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Did Iraq ever have Uranium?

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  • 08-07-2008 12:19am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 37,301 ✭✭✭✭


    Yes. 550 metric tons of "yellowcake". They just didn't tell anyone about it until it was out of the country. Clever that.
    July 06, 2008
    Associated Press

    The last major remnant of Saddam Hussein's nuclear program - a huge stockpile of concentrated natural uranium - reached a Canadian port Saturday to complete a secret U.S. operation that included a two-week airlift from Baghdad and a ship voyage crossing two oceans.
    The removal of 550 metric tons of "yellowcake" - the seed material for higher-grade nuclear enrichment - was a significant step toward closing the books on Saddam's nuclear legacy. It also brought relief to U.S. and Iraqi authorities who had worried the cache would reach insurgents or smugglers crossing to Iran to aid its nuclear ambitions.
    What's now left is the final and complicated push to clean up the remaining radioactive debris at the former Tuwaitha nuclear complex about 12 miles south of Baghdad - using teams that include Iraqi experts recently trained in the Chernobyl fallout zone in Ukraine.
    "Everyone is very happy to have this safely out of Iraq," said a senior U.S. official who outlined the nearly three-month operation to The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
    While yellowcake alone is not considered potent enough for a so-called "dirty bomb" - a conventional explosive that disperses radioactive material - it could stir widespread panic if incorporated in a blast. Yellowcake also can be enriched for use in reactors and, at higher levels, nuclear weapons using sophisticated equipment.
    The Iraqi government sold the yellowcake to a Canadian uranium producer, Cameco Corp., in a transaction the official described as worth "tens of millions of dollars." A Cameco spokesman, Lyle Krahn, declined to discuss the price, but said the yellowcake will be processed at facilities in Ontario for use in energy-producing reactors.
    "We are pleased ... that we have taken (the yellowcake) from a volatile region into a stable area to produce clean electricity," he said.
    The deal culminated more than a year of intense diplomatic and military initiatives - kept hushed in fear of ambushes or attacks once the convoys were under way: first carrying 3,500 barrels by road to Baghdad, then on 37 military flights to the Indian Ocean atoll of Diego Garcia and finally aboard a U.S.-flagged ship for a 8,500-mile trip to Montreal.
    And, in a symbolic way, the mission linked the current attempts to stabilize Iraq with some of the high-profile claims about Saddam's weapons capabilities in the buildup to the 2003 invasion.
    Accusations that Saddam had tried to purchase more yellowcake from the African nation of Niger - and an article by a former U.S. ambassador refuting the claims - led to a wide-ranging probe into Washington leaks that reached high into the Bush administration.
    Tuwaitha and an adjacent research facility were well known for decades as the centerpiece of Saddam's nuclear efforts.
    Israeli warplanes bombed a reactor project at the site in 1981. Later, U.N. inspectors documented and safeguarded the yellowcake, which had been stored in aging drums and containers since before the 1991 Gulf War. There was no evidence of any yellowcake dating from after 1991, the official said.
    U.S. and Iraqi forces have guarded the 23,000-acre site - surrounded by huge sand berms - following a wave of looting after Saddam's fall that included villagers toting away yellowcake storage barrels for use as drinking water cisterns.
    Yellowcake is obtained by using various solutions to leach out uranium from raw ore and can have a corn meal-like color and consistency. It poses no severe risk if stored and sealed properly. But exposure carries well-documented health concerns associated with heavy metals such as damage to internal organs, experts say.
    "The big problem comes with any inhalation of any of the yellowcake dust," said Doug Brugge, a professor of public health issues at the Tufts University School of Medicine.
    Moving the yellowcake faced numerous hurdles.
    Diplomats and military leaders first weighed the idea of shipping the yellowcake overland to Kuwait's port on the Persian Gulf. Such a route, however, would pass through Iraq's Shiite heartland and within easy range of extremist factions, including some that Washington claims are aided by Iran. The ship also would need to clear the narrow Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Gulf, where U.S. and Iranian ships often come in close contact.
    Kuwaiti authorities, too, were reluctant to open their borders to the shipment despite top-level lobbying from Washington.
    An alternative plan took shape: shipping out the yellowcake on cargo planes.
    But the yellowcake still needed a final destination. Iraqi government officials sought buyers on the commercial market, where uranium prices spiked at about $120 per pound last year. It's currently selling for about half that. The Cameco deal was reached earlier this year, the official said.
    At that point, U.S.-led crews began removing the yellowcake from the Saddam-era containers - some leaking or weakened by corrosion - and reloading the material into about 3,500 secure barrels.
    In April, truck convoys started moving the yellowcake from Tuwaitha to Baghdad's international airport, the official said. Then, for two weeks in May, it was ferried in 37 flights to Diego Garcia, a speck of British territory in the Indian Ocean where the U.S. military maintains a base.
    On June 3, an American ship left the island for Montreal, said the official, who declined to give further details about the operation.
    The yellowcake wasn't the only dangerous item removed from Tuwaitha.
    Earlier this year, the military withdrew four devices for controlled radiation exposure from the former nuclear complex. The lead-enclosed irradiation units, used to decontaminate food and other items, contain elements of high radioactivity that could potentially be used in a weapon, according to the official. Their Ottawa-based manufacturer, MDS Nordion, took them back for free, the official said.
    The yellowcake was the last major stockpile from Saddam's nuclear efforts, but years of final cleanup is ahead for Tuwaitha and other smaller sites.
    The U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency plans to offer technical expertise.
    Last month, a team of Iraqi nuclear experts completed training in the Ukrainian ghost town of Pripyat, which once housed the Chernobyl workers before the deadly meltdown in 1986, said an IAEA official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the decontamination plan has not yet been publicly announced.
    But the job ahead is enormous, complicated by digging out radioactive "hot zones" entombed in concrete during Saddam's rule, said the IAEA official. Last year, an IAEA safety expert, Dennis Reisenweaver, predicted the cleanup could take "many years."
    The yellowcake issue also is one of the many troubling footnotes of the war for Washington.
    A CIA officer, Valerie Plame, claimed her identity was leaked to journalists to retaliate against her husband, former Ambassador Joe Wilson, who wrote that he had found no evidence to support assertions that Iraq tried to buy additional yellowcake from Niger.
    A federal investigation led to the conviction of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice.


Comments

  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,401 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    IAEA have known about that stockpile since the 1991 war.

    NTM


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    So does this mean that they've finally found the fabled WMDs ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 763 ✭✭✭Dar


    Nope. That uranium was left over from Iraq's abortive nuclear programme from years back. It's been under weapon inspector supervision for 17 years. It was all accounted for and there had been no attempt since 91 to enrich it. Nothing to see here :).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,082 ✭✭✭lostexpectation


    and it not the uranium they supposedlly tried to get from niger or whereever which is what they based the war on...


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,426 ✭✭✭ressem


    From IAEA reports up to '98.
    http://www.iaea.org/OurWork/SV/Invo/factsheet.html#indigenous


    268 thousand Kg of yellowcake from Portugal, bit less from Niger in the early 80's.
    Another 11 thousand Kg of uranium from Italy. A portion of which was enriched to a low degree.

    Too late to make them members of the axis of evil?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 78,423 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    and it not the uranium they supposedlly tried to get from niger or whereever which is what they based the war on...
    No, that was exposed as a rather crude forgery.
    ressem wrote: »
    From IAEA reports up to '98.
    http://www.iaea.org/OurWork/SV/Invo/factsheet.html#indigenous

    268 thousand Kg of yellowcake from Portugal, bit less from Niger in the early 80's.
    Another 11 thousand Kg of uranium from Italy. A portion of which was enriched to a low degree. Too late to make them members of the axis of evil?
    Portugal, Niger and Italy are not (named) members of axis of evil! :D

    While they may have been members of the axis of evil, that does not justify war. The war was claimed to be justified on the basis of unknown WMD. All it did was scatter a bunch of the secured 1980s era material, e.g. explosives that were of a sufficent quality for use in nuclear weapons was looted in the first few weeks of the war.

    The total discovered so far as I know have been:
    * Material previously known about.
    * One artillery shell (previously fired in the 1980s) used in an IED, believed to have been mistaken by insurgents for a high explosive shell.
    * Nineteen artillery shells, found I think by the Danes and believed to have been mislaid in the 1980s.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,401 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    The total of chemical warhead shells found, if memory serves, is somewhere on the order of 500, but they were in such condition they were likely just misplaced since the Iran/Iraq war.

    NTM


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