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Wednesday, June 25, 2003

CIA finds papers, parts in Iraq for enriching uranium

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The CIA has uncovered components of a gas centrifuge used to enrich weapons-grade uranium, and a stack of nuclear arms documents in the back yard of an Iraqi scientist, an indication Baghdad was hiding its arms program for future use, a U.S. intelligence official said yesterday.

Iraqi scientist Mahdi Shukur Obeidi, who came forward with the documents and components in late May, hid the items in his back yard under a rosebush 12 years ago, said an official familiar with details of the discovery. Officials confirmed the discovery after it was first reported by CNN.

"These documents and components were deliberately hidden at the direction of Iraq's senior leadership with the aim of preserving the regime's capacity to resume construction of a centrifuge that at some point could be used to enrich uranium for a nuclear device," the intelligence official said.

The official said that the discovery was "not a smoking gun" indicating that Iraq had nuclear weapons, only that it planned to develop them once United Nations sanctions barring Iraq from operating a nuclear-weapons program were lifted. The sanctions were imposed after the Persian Gulf war.

"Their existence validates our long-standing view that Iraq had hidden nuclear technology," the official said. "And this new evidence indicates that the Iraqis concealed proscribed documents and examples of critical centrifuge components, some of them extremely difficult to manufacture, in contravention of U.N. Security Council resolutions."

David Kay, a former U.N. weapons inspector now working as an adviser to the CIA, said the finding in Iraq "begins to tell us how huge our job is."

"Remember his material was buried in a barrel behind his house in a rose garden," Mr. Kay told CNN. "There's no way that that would have been discovered by normal international inspections. I couldn't have done it. My successors couldn't have done it."

The centrifuge components were part of Iraq's pre-1991 uranium-enrichment program, the official said.

"Doctor Obeidi told us [the documents] represent a complete set of what would be needed to rebuild a uranium-enrichment program," the official said.

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