/ 24 January 2003

Iraq ‘preparing to use chemical weapons’

Iraqi documents obtained by the BBC appear to suggest that the country’s president, Saddam Hussein, is preparing to use chemical weapons against western troops in the event of war, it was reported on Friday.

The handwritten notes state that elite units of the Iraqi military have been issued with new chemical warfare suits and supplies of the drug atropine, which is used to counter the effects of nerve gas.

The Radio 4 Today programme reported that the papers had been passed to the BBC by the Iraqi National Coalition (INC), an opposition group which claims to have received them during secret meetings with serving members of Baghdad’s military.

Today reported that the documents were brought out of Iraq within the past month and have been verified by three different experts. The papers suggest that the chemical suits and anti-nerve gas drugs were smuggled into Iraq from neighbouring countries. Details of methods for attacking ships in the Gulf region with unmanned submarines are also included in the paperwork.

The documents indicate that the new chemical suits and atropine, which protect against the nerve gases sarin and VX, have been issued to the Republican Guard and Special Republican Guard, President Saddam’s most loyal and feared military units.

The secretary-general of the INC, Tawfik al-Yassiri, is a former brigadier general in the Iraqi army, and claims that his organisation has extensive contacts within Saddam’s military.

He told the Today programme: ”We received the documents from inside Iraq, passed on by people who left Iraq.

”We have checked the information in other ways. We have members of our organisation in most of the camps and cities in Iraq, from soldiers to generals.”

Toby Dodge, an Iraq specialist from Warwick University who looked at the documents for the programme, said: ”The documents that you have supplied me seem to be genuine … If you look at Iraqi troop deployments, these groups would be the recipients of all that Saddam had, in training and modern weapons and in chemical and biological weapons protection apparatus.”

Bill Tierney, a former UN weapons inspector, told Today: ”The key point is that the Republican Guard have been issued this new equipment. During inspections, I have seen that their standard decontamination equipment is 60s Soviet model and not very good at all.

”If both these two units have new equipment, it would indicate that they are prepared to use chemical weapons. The Iraqis’ standard chemical weapon is mustard gas, but they were keen on developing VX. The fact that they have imported atropine is an indicator that they are willing to use VX.”

A former CIA station chief in northern Iraq, Bob Bear, said that if the opposition was receiving information from elite military units, it suggested Saddam was in danger of mutiny among those closest to him.

He told the programme: ”The Special Republican Guard is controlled by Saddam’s family. This means that they really want Saddam to go. If this information is from the Special Republican Guard, then maybe Saddam is closer to the end than we expect.” – Guardian Unlimited Â