Statement By David Kay on the Interim Progress Report On the Activities of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG)
Before the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence, the House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on
Defense, and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
United States Government
October 2, 2003
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I welcome this opportunity to discuss with
the Committee the progress that the Iraq Survey Group has made in its
initial three months of its investigation into Iraq's Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMD) programs.
I cannot emphasize too strongly that the Interim Progress Report,
which has been made available to you, is a snapshot, in the context of
an on-going investigation, of where we are after our first three months
of work. The report does not represent a final reckoning of Iraq's WMD
programs, nor are we at the point where we are prepared to close the
file on any of these programs. While solid progress - I would say even
remarkable progress considering the conditions that the ISG has had to
work under - has been made in this initial period of operations, much
remains to be done. We are still very much in the collection and
analysis mode, still seeking the information and evidence that will
allow us to confidently draw comprehensive conclusions to the actual
objectives, scope, and dimensions of Iraq's WMD activities at the time
of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Iraq's WMD programs spanned more than two
decades, involved thousands of people, billions of dollars, and were
elaborately shielded by security and deception operations that continued
even beyond the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The very scale of this
program when coupled with the conditions in Iraq that have prevailed
since the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom dictate the speed at which we
can move to a comprehensive understanding of Iraq's WMD activities.
We need to recall that in the 1991-2003 period the intelligence
community and the UN/IAEA inspectors had to draw conclusions as to the
status of Iraq's WMD program in the face of incomplete, and often false,
data supplied by Iraq or data collected either by UN/IAEA inspectors
operating within the severe constraints that Iraqi security and
deception actions imposed or by national intelligence collection systems
with their own inherent limitations. The result was that our
understanding of the status of Iraq's WMD program was always bounded by
large uncertainties and had to be heavily caveated. With the regime of
Saddam Husayn at an end, ISG has the opportunity for the first time of
drawing together all the evidence that can still be found in Iraq - much
evidence is irretrievably lost - to reach definitive conclusions
concerning the true state of Iraq's WMD program. It is far too early to
reach any definitive conclusions and, in some areas, we may never reach
that goal. The unique nature of this opportunity, however, requires that
we take great care to ensure that the conclusions we draw reflect the
truth to the maximum extent possible given the conditions in
post-conflict Iraq.
We have not yet found stocks of weapons, but we are not yet at the
point where we can say definitively either that such weapon stocks do
not exist or that they existed before the war and our only task is to
find where they have gone. We are actively engaged in searching for such
weapons based on information being supplied to us by Iraqis.
Why are we having such difficulty in finding weapons or in reaching a
confident conclusion that they do not exist or that they once existed
but have been removed? Our search efforts are being hindered by six
principal factors:
- From birth all of Iraq's
WMD activities were highly compartmentalized within a regime that ruled
and kept its secrets through fear and terror and with deception and
denial built into each program;
- Deliberate dispersal and destruction of material and
documentation related to weapons programs began pre-conflict and ran
trans-to-post conflict;
- Post-OIF looting destroyed or
dispersed important and easily collectable material and forensic
evidence concerning Iraq's WMD program. As the report covers in detail,
significant elements of this looting were carried out in a systematic
and deliberate manner, with the clear aim of concealing pre-OIF
activities of Saddam's regime;
- Some WMD personnel crossed borders in the pre/trans conflict period
and may have taken evidence and even weapons-related materials with
them;
- Any actual WMD weapons or material is likely to
be small in relation to the total conventional armaments footprint and
difficult to near impossible to identify with normal search procedures.
It is important to keep in mind that even the bulkiest materials we are
searching for, in the quantities we would expect to find, can be
concealed in spaces not much larger than a two car garage;
- The environment in Iraq remains far from permissive for our
activities, with many Iraqis that we talk to reporting threats and overt
acts of intimidation and our own personnel being the subject of threats
and attacks. In September alone we have had three attacks on ISG
facilities or teams: The ISG base in Irbil was bombed and four staff
injured, two very seriously; a two person team had their vehicle blocked
by gunmen and only escaped by firing back through their own windshield;
and on Wednesday, 24 September, the ISG Headquarters in Baghdad again
was subject to mortar attack.
What have we found and what have we not found in
the first 3 months of our work?
We have discovered dozens of WMD-related program activities and
significant amounts of equipment that Iraq concealed from the United
Nations during the inspections that began in late 2002. The discovery of
these deliberate concealment efforts have come about both through the
admissions of Iraqi scientists and officials concerning information they
deliberately withheld and through physical evidence of equipment and
activities that ISG has discovered that should have been declared to the
UN. Let me just give you a few examples of these concealment efforts,
some of which I will elaborate on later:
- A clandestine
network of laboratories and safehouses within the Iraqi Intelligence
Service that contained equipment subject to UN monitoring and suitable
for continuing CBW research.
- A prison laboratory complex, possibly used in human
testing of BW agents, that Iraqi officials working to prepare for UN
inspections were explicitly ordered not to declare to the UN.
- Reference strains of biological organisms concealed in a
scientist's home, one of which can be used to produce biological
weapons.
- New research on BW-applicable agents, Brucella and Congo
Crimean Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF), and continuing work on ricin and
aflatoxin were not declared to the UN.
- Documents and
equipment, hidden in scientists' homes, that would have been useful in
resuming uranium enrichment by centrifuge and electromagnetic isotope
separation (EMIS).
- A line of UAVs not fully declared at an undeclared production
facility and an admission that they had tested one of their declared
UAVs out to a range of 500 km, 350 km beyond the permissible limit.
- Continuing covert capability to manufacture fuel
propellant useful only for prohibited SCUD variant missiles, a
capability that was maintained at least until the end of 2001 and that
cooperating Iraqi scientists have said they were told to conceal from
the UN.
- Plans and advanced design work for new long-range missiles with
ranges up to at least 1000 km - well beyond the 150 km range limit
imposed by the UN. Missiles of a 1000 km range would have allowed Iraq
to threaten targets through out the Middle East, including Ankara,
Cairo, and Abu Dhabi.
- Clandestine attempts between
late-1999 and 2002 to obtain from North Korea technology related to
1,300 km range ballistic missiles — probably the No Dong — 300 km range
anti-ship cruise missiles, and other prohibited military equipment.
In addition to the discovery of extensive concealment efforts,
we have been faced with a systematic sanitization of documentary and
computer evidence in a wide range of offices, laboratories, and
companies suspected of WMD work. The pattern of these efforts to erase
evidence - hard drives destroyed, specific files burned, equipment
cleaned of all traces of use - are ones of deliberate, rather than
random, acts. For example,
- On 10 July 2003 an ISG team exploited the Revolutionary
Command Council (RCC) Headquarters in Baghdad. The basement of the main
building contained an archive of documents situated on well-organized
rows of metal shelving. The basement suffered no fire damage despite the
total destruction of the upper floors from coalition air strikes. Upon
arrival the exploitation team encountered small piles of ash where
individual documents or binders of documents were intentionally
destroyed. Computer hard drives had been deliberately destroyed.
Computers would have had financial value to a random looter; their
destruction, rather than removal for resale or reuse, indicates a
targeted effort to prevent Coalition forces from gaining access to their
contents.
- All IIS laboratories visited by IIS
exploitation teams have been clearly sanitized, including removal of
much equipment, shredding and burning of documents, and even the removal
of nameplates from office doors.
- Although much of the deliberate destruction and sanitization of
documents and records probably occurred during the height of OIF combat
operations, indications of significant continuing destruction efforts
have been found after the end of major combat operations, including
entry in May 2003 of the locked gated vaults of the Ba'ath party
intelligence building in Baghdad and highly selective destruction of
computer hard drives and data storage equipment along with the burning
of a small number of specific binders that appear to have contained
financial and intelligence records, and in July 2003 a site exploitation
team at the Abu Ghurayb Prison found one pile of the smoldering ashes
from documents that was still warm to the touch.
I would
now like to review our efforts in each of the major lines of enquiry
that ISG has pursued during this initial phase of its work.
With regard to biological warfare activities, which has been
one of our two initial areas of focus, ISG teams are uncovering
significant information - including research and development of
BW-applicable organisms, the involvement of Iraqi Intelligence Service
(IIS) in possible BW activities, and deliberate concealment activities.
All of this suggests Iraq after 1996 further compartmentalized its
program and focused on maintaining smaller, covert capabilities that
could be activated quickly to surge the production of BW agents.
Debriefings of IIS officials and site visits have begun to unravel a
clandestine network of laboratories and facilities within the security
service apparatus. This network was never declared to the UN and was
previously unknown. We are still working on determining the extent to
which this network was tied to large-scale military efforts or BW terror
weapons, but this clandestine capability was suitable for preserving BW
expertise, BW capable facilities and continuing R&D - all key
elements for maintaining a capability for resuming BW production. The
IIS also played a prominent role in sponsoring students for overseas
graduate studies in the biological sciences, according to Iraqi
scientists and IIS sources, providing an important avenue for furthering
BW-applicable research. This was the only area of graduate work that the
IIS appeared to sponsor.
Discussions with Iraqi scientists uncovered agent R&D work that
paired overt work with nonpathogenic organisms serving as surrogates for
prohibited investigation with pathogenic agents. Examples include: B.
Thurengiensis (Bt) with B. anthracis (anthrax), and medicinal
plants with ricin. In a similar vein, two key former BW scientists,
confirmed that Iraq under the guise of legitimate activity developed
refinements of processes and products relevant to BW agents. The
scientists discussed the development of improved, simplified
fermentation and spray drying capabilities for the simulant Bt that
would have been directly applicable to anthrax, and one scientist
confirmed that the production line for Bt could be switched to produce
anthrax in one week if the seed stock were available.
A very large body of information has been developed through
debriefings, site visits, and exploitation of captured Iraqi documents
that confirms that Iraq concealed equipment and materials from UN
inspectors when they returned in 2002. One noteworthy example is a
collection of reference strains that ought to have been declared to the
UN. Among them was a vial of live C. botulinum Okra B. from which a
biological agent can be produced. This discovery - hidden in the home of
a BW scientist - illustrates the point I made earlier about the
difficulty of locating small stocks of material that can be used to
covertly surge production of deadly weapons. The scientist who concealed
the vials containing this agent has identified a large cache of agents
that he was asked, but refused, to conceal. ISG is actively searching
for this second cache.
Additional information is beginning to corroborate reporting since
1996 about human testing activities using chemical and biological
substances, but progress in this area is slow given the concern of
knowledgeable Iraqi personnel about their being prosecuted for crimes
against humanity.
We have not yet been able to corroborate the existence of a mobile BW
production effort. Investigation into the origin of and intended use for
the two trailers found in northern Iraq in April has yielded a number of
explanations, including hydrogen, missile propellant, and BW production,
but technical limitations would prevent any of these processes from
being ideally suited to these trailers. That said, nothing we have
discovered rules out their potential use in BW production.
We have made significant progress in identifying and locating
individuals who were reportedly involved in a mobile program, and we are
confident that we will be able to get an answer to the questions as to
whether there was a mobile program and whether the trailers that have
been discovered so far were part of such a program.
Let me turn now to chemical weapons (CW). In searching for
retained stocks of chemical munitions, ISG has had to contend with the
almost unbelievable scale of Iraq's conventional weapons armory, which
dwarfs by orders of magnitude the physical size of any conceivable stock
of chemical weapons. For example, there are approximately 130 known
Iraqi Ammunition Storage Points (ASP), many of which exceed 50 square
miles in size and hold an estimated 600,000 tons of artillery shells,
rockets, aviation bombs and other ordinance. Of these 130 ASPs,
approximately 120 still remain unexamined. As Iraqi practice was not to
mark much of their chemical ordinance and to store it at the same ASPs
that held conventional rounds, the size of the required search effort is
enormous.
While searching for retained weapons, ISG teams have developed
multiple sources that indicate that Iraq explored the possibility of CW
production in recent years, possibly as late as 2003. When Saddam had
asked a senior military official in either 2001 or 2002 how long it
would take to produce new chemical agent and weapons, he told ISG that
after he consulted with CW experts in OMI he responded it would take six
months for mustard. Another senior Iraqi chemical weapons expert in
responding to a request in mid-2002 from Uday Husayn for CW for the
Fedayeen Saddam estimated that it would take two months to produce
mustard and two years for Sarin.
We are starting to survey parts of Iraq's chemical industry to
determine if suitable equipment and bulk chemicals were available for
chemical weapons production. We have been struck that two senior Iraqi
officials volunteered that if they had been ordered to resume CW
production Iraq would have been willing to use stainless steel systems
that would be disposed of after a few production runs, in place of
corrosive-resistant equipment which they did not have.
We continue to follow leads on Iraq's acquisition of equipment and
bulk precursors suitable for a CW program. Several possibilities have
emerged and are now being exploited. One example involves a foreign
company with offices in Baghdad, that imported in the past into Iraq
dual-use equipment and maintained active contracts through 2002. Its
Baghdad office was found looted in August 2003, but we are pursuing
other locations and associates of the company.
Information obtained since OIF has identified several key areas in
which Iraq may have engaged in proscribed or undeclared activity since
1991, including research on a possible VX stabilizer, research and
development for CW-capable munitions, and procurement/concealment of
dual-use materials and equipment.
Multiple sources with varied access and reliability have told ISG
that Iraq did not have a large, ongoing, centrally controlled CW program
after 1991. Information found to date suggests that Iraq's large-scale
capability to develop, produce, and fill new CW munitions was reduced -
if not entirely destroyed - during Operations Desert Storm and Desert
Fox, 13 years of UN sanctions and UN inspections. We are carefully
examining dual-use, commercial chemical facilities to determine whether
these were used or planned as alternative production sites.
We have also acquired information related to Iraq's CW doctrine and
Iraq's war plans for OIF, but we have not yet found evidence to confirm
pre-war reporting that Iraqi military units were prepared to use CW
against Coalition forces. Our efforts to collect and exploit
intelligence on Iraq's chemical weapons program have thus far yielded
little reliable information on post-1991 CW stocks and CW agent
production, although we continue to receive and follow leads related to
such stocks. We have multiple reports that Iraq retained CW munitions
made prior to 1991, possibly including mustard - a long-lasting chemical
agent - but we have to date been unable to locate any such munitions.
With regard to Iraq's nuclear program, the testimony we have
obtained from Iraqi scientists and senior government officials should
clear up any doubts about whether Saddam still wanted to obtain nuclear
weapons. They have told ISG that Saddam Husayn remained firmly committed
to acquiring nuclear weapons. These officials assert that Saddam would
have resumed nuclear weapons development at some future point. Some
indicated a resumption after Iraq was free of sanctions. At least one
senior Iraqi official believed that by 2000 Saddam had run out of
patience with waiting for sanctions to end and wanted to restart the
nuclear program. The Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC) beginning
around 1999 expanded its laboratories and research activities and
increased its overall funding levels. This expansion may have been in
initial preparation for renewed nuclear weapons research, although
documentary evidence of this has not been found, and this is the subject
of continuing investigation by ISG.
Starting around 2000, the senior Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission
(IAEC) and high-level Ba'ath Party official Dr. Khalid Ibrahim Sa'id
began several small and relatively unsophisticated research initiatives
that could be applied to nuclear weapons development. These initiatives
did not in-and-of themselves constitute a resumption of the nuclear
weapons program, but could have been useful in developing a
weapons-relevant science base for the long-term. We do not yet have
information indicating whether a higher government authority directed
Sa'id to initiate this research and, regretfully, Dr. Said was killed on
April 8th during the fall of Baghdad when the car he was riding in
attempted to run a Coalition roadblock.
Despite evidence of Saddam's continued ambition to acquire nuclear
weapons, to date we have not uncovered evidence that Iraq undertook
significant post-1998 steps to actually build nuclear weapons or produce
fissile material. However, Iraq did take steps to preserve some
technological capability from the pre-1991 nuclear weapons program.
- According to documents and testimony of Iraqi scientists, some
of the key technical groups from the pre-1991 nuclear weapons program
remained largely intact, performing work on nuclear-relevant dual-use
technologies within the Military Industrial Commission (MIC). Some
scientists from the pre-1991 nuclear weapons program have told ISG that
they believed that these working groups were preserved in order to allow
a reconstitution of the nuclear weapons program, but none of the
scientists could produce official orders or plans to support their
belief.
- In some cases, these groups performed work
which could help preserve the science base and core skills that would be
needed for any future fissile material production or nuclear weapons
development.
- Several scientists - at the direction of senior Iraqi
government officials - preserved documents and equipment from their
pre-1991 nuclear weapon-related research and did not reveal this to the
UN/IAEA. One Iraqi scientist recently stated in an interview with ISG
that it was a "common understanding" among the scientists that
material was being preserved for reconstitution of nuclear
weapons-related work.
The ISG nuclear team has found
indications that there was interest, beginning in 2002, in
reconstituting a centrifuge enrichment program. Most of this activity
centered on activities of Dr. Sa'id that caused some of his former
colleagues in the pre-1991 nuclear program to suspect that Dr. Sa'id, at
least, was considering a restart of the centrifuge program. We do not
yet fully understand Iraqi intentions, and the evidence does not tie any
activity directly to centrifuge research or development.
Exploitation of additional documents may shed light on the projects
and program plans of Dr. Khalid Ibrahim Sa'id. There may be more
projects to be discovered in research placed at universities and private
companies. Iraqi interest in reconstitution of a uranium enrichment
program needs to be better understood through the analysis of
procurement records and additional interviews.
With regard to delivery systems, the ISG team has discovered
sufficient evidence to date to conclude that the Iraqi regime was
committed to delivery system improvements that would have, if OIF had
not occurred, dramatically breached UN restrictions placed on Iraq after
the 1991 Gulf War.
Detainees and co-operative sources indicate that beginning in 2000
Saddam ordered the development of ballistic missiles with ranges of at
least 400km and up to 1000km and that measures to conceal these projects
from UNMOVIC were initiated in late-2002, ahead of the arrival of
inspectors. Work was also underway for a clustered engine liquid
propellant missile, and it appears the work had progressed to a point to
support initial prototype production of some parts and assemblies.
According to a cooperating senior detainee, Saddam concluded that the
proposals from both the liquid-propellant and solid-propellant missile
design centers would take too long. For instance, the liquid-propellant
missile project team forecast first delivery in six years. Saddam
countered in 2000 that he wanted the missile designed and built inside
of six months. On the other hand several sources contend that Saddam's
range requirements for the missiles grew from 400-500km in 2000 to
600-1000km in 2002.
ISG has gathered testimony from missile designers at Al Kindi State
Company that Iraq has reinitiated work on converting SA-2 Surface-to-Air
Missiles into ballistic missiles with a range goal of about 250km.
Engineering work was reportedly underway in early 2003, despite the
presence of UNMOVIC. This program was not declared to the UN. ISG is
presently seeking additional confirmation and details on this project. A
second cooperative source has stated that the program actually began in
2001, but that it received added impetus in the run-up to OIF, and that
missiles from this project were transferred to a facility north of
Baghdad. This source also provided documentary evidence of instructions
to convert SA-2s into surface-to-surface missiles.
ISG has obtained testimony from both detainees and cooperative
sources that indicate that proscribed-range solid-propellant missile
design studies were initiated, or already underway, at the time when
work on the clustered liquid-propellant missile designs began. The
motor diameter was to be 800 to 1000mm, i.e. much greater than the
500-mm Ababil-100. The range goals cited for this system vary from over
400km up to 1000km, depending on the source and the payload mass.
A cooperative source, involved in the 2001-2002 deliberations on the
long-range solid propellant project, provided ISG with a set of concept
designs for a launcher designed to accommodate a 1m diameter by 9m
length missile. The limited detail in the drawings suggest there was
some way to go before launcher fabrication. The source believes that
these drawings would not have been requested until the missile progress
was relatively advanced, normally beyond the design state. The drawing
are in CAD format, with files dated 09/01/02.
While we have obtained enough information to make us confident that
this design effort was underway, we are not yet confident which accounts
of the timeline and project progress are accurate and are now seeking to
better understand this program and its actual progress at the time of
OIF.
One cooperative source has said that he suspected that the new
large-diameter solid-propellant missile was intended to have a CW-filled
warhead, but no detainee has admitted any actual knowledge of plans for
unconventional warheads for any current or planned ballistic missile.
The suspicion expressed by the one source about a CW warhead was based
on his assessment of the unavailability of nuclear warheads and
potential survivability problems of biological warfare agent in
ballistic missile warheads. This is an area of great interest and we are
seeking additional information on warhead designs.
While I have spoken so far of planned missile systems, one high-level
detainee has recently claimed that Iraq retained a small quantity of
Scud-variant missiles until at least 2001, although he subsequently
recanted these claims, work continues to determine the truth. Two other
sources contend that Iraq continued to produce until 2001 liquid fuel
and oxidizer specific to Scud-type systems. The cooperating source
claims that the al Tariq Factory was used to manufacture Scud oxidizer
(IRFNA) from 1996 to 2001, and that nitrogen tetroxide, a chief
ingredient of IRFNA was collected from a bleed port on the production
equipment, was reserved, and then mixed with highly concentrated nitric
acid plus an inhibitor to produce Scud oxidizer. Iraq never declared
its pre-Gulf War capability to manufacture Scud IRFNA out of fear,
multiple sources have stated, that the al Tariq Factory would be
destroyed, leaving Baghdad without the ability to produce highly
concentrated nitric acid, explosives and munitions. To date we have not
discovered documentary or material evidence to corroborate these claims,
but continued efforts are underway to clarify and confirm this
information with additional Iraqi sources and to locate corroborating
physical evidence. If we can confirm that the fuel was produced as late
as 2001, and given that Scud fuel can only be used in Scud-variant
missiles, we will have strong evidence that the missiles must have been
retained until that date. This would, of course, be yet another example
of a failure to declare prohibited activities to the UN.
Iraq was continuing to develop a variety of UAV platforms and
maintained two UAV programs that were working in parallel, one at Ibn
Fernas and one at al-Rashid Air Force Base. Ibn Fernas worked on the
development of smaller, more traditional types of UAVs in addition to
the conversion of manned aircraft into UAVs. This program was not
declared to the UN until the 2002 CAFCD in which Iraq declared the
RPV-20, RPV-30 and Pigeon RPV systems to the UN. All these systems had
declared ranges of less than 150km. Several Iraqi officials stated that
the RPV-20 flew over 500km on autopilot in 2002, contradicting Iraq's
declaration on the system's range. The al-Rashid group was developing a
competing line of UAVs. This program was never fully declared to the UN
and is the subject of on-going work by ISG. Additional work is also
focusing on the payloads and intended use for these UAVs. Surveillance
and use as decoys are uses mentioned by some of those interviewed. Given
Iraq's interest before the Gulf War in attempting to convert a MIG-21
into an unmanned aerial vehicle to carry spray tanks capable of
dispensing chemical or biological agents, attention is being paid to
whether any of the newer generation of UAVs were intended to have a
similar purpose. This remains an open question.
ISG has discovered evidence of two primary cruise missile programs.
The first appears to have been successfully implemented, whereas the
second had not yet reached maturity at the time of OIF.
The first involved upgrades to the HY-2 coastal-defense cruise
missile. ISG has developed multiple sources of testimony, which is
corroborated in part by a captured document, that Iraq undertook a
program aimed at increasing the HY-2's range and permitting its use as a
land-attack missile. These efforts extended the HY-2's range from its
original 100km to 150-180km. Ten modified missiles were delivered to the
military prior to OIF and two of these were fired from Umm Qasr during
OIF - one was shot down and one hit Kuwait.
The second program, called the Jenin, was a much more ambitious
effort to convert the HY-2 into a 1000km range land-attack cruise
missile. The Jenin concept was presented to Saddam on 23 November 2001
and received what cooperative sources called an "unusually quick
response" in little more than a week. The essence of the concept
was to take an HY-2, strip it of its liquid rocket engine, and put in
its place a turbine engine from a Russian helicopter - the TV-2-117 or
TV3-117 from a Mi-8 or Mi-17helicopter. To prevent discovery by the UN,
Iraq halted engine development and testing and disassembled the test
stand in late 2002 before the design criteria had been met.
In addition to the activities detailed here on Iraq's attempts to
develop delivery systems beyond the permitted UN 150km, ISG has also
developed information on Iraqi attempts to purchase proscribed missiles
and missile technology. Documents found by ISG describe a high level
dialogue between Iraq and North Korea that began in December 1999 and
included an October 2000 meeting in Baghdad. These documents indicate
Iraqi interest in the transfer of technology for surface-to-surface
missiles with a range of 1300km (probably No Dong) and land-to-sea
missiles with a range of 300km. The document quotes the North Koreans as
understanding the limitations imposed by the UN, but being prepared
"to cooperate with Iraq on the items it specified". At the
time of OIF, these discussions had not led to any missiles being
transferred to Iraq. A high level cooperating source has reported that
in late 2002 at Saddam's behest a delegation of Iraqi officials was sent
to meet with foreign export companies, including one that dealt with
missiles. Iraq was interested in buying an advanced ballistic missile
with 270km and 500km ranges.
The ISG has also identified a large volume of material and testimony
by cooperating Iraq officials on Iraq's effort to illicitly procure
parts and foreign assistance for its missile program. These include:
- Significant level of assistance from a foreign company and its
network of affiliates in supplying and supporting the development of
production capabilities for solid rocket propellant and dual-use
chemicals.
- Entities from another foreign country were involved in
supplying guidance and control systems for use in the Al-Fat'h
(Ababil-100). The contract was incomplete by the time of OIF due to
technical problems with the few systems delivered and a financial
dispute.
- A group of foreign experts operating in a
private capacity were helping to develop Iraq's liquid propellant
ballistic missile RDT&E and production infrastructure. They worked
in Baghdad for about three months in late 1998 and subsequently
continued work on the project from abroad. An actual contract valued at
$10 million for machinery and equipment was signed in June 2001,
initially for 18 months, but later extended. This cooperation continued
right up until the war.
- A different group of foreign experts traveled to Iraq in
1999 to conduct a technical review that resulted in what became the Al
Samoud 2 design, and a contract was signed in 2001 for the provision of
rigs, fixtures and control equipment for the redesigned missile.
- Detainees and cooperative sources have described the
role of a foreign expert in negotiations on the development of Iraq's
liquid and solid propellant production infrastructure. This could have
had applications in existing and planned longer range systems, although
it is reported that nothing had actually been implemented before
OIF.
Uncertainty remains about the full extent of foreign assistance to
Iraq's planned expansion of its missile systems and work is continuing
to gain a full resolution of this issue. However, there is little doubt
from the evidence already gathered that there was substantial illegal
procurement for all aspects of the missile programs.
I have covered a lot of ground today, much of it highly technical.
Although we are resisting drawing conclusions in this first interim
report, a number of things have become clearer already as a result of
our investigation, among them:
- Saddam, at least as judged
by those scientists and other insiders who worked in his
military-industrial programs, had not given up his aspirations and
intentions to continue to acquire weapons of mass destruction. Even
those senior officials we have interviewed who claim no direct knowledge
of any on-going prohibited activities readily acknowledge that Saddam
intended to resume these programs whenever the external restrictions
were removed. Several of these officials acknowledge receiving inquiries
since 2000 from Saddam or his sons about how long it would take to
either restart CW production or make available chemical weapons.
- In the delivery systems area there were already well
advanced, but undeclared, on-going activities that, if OIF had not
intervened, would have resulted in the production of missiles with
ranges at least up to 1000 km, well in excess of the UN permitted range
of 150 km. These missile activities were supported by a serious
clandestine procurement program about which we have much still to
learn.
- In the chemical and biological weapons area we have
confidence that there were at a minimum clandestine on-going research
and development activities that were embedded in the Iraqi Intelligence
Service. While we have much yet to learn about the exact work programs
and capabilities of these activities, it is already apparent that these
undeclared activities would have at a minimum facilitated chemical and
biological weapons activities and provided a technically trained
cadre.
Let me conclude by returning to something I began
with today. We face a unique but challenging opportunity in our efforts
to unravel the exact status of Iraq's WMD program. The good news is that
we do not have to rely for the first time in over a decade on
- the incomplete, and often false, data that Iraq supplied the
UN/IAEA;
- data collected by UN inspectors operating with the
severe constraints that Iraqi security and deception actions
imposed;
- information supplied by defectors, some of
whom certainly fabricated much that they supplied and perhaps were under
the direct control of the IIS;
- data collected by national technical collections systems with
their own limitations.
The bad news is that we have to do
this under conditions that ensure that our work will take time and
impose serious physical dangers on those who are asked to carry it
out.
Why should we take the time and run the risk to ensure that our
conclusions reflect the truth to the maximum extent that is possible
given the conditions in post-conflict Iraq? For those of us that are
carrying out this search, there are two reasons that drive us to want to
complete this effort.
First, whatever we find will probably differ from pre-war
intelligence. Empirical reality on the ground is, and has always been,
different from intelligence judgments that must be made under serious
constraints of time, distance and information. It is, however, only by
understanding precisely what those difference are that the quality of
future intelligence and investment decisions concerning future
intelligence systems can be improved. Proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction is such a continuing threat to global society that learning
those lessons has a high imperative.
Second, we have found people, technical information and illicit
procurement networks that if allowed to flow to other countries and
regions could accelerate global proliferation. Even in the area of
actual weapons there is no doubt that Iraq had at one time chemical and
biological weapons. Even if there were only a remote possibility that
these pre-1991 weapons still exist, we have an obligation to American
troops who are now there and the Iraqi population to ensure that none of
these remain to be used against them in the ongoing insurgency
activity.
Mr. Chairman and Members I appreciate this opportunity to share with
you the initial results of the first 3 months of the activities of the
Iraqi Survey Group. I am certain that I speak for Major General Keith
Dayton, who commands the Iraqi Survey Group, when I say how proud we are
of the men and women from across the Government and from our Coalition
partners, Australia and the United Kingdom, who have gone to Iraq and
are carrying out this important mission.
Thank you.
The Future of Iraq | The War and the Wider World | A Violent Month | Events of the Past Year | Government Documents | Maps