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Iraq used Sarin in Intifadah Ash-Shabaniyah, confirms report
By: Mohamed Ali
WASHINGTON, United states: U.S. investigators have confirmed that
Iraq used chemical weapons to quash Intifadah Shabaniyah that took
place in th month of Shaban after the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
The information was uncovered by the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), the task
force established following the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 to determine
the state of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction programs, but was
little noticed when the ISG issued its final three-volume report in
September 2004.
The report marked the first outside confirmation that the regime had
used chemical weapons to quell the uprising. At the time, much of Iraq
was in open revolt, the report notes, and the Iraqi regime was deeply
shaken by the fall of Karbala to Shiites. The report said the use of
chemical weapons was an example of the “dire nature of the situation”
and the regime’s “faith in ‘special weapons’” that it would consider
using chemical weapons while coalition forces were still in Iraq.
Still, the scale of nerve weapon use by the Saddam regime against the
Shiites in southern Iraq appears to be much smaller than a March 1988
chemical weapons attack against Kurds in northern Iraq or the regime’s
use of chemical weapons during an eight-year war with Iran in the
1980s. Post-Gulf War restrictions imposed on Iraq after its defeat by
a U.S.-led coalition may have limited the effectiveness of the attacks
and prevented greater casualties, the report said.
The ISG uncovered the incident through interviews with several members
of the Iraqi chemical weapons program. But public attention focused on
the report’s broader conclusions that Iraq had destroyed its
stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, as well as eliminated
its nuclear weapons program by the time of the invasion. (See ACT,
November 2004.)
Hussein Kamel, a son-in-law of Saddam Hussein and then-head of the
Military Industrial Commission, gave the order to ready chemical
munitions for use. According to the report, Kamel’s first chemical
agent choice was VX, a nerve agent. When informed that there was no VX
available, the Iraqis selected sarin, another nerve agent, declining
to use mustard gas because it was easily detectable.
Technicians from the Muthanna State Establishment (MSE), Iraq’s
primary chemical weapons research, development, and production
facility, mixed sarin components in R-400 aerial bombs at the Tamuz
air base on March 7. MI-8 helicopters from nearby bases were armed
with the R-400s and flew sorties against Shiite rebels near Karbala.
One account from a senior official suggests that the helicopters
dropped 10-20 sarin-filled bombs, although another account suggests
that the total may have been as high as 32.
Although the report notes that Iraq had used the MI-8 helicopter in
the 1980s to drop chemical munitions during the Iraq-Iran War, the
R-400—an aerial bomb of Iraqi design—did not enter service until 1990.
Originally designed for low-altitude, high-speed delivery of chemical
and biological weapons by Iraq’s fighter aircraft, the R-400s “most
likely did not activate properly when dropped from a slow moving
helicopter,” according to the report. Cease-fire restrictions
negotiated by the U.S.-led coalition at Safwan just days earlier
prohibited Iraq from flying fixed-wing aircraft, although Iraq
convinced the coalition to allow it to continue flying helicopters,
supposedly to transport Iraqi officials.
Following an angry call to a senior chemical weapons official about
the failure of the initial helicopter sorties, technicians at MSE
filled several large aerial bombs with tear gas. According to the
report, helicopters dropped up to 200 of these bombs on rebel targets
near Karbala and Najaf. The report also notes that Iraq brought
several trailers with mustard-filled aerial bombs to the base as well,
although the bombs were never unloaded or used.
Each R-400 aerial bomb can hold approximately 90 liters of chemical
agent, and its effective use would have probably caused substantial
casualties, but it is not clear how many casualties can be attributed
to the sarin use.
Ewen Buchanan, spokesperson for the UN Monitoring, Verification and
Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) said that the selection and bungled
use of the sarin-filled R-400s made some sense from the regime’s
perspective. “As the Iraqis explained to me, ‘beggars can’t be
choosers,’ and the R-400s were likely what was available at the time,”
he said, noting that UNMOVIC had not uncovered this incident during
its investigation. “It was probably more important to use some kind of
chemical weapon for its psychological effects on the enemy.”
By contrast, in the March 1988 attack, Iraq was free to use its full
chemical weapons arsenal. Iraq used mustard gas, tabun, VX, and sarin
against Kurds in Halabja in northern Iraq. About 5,000 deaths are
directly attributable to the chemical weapons used, and another 10,000
people were blinded, maimed, or disfigured. The Iraqi Special
Tribunal, established by the provisional Iraqi government in 2003 to
try war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the Ba`ath
Party’s reign, has been investigating the use of chemical weapons
against the Kurds. The body will be responsible for the trials of
Saddam Hussein and Ali Hassan al-Majid, better known as “Chemical
Ali,” the general who allegedly ordered the use of chemical weapons.
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