Katana VentraIP

Iraq and weapons of mass destruction

Iraq actively researched and later employed weapons of mass destruction (WMD) from 1962 to 1991, when it destroyed its chemical weapons stockpile and halted its biological and nuclear weapon programs as required by the United Nations Security Council.[1] The fifth president of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, was internationally condemned for his use of chemical weapons against Iranian and Kurdish civilians during the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s. Saddam pursued an extensive biological weapons program and a nuclear weapons program, though no nuclear bomb was built. After the Gulf War, the United Nations located and destroyed large quantities of Iraqi chemical weapons and related equipment and materials; Iraq ceased its chemical, biological and nuclear programs.[2]

Not to be confused with Iran and weapons of mass destruction.

In the early 2000s, U.S. President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair both asserted that Saddam Hussein's weapons programs were still actively building weapons and that large stockpiles of WMDs were hidden in Iraq. Inspections by the UN to resolve the status of unresolved disarmament questions restarted between November 2002 and March 2003,[3] under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1441, which demanded Hussein give "immediate, unconditional and active cooperation" with UN and IAEA inspections.[4] The United States asserted that Hussein's frequent lack of cooperation was a breach of Resolution 1441, but failed to convince the United Nations Security Council to pass a new resolution authorizing the use of force.[5][6][7] Despite this, Bush asserted peaceful measures could not disarm Iraq of the weapons that he alleged it possessed and he launched a second Gulf War instead. A year later, the United States Senate officially released the Senate Report of Pre-war Intelligence on Iraq which concluded that many of the Bush Administration's pre-war statements about Iraqi WMD were misleading and not supported by the underlying intelligence. United States–led inspections later found that Iraq had earlier ceased active WMD production and stockpiling; the war was called by many, including 2008 Republican presidential nominee John McCain, a "mistake",[1] while others have argued the false allegations of weapons were used as a deliberate pretext for war.


Iraq signed the Geneva Protocol in 1931, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1969, and the Biological Weapons Convention in 1972 but did not ratify it until June 11, 1991. Iraq ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention in January 2009, with its entry into force for Iraq coming a month later on February 12.[8]

Iraq

1959

None

None

None

None

None

None

None; programme was infiltrated, abandoned, destroyed by Israel in 1981 and Iran in 1989. Officially program ended in 1990.

Al-Hussein (644 km)

Yes

50 deployed missiles

Al-Samoud 2

Various equipment, including vehicles, engines and warheads, related to the AS2 missiles

2 large propellant casting chambers

14 155 mm shells filled with mustard gas, the mustard gas totaling approximately 49 litres and still at high purity

Approximately 500 ml of

thiodiglycol

Some 122 mm chemical warheads

Some chemical equipment

224.6 kg of expired growth media

At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA

Alexander Coker

Curveball (informant)

David Kelly

Dodgy Dossier

Corinne Heraud

Iraqi aluminum tubes

Office of Special Plans

Operation Rockingham

Demetrius Perricos

a project with unknown objectives commissioned by Iraqi president Saddam Hussein to build a series of "superguns"

Project Babylon

Syria and weapons of mass destruction

Yellowcake forgery

The Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes

Coletta, Giovanni. "Politicising intelligence: what went wrong with the UK and US assessments on Iraqi WMD in 2002" Journal of Intelligence History (2018) 17#1 pp 65–78 is a scholarly analysis.

Isikoff, Michael. and David Corn. Hubris: The inside story of spin, scandal, and the selling of the Iraq War (2006) is journalistic.

Jervis, Robert. 2010. Why Intelligence Fails Lessons from the Iranian Revolution and the Iraq War. Cornell University Press.

Lake, David A. "Two cheers for bargaining theory: Assessing rationalist explanations of the Iraq War." International Security 35.3 (2010): 7–52.

Braut-Hegghammer, Målfrid. 2020. "." International Security.

Cheater's Dilemma: Iraq, Weapons of Mass Destruction, and the Path to War

Web site

Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Iraq

Archived 2020-09-07 at the Wayback Machine Prospect magazine

WMD theories and conspiracies

directory category

LookSmart – Iraq WMD Controversy

Washington Post article by Arthur Keller a former CIA case worker who worked on trying to find WMDs in Iraq

Richard S. Tracey, , 23 January 2007, Air & Space Power Journal.

Trapped by a Mindset: The Iraq WMD Intelligence Failure

featuring Pennsylvania Army National Guard Soldiers assigned to the Iraq Survey Group in 2004–05.

Teaser of upcoming documentary film Land of Confusion

Annotated bibliography for the Iraqi nuclear weapons program from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues