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The Russian Strain: Moscow is Saddam's biggest supplier of chemical and bio weapons.
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | Thursday, March 27, 2003 | By Robert Goldberg

Posted on 03/27/2003 6:51:31 AM PST by JohnHuang2

The Russian Strain
By Robert Goldberg
The Wall Street Journal | March 27, 2003


Russia's foreign minister, Igor Ivanov, was decidely testy yesterday, saying that his country's firms have not violated sanctions on Iraq. "There is no evidence confirming violations by Russian firms of existing sanctions," he stated, before aiming sharp words at the U.S. He has reason to be so defensive. Russia's involvement in the arming of Iraq goes beyond supplying radar-jamming systems and the personnel to maintain them. Moscow has supported Iraq's development of weapons of mass destruction and connived with Baghdad in hiding its role as a main supplier of the materials and know-how to weaponize anthrax, botulism and smallpox.

Russian support for Iraq is not new. Gary Milhollin and Kelly Motz's July 2001 article in Commentary notes that inspectors found a 300-page file detailing a 1995 deal for Russian aircraft. The agreement not only included military craft that the embargo banned, but engines and guidance systems for remote-controlled drones, which could deliver gas or germ-warfare agents.

In 1999 Russia agreed to sell Saddam Hussein $100 million worth of military hardware. The deal involved Ahmed Murtada Ahmed Khalil, the transport and communications minister, who ran the biological weapons program at the Salman Pak facility outside Baghdad, and who knew exactly what Iraq would need in order to rebuild its WMD program after the Gulf War. Under his tenure, Russian involvement in the development of Iraq's WMD program has increased. Iraq's Scud-C or al-Hussein missiles were acquired from high-level military officials and Russian arms dealers. The al-Hussein was retrofitted to deliver chemical and biological weapons with Russian technology. In 1998, the U.N. Special Commission was prevented from verifying Iraqi claims that it had destroyed the al-Hussein warheads. At that time, Russia joined with France and Germany in taking up Iraq's campaign to weaken the inspection authority and opposed the Clinton administration's decision to bomb Iraq back into compliance. To this day, inspectors believe that Iraq retains a stock of chemical munitions, including chemical/biological al-Hussein ballistic missile warheads, 2,000 aerial bombs, 15,000-25,000 rockets, and 15,000 artillery shells. Iraq may also retain bio-weapon sprayers for its Mirage F-1s.

Russia appears to be helping Iraq build a better biological and chemical weapons program. Richard Spertzel, the former head of Unscom's biological weapons inspectors, points to negotiations in 1995 between Russia and Iraq for the supply of fermentation equipment, including a 5,000-liter fermentation vessel. He notes that the vessel that Moscow agreed to sell Iraq for use in making single-cell animal protein was 10 times larger than the largest vessel Iraq has admitted using to brew germs. Documents he uncovered call for an agreement between leaders of Iraq's weapons programs and Russian experts for the "design, construction and operation of the plant." The agreement -- which Russia maintains was for the purchase of equipment to manufacture animal feed -- includes the names of the director of Iraq's botulinum toxin program, the chief engineer for the Al Hakam chemical weapons plant, and prominent members of Iraq's military industrial commission. Iraq publicly admitted producing anthrax and botulinum toxin at Al Hakam. Though Russia flatly denied involvement, it refused to allow Mr. Spertzel to interview Russians to determine whether the equipment was actually delivered. Though inspectors decommissioned Al Hakam in 1996, Mr. Spertzel believes that the Russian equipment was delivered and stored elsewhere.

Key Unscom scientists were Russians who had been deeply involved in the Soviet bioweapons program. Tariq Aziz worked with Premier Yevgeny Primakov to pack inspection teams with Russians picked by Moscow. The manipulation paid off. Mr. Spertzel recalls the Russians were "constantly giving the Iraqis the benefit of doubt. They said, 'no way could Al Hakam be a dual-use facility.'" Yet Mr. Spertzel is "100% convinced that Iraq has weaponized smallpox," and that the Russians on the inspection team were "paranoid" about his efforts to uncover smallpox production. They had reason to be, since it is likely that Russia supplied the original virus. The CIA determined that in the 1990s, a Russian scientist, Nelja N. Maltseva, had brought the strain -- named the Aralsk strain after a 1971 smallpox outbreak in the town of Aralsk, at the northern end of the Aral Sea -- to Iraq. The Soviets hushed up the 1971 outbreak; and their successors in Moscow now deny that Maltseva handed any virus over to the Iraqis.

In 2002, Alan Zelicofff, an adviser to inspection teams and a senior scientist at Sandia National Laboratories who has run a hepatitis C monitoring program with Russian epidemiology units, uncovered a Soviet-era secret report about the Aralsk outbreak. When forced to admit its occurrence, Dr. Zelicoff's Russian counterparts claimed it was a natural outbreak triggered by the "garden variety" smallpox virus. But after interviews with victims and an analysis of the outbreak's timing and trajectory, Dr. Zelicoff determined that it was caused by "a new and lethal strain of smallpox that traveled at least 20 miles from a secret biological weapons testing site on an island in the Aral Sea to infect people downwind on a ship." Of the six adults who were exposed to the strain, five contracted smallpox despite being immunized. Dr. Zelicoff and others believe that the strain is more communicable, and might be vaccine-resistant. He asked colleagues in Russia to help him locate the strain last summer and to determine if the current smallpox vaccine can protect people from infection. They replied curtly that no such strain existed, a stance they maintain to this day.

Other countries have -- through carelessness or complicity -- provided Iraq with the materials and equipment needed to build up its biological and chemical weapons program. But none have done more to rebuild Saddam's arsenal, and none have been more aggressive in helping hide the truth, than Russia. If these weapons are deployed against our troops, or wind up in terrorist hands, Vladimir Putin might find that he never gets asked to the Bush ranch again.

Mr. Goldberg is a writer specializing in bioterrorism and medical innovation.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: wmd
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Thursday, March 27, 2003

Quote of the Day by jwalsh07

1 posted on 03/27/2003 6:51:32 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Sickening.
2 posted on 03/27/2003 6:58:15 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: Freedom'sWorthIt
G'morning, friend ;)
3 posted on 03/27/2003 7:07:37 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: Freedom'sWorthIt
Is there any nation that was in compliance with UN Mandates?

The UN caused this problem, promoting to the public the notion that it keeps the world a safer place, while in reality the UN just provides diplomatic cover for law breaking and evil manipulation.

Disband the UN right now. Let nations and their leaders be outed for what they really are and not what they claim to be.

4 posted on 03/27/2003 7:08:52 AM PST by blackdog (American Lamb, from American farmers to your table. Never ever offered to the French.)
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To: JohnHuang2
Perhaps this Russian duplicity explains Scott Ritter's pro Iraq "conversion".
He is, I believe, married to a Russian woman who has ties to Moscow.
5 posted on 03/27/2003 7:13:06 AM PST by MamaLucci (We gave 'em enough rope, let the UN hang!)
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To: JohnHuang2
Chilling!
6 posted on 03/27/2003 7:15:30 AM PST by Freedom56v2
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: JohnHuang2
**The Russian Strain: Moscow is Saddam's biggest supplier of chemical and bio weapons.**

And now we are beginning to see the truth. (Not quite like the Russian guns, etc. that were left in Afghanistan.)
8 posted on 03/27/2003 7:25:48 AM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Freedom'sWorthIt
Makes you wonder whether Russia paid France, or put in place cheap oil agreements, in return for France's cooperation to oppose the US.
9 posted on 03/27/2003 7:48:26 AM PST by Go Gordon
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To: JohnHuang2
Good morning - and thanks for the non-Reuters posts! :-)
10 posted on 03/27/2003 7:49:20 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: Go Gordon
Well - the French evidently have huge business dealings with Iraq - as one reason for their treacheries. Then, again, it may just be that this is what the French have become. Terrorist sympathizers. They used to be just plain cowards. (Note: This is NOT in reference to the French Underground in WWII who were nothing but courageous heroes!)
11 posted on 03/27/2003 7:50:42 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: Freedom'sWorthIt
thanks for the non-Reuters posts!

Ha! hehe ;)

13 posted on 03/27/2003 7:52:46 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: Freedom'sWorthIt; JohnHuang2; MLedeen; colorado tanker; PhiKapMom; Grampa Dave; Poohbah; ...
Note that a lot of the deal mentioned are from about the time Boris Yeltsin was supposedly in charge (well, when he wasn't drinking himself into oblivion).

Kinda hard to lay this one on Putin, IMO. I don't think the Administration is doing that at all. Venom against the Russian from Republicans is conspicuous by its absence. There is probably a reason for this, if you want my opinion.
14 posted on 03/27/2003 7:56:59 AM PST by hchutch ("But tonight we get EVEN!" - Ice-T)
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To: kolja2003
It is a lie? I wish to God it was a lie. I have nothing but admiration for the Russian people who endured the 70+ years of communist butcheries! God bless them. But the KGB has not yet been "outed" to the degree necessary to cleanse Russia from the vile evil that undergirded every atrocity committed during those years. Which means those people are still there - many of them (some of them now the Russian mobsters). And there were once such great hopes for the current leaders of Russia. Perhaps there still is hope. Give us hope. Get the Russian leader to back the US on this righteous cause! If he does not - he cannot be "right".
15 posted on 03/27/2003 7:57:07 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: JohnHuang2
Thanks John!

This shreds those who would like to protect the current Russian Maffia/KGB head thug, the Vlader!

Nothing like a hard hitting WSJ article to remove any doubts.

Thanks, this has been bookmarked!
16 posted on 03/27/2003 8:00:10 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: hchutch
Well - even with the "communist party" officially out of power in Russia - THE COMMUNISTS ARE STILL THERE! Sadly, not too many in the current administration understand the danger from the world's communists who are still alive and fluorishing - just look at Brazil and Venezuela for example. And it is THEY who are behind the Russian intransigence and the French as well. (Yes, $$$$ is behind it all - but it is the communist world view in conjunction with the $$$ interests that forms the strong anti-American, anti-Freedom bond we see in Germany/France/Russia/China Axis of evil.
17 posted on 03/27/2003 8:01:11 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: kolja2003
Nice try. Does the Russian Maffia pay you by the word or posting to sanitize after them?
18 posted on 03/27/2003 8:02:20 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: hchutch
I would not be surprised if Bush and Putin have secretly made a deal regarding Russia's role in pro-Saddam Iraq. Expect Russia to be a part of the coalition after the war, like they were let in after Kosovo. Saddam owes Russia a lot of money, and this is what the Russians are concerned about.
19 posted on 03/27/2003 8:02:30 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Grampa Dave
Welcome, Grampa
20 posted on 03/27/2003 8:09:34 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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