What Happened to All Those Weapons of Mass Destruction?

Joby Warrick, The Washington Post

WASHINGTON, 28 March 2003 — President Bush pledged again Wednesday to rid Iraq of “weapons of terror,” but US/UK forces have so far failed to find proof of Iraqi biological or chemical weapons a week after the start of the US-led invasion.

Pentagon officials pointed to the discovery Tuesday of Iraqi chemical protection suits at a hospital near Nassiriyah as evidence that Iraq’s military had prepared for a chemical attack. Yet, the absence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction — either in the battlefield or in caches uncovered by US troops — has remained a notable feature of the military campaign so far, intelligence officials and weapons experts say.

Teams of weapons “hunters” acting on intelligence tips found no banned weapons Wednesday during extensive searches of ammunition dumps near the port city of Umm Qasr. Earlier in the week, another team scoured a factory near Najaf that was initially thought to be a chemical-weapons plant. Numerous other sites identified as likely storage areas for biological or chemical weapons were searched by Special Forces units in the opening hours of the conflict, US military officials have acknowledged. No unconventional weapons were found at any of the sites, the officials said.

The Bush administration has steadfastly maintained that such weapons would eventually be discovered. In his speech Washington at McDill Air Force Base in Tampa, home of the US Central Command, Bush sought again to frame the Iraqi campaign as a bid to “prevent the Iraqi regime from using its hidden weapons of mass destruction.”

But in recent days US officials have faced questions from reporters and open skepticism from other governments critical of US policy toward Iraq. Secretary of State Colin Powell was confronted about the US failure to find weapons in an interview with an Abu Dhabi television reporter. Powell said he was “quite confident” that Iraqi weapons of mass destruction would be found, but “right now we’re trying to finish these battles, and that’s our priority.”

Tuesday’s discovery of about 3,000 chemical protection suits and an assortment of gas masks and chemical antidotes at the Nassiriyah hospital appeared to bolster the administration’s case, suggesting that Iraq was planning a chemical attack. Powell said the suits “must have been purchased because they thought chemical weapons might be present on the battlefield — and the only ones who could deliver such chemical weapons would be the Iraqi armed forces.” But much about the discovered suits remained unclear Wednesday, including how old they were and how the Iraqis intended to use them.

It is possible that US officials far overestimated Iraq’s weapons holdings. While Iraq is known to have possessed significant numbers of chemical and biological weapons before the 1991 war, much of its arsenal was destroyed by allied bombings or UN weapons inspectors.

In any case, the bar for President Bush is now very high: He has to deliver a large number of weapons to prove not only that Saddam Hussein was lying, but also that his weapons pose such an eminent threat that war is necessary.”