress in making massdestruction weapons. (This was mainly so in the case of the country's missile program; in the case of its biological program, which was and is easier to

IRAQ: THE SNARE OF INSPECTIONS

conceal, the nonconfrontational model was of far less benefit.)

In the present instance, however, a policy of avoiding confrontation will be dangerous in the extreme. Inspections will then be aimed only at monitoring what is already known rather than at searching aggressively for what is still hidden. Moreover, the very failure to find anything new will feed the demand that the embargo against Iraq be lifted without the goal of inspections-namely, disarmament-ever being achieved. The price to be paid will be all the higher in view of the elementary fact that, since the day inspections began in 1991, Iraq has consistently tried to defeat them. But that brings us to the heart of the matter. What is it that inspections are designed to do? They are designed to verify that a country's declarations about a weapon program are honest and

complete. And that sort of verification is indeed a feasible goal for an inspection team: to look at sites and equipment and see whether the official story about their use is accurate. To do this effectively, inspectors can rely both on scientific principles and on information gained through intelligence-gathering. It is a different proposition altogether to go ranging about a country in search of things that have been deliberately concealed; that is a task with no beginning and no end.

In short, without a full and coherent description of the entire Iraqi weapon program, inspectors can never verify that it has been eliminated. The truth must come first, and it can come only from the Iraqis themselves. What the world needs is an Iraqi government that will stop lying and surrender those programs. That is hardly likely to happen as long as Saddam Hussein remains in power.

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Psssst... Can I Get

A Bomb Trigger?

W

WHEN it was revealed last week

that Iraq had tried to purchase
"aluminum tubes," it seemed to
many experts and certainly to the Bush
administration-that Saddam Hussein
was continuing attempts to build a nuclear
weapon. The inference was partly based
on the shape and composition of the tubes,
which were much like those used in equip-
ment to enrich uranium.

But keeping track of all of the equip-
ment and know-how that go into making a
nuclear bomb is rarely a simple task.
Some items have benign uses. Others, like
blueprints for making a bomb, have obvi-
ous implications. Following is a selection
of technologies and services that are
known to have been transferred to coun-
tries with nuclear ambitions - all of
which raised suspicions regarding their ul-
timate use.
TOM ZELLER

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High-Precision Switches

Sunday, September 15, 2002

1998 These switches have legitimate and beneficial
uses, including in machines that pulverize kidney
stones. But they are also useful in detonating nuclear
weapons. Iraq bought six machines for treating kid-
ney stones, each containing one switch, and ordered
120 more switches as "spare parts." It is unclear how
many Iraq actually received.

Aluminum Tubes
?

Iraq

2002 High-strength aluminum can have benign ap-
plications, including production of aircraft parts, but
it is also one of the few materials that can withstand
the high rotational speeds required of gas centrifug-
es for uranium enrichment-a key step in nuclear
bomb building.

Beryllium

India

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Germany

1984 Although the material is used in
high-performance aircraft and spacecraft,
it is also used to received the power of nu-
clear weapons. India needed beryllium
spheres to increase the yield of its fission
bombs; the United States fined the Ger-
man exporter for re-transferring the materi-
al, which had originated in America.

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Heavy Water and
Graphite Technology

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China

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[Insert from the New York Times OP-ED Friday, April 24, 1992-A35.]

IRAQ'S BOMB, CHIP BY CHIP

The U.S. Commerce Department licensed the following strategic American exports for Saddam Hussein's atomic weapon programs between 1985 and 1990. Virtually all of the items were shipped to Iraq; all are useful for making atomic bombs or long-range missiles. United Nations inspectors in Iraq are still trying to find most of them. The list is based on Commerce Department export licensing records; the dollar amount of each transaction is as claimed by the exporting company. It was compiled by Gary Milhollin, a law professor at the University of Wisconsin and director of the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control, and Diana Edensword, a research analyst at the project.

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Sales to: Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission, the main atomic research laboratory; Badr and Daura sites, where bomb fuel was made; Al Qaaaa site, where detonators were made.

Canberra Elektronik: computers for measuring gamma rays and fast neutrons— $30,000

Cerberus Ltd.: computers-$18,181

Hewlett Packard: computers; electronic testing, calibration and graphics equipment-$25,000

International Computer Systems: computers useful for graphic design of atomic bombs and missiles $1,600,000

Perkin-Elmer: computers and instruments useful for quality control of bomb fuels $280,000

TI Coating Inc.: equipment for coating metal parts, useful for bomb production$373,708

ATOMIC BOMB AND MISSILE BUILDERS

Sales to: Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization, which ran the atomic bomb, missile and chemical weapon factories; Nassr state enterprise, where equipment for enriching atomic bomb fuel was made; Salah Al Din site, where electronic equipment for missiles and atomic bombs was made; Ministry of Defense, which oversaw missile and atomic bomb development.

Axel Electronics: capacitors-$84,000

BDM Corporation: computers; computer-assisted design equipment-$52,000
Canberra Elektronik: computers for computer-assisted design—$21,552

Carl Zeiss: microcomputers for mapping-$104,545

Consarc Corporation: computers to run machine tools capable of manufacturing atomic bomb parts (this sale was stopped by Presidential order in June 1990)$525,550

Data General Corporation: computers for mapping $324,000

Gerber Systems: computers to run machine tools capable of manufacturing atomic bomb and missile parts-$367,428

Hewlett Packard: computers for making molds; frequency synthesizers and other equipment useful for operating secured military communications systems$1,045,500

Honeywell Inc.: computers-$353,333

International Computer Systems: computers for manufacturing, tool design and graphics-$4,497,700

International Computers Ltd.: computers-$687,994

Leybold Vacuum Systems: computer controlled welder used by Iraqis to produce centrifuges for making atomic bomb fuel-$1,400,000

Lummus Crest: Radio spectrum analyzers; design computers; computers for factories producing mustard gas ingredients-$250,000

Rockwell Collins International: equipment for navigation, directional finding, radar communications or airborne communications $127,558

Sackman Associates: computers and instruments capable of analyzing metals and powders for atomic bomb and missile manufacture $60,000

Siemens Corporation: computers and instruments capable of analyzing metals and powders for atomic bomb and missile manufacture $78,000

Spectra Physics: lasers; detection and tracking equipment for lasers-$19,000
Unisys Corporation: computers $2,600,000

Wild Magnavox Satellite Survey: computers for processing satellite images that are useful for military mapping and surveillance-$270,000

Zeta Laboratories: quartz crystals for military radar-$1,105,000

MISSILE BUILDERS

Sales to: Saad 16, the main missile research site; State Organization for Technical Industry, the procurement organization for missile sites that bought most Scud missile parts and equipment.

BDM Corporation: computers; superconducting electronics-$29,405

Carl Schenck: computers $10,228

EZ Logic Data: computers-$27,800

Finnigan MAT: computers that U.N. inspectors believe monitored uranium enrichment for atomic bomb fuel-$483,000

Hewlett Packard: electronic testing equipment; computers; frequency synthesizers; radio spectrum analyzers-$599,257

International Computer Systems: computers $1,375,000

International Imaging Systems: computers for processing satellite data; infrared equipment capable of aerial reconaissance and military surveillance-$688,000 Lummus Crest: computers to aid factory design—$44,320

Perkin-Elmer: computers-$24,560

Scientific Atlanta: equipment for producing radar antennas $820,000

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