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Iraq To Destroy Four Missiles Saturday

Iraqi truks, carrying Al-Samoud 2 missiles head to an undisclosed location from the Al-Taji military complex, some 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of Baghdad 01 March 2003, where Iraqi and UN officials had said the banned Al-Samoud 2 missiles were to be destroyed. Iraq destroyed the first of its banned missile and an operation is under way to scrap three others, a senior UN official said. AFP Photo by Karim Sahib

Iraq's destruction of Al-Samoud missiles merely "a game": White House
Washington (AFP) Mar 1, 2003
The White House dismissed Baghdad's move to begin destroying its Al-Samoud 2 missiles Saturday, saying the step was merely part of "a game" Iraq was playing with the international community.

"President (George W.) Bush has always predicted that Iraq would destroy their Al-Samoud 2 missiles as part of their games of deception," White House spokeswoman Mercy Viana said.

She added that UN Resolution 1441 "called for a complete, total and immediate disarmament; it did not call for pieces of disarmament."

"It is a game that Iraq is playing," she said.

Under UN supervision early Saturday in Al-Taji, north of Baghdad, Iraq began destroying the first four of its stockpile of banned Al-Samoud 2 missiles, said by UN experts to exceed the agreed range limit of 150 kilometers (93 miles) set under UN disarmament terms.

Chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix ordered Iraq to start destroying the missiles, warheads and component parts and their manufacturing systems by Saturday.

The United States, together with Britain, has massed more than 225,000 troops in the Gulf for a possible war, which they say is being mounted to rid Iraq of its alleged arsenal of banned weapons.

Iraqi officials say there are about 100 Al-Samoud 2 missiles in existence, of which around 50 have been delivered to the army.


 Washington (AFP) March 1
Iraq on Saturday completed the destruction of the first four banned Al-Samoud 2 missiles and one casting chamber under UN supervision, UN spokesman Hiro Ueki told AFP.

"We can confirm that four Al-Samoud 2 missiles were destroyed today" at the Al-Taji military facility north of Baghdad, said Ueki.

"One casting chamber was destroyed at another site south of Baghdad," he added.

Ueki said the destruction of Al-Samoud missiles "will continue tomorrow at the same location."

The four missiles were destroyed in a six-hour operation, the first since UN chief inspector Hans Blix ruled earlier this month that the missiles exceeded the 150-kilometer (93-mile) range allowed under UN disarmament terms and must be scrapped.

The destruction process comes at a time when the United States and Britain are massing forces in the region in preparation for an anticipated war on Iraq on the grounds that it is concealing banned weapons and not cooperating fully with arms inspectors.

earlier related report
Destruction Of Al-Samoud Missiles Alone Won't Stop War
 Washington (AFP) March 1
Baghdad's decision that it will begin destroying its Al-Samoud 2 missiles Saturday appeared unlikely to move the White House, which has asserted that only Saddam Hussein's ouster could dissuade it from launching a military strike.

At a press conference Friday, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said that nothing short of complete disarmament -- along with Saddam leaving the country -- would stop a US-led strike.

"President (George W.) Bush has always predicted that Iraq would destroy its Al Samoud 2 missiles as part of their games of deception," Fleischer said Friday.

"I think when you summarize Iraq's statement, that in principle they will destroy their missiles, the Iraqi actions are propaganda wrapped in a lie, inside a falsehood," he said.

"The president remains hopeful that war can be averted. The president remains hopeful that Saddam Hussein and his top leaders will go into exile or that he will completely and totally disarm," Fleischer continued.

"Total disarmament is total disarmament is total disarmament" Fleischer said. "It's not a piece of disarmament," "If someone takes one bullet out of the chamber of a gun while they have six other bullets in the gun, they haven't disarmed."

Iraq confirmed Saturday it would start destroying a stockpile of Al-Samoud 2 missiles Chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix had ordered Iraq to start destroying the missiles, warheads and component parts and their manufacturing systems by Saturday, after UN experts said the missiles exceeded the 150-kilometer (93-mile) limit set under UN disarmament terms.

Fleischer said that Washington was only insisting upon enforcement of the United Nations' own resolution.

"The UN set out the standard: full, immediate, complete disarmament," Fleischer said "That is the standard, that is the answer, that is what has not happened."

earlier related report
Iraq To Destroy Four Al-Samoud 2 Missiles Saturday, More To Follow
Baghdad (AFP) March 1, 2003
UN and Iraqi officials have had "good discussions" about the destruction of banned Al-Samoud 2 missiles, Iraq's top official on disarmament said Saturday after a 90-minute meeting.

"The discussions were good," General Amer al-Saadi told reporters after the meeting at the headquarters of Iraq's National Monitoring Directorate (NMD), which liaises with the UN inspectors.

The UN team returned to their Canal Hotel base after the talks, according to an AFP correpsondent.

Iraq had confirmed earlier that it would start destroying its stockpile of Al-Samoud 2 missiles, which UN experts say are banned, later Saturday.

The talks were led on the UN side by Dimitri Perricos, the deputy executive chairman of the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC).

Representing the Iraqi side were Saadi, who is President Saddam Hussein's top scientific advisor, and NMD chief General Hossam Mohammed Amin.

Chief UN arms inspector Hans Blix had ordered Baghdad to start destroying the missiles, warheads, component parts and manufacturing systems by Saturday, after UN experts said they exceeded the 150-kilometer (93-mile) range allowed under UN disarmament terms.

Saturday's "technical meeting" was designed to cover the modalities of how to scrap the missiles.

Amin told AFP before it began that the destructon process was "due to start today."

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