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Ready for Holy War Against
American Lies, Saddam Says
By NADIA ABOU EL MAGD,
Associated Press
December 25, 2002
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Saddam Hussein said Tuesday that Iraqis are ready to
fight a holy war against the United States, and he accused
Washington of using lies and military might in a bid to rule the
world.
In a vitriolic address read to Iraqis by a
television announcer, Saddam said the world is entering a new year
"under unique circumstances ... which have been manufactured by the
forces of evil and darkness in order to create a situation of
instability, chaos and tension."
Saddam said the United States and Israel are bent
on waging war against Iraq in a first step to spread their authority
"across the world and control fortunes and futures" of other
countries.
The Iraqi leader again rejected U.S. and British
claims that his regime possesses weapons of mass destruction.
Saddam also said his regime wants to cooperate
with U.N. weapons inspectors conducting almost daily searches in
Iraq to verify Baghdad no longer possesses chemical, biological or
nuclear arms.
"We are confident that the outcome of the (U.N.)
inspection operations will be a big shock to the United States and
will expose all the American lies," Saddam's statement said.
An Iraqi scientist interviewed by U.N. inspectors
Tuesday also said Baghdad is not hiding weapons of mass destruction,
and Iraqi officials said they were willing to discuss U.N.
criticisms of the nation's arms declaration.
Teams of weapon inspectors and nuclear inspectors,
meanwhile, resumed inspections at numerous sites, with biological
experts visiting the College of Veterinary Medicine at Baghdad
University and missile teams visiting five sites in and around
Baghdad connected to arms production.
The Iraqi Information Ministry said inspectors
visited the Hateen Company, a complex of factories 45 miles south of
Baghdad that produces artillery ammunition.
Sabah Abdel-Nour, a former member of Iraq's
nuclear program who now is a professor at Baghdad's University of
Technology, said his interview with U.N. inspectors was "very
objective, the discussion was very friendly."
"I explained to them (the inspectors) all that I
know and that we do not have anything to hide," he said. "The
questions were mainly about what has been done or any progress which
has been achieved in Iraq since 1998.
"They wanted to inspect whether this university
has anything of their interest, they were inquiring whether there is
any advanced equipment which could be used or misused."
But Abdel-Nour said he refused to be quizzed in
private, preferring instead to have Iraqi officials present during
the meeting.
He was not asked to leave Iraq for questioning.
"I do not have anything to say outside Iraq more
of what I have said here," Abdel-Nour said.
Also, Iraq's chief representative to the U.N.
mission told The Associated Press on Tuesday he saw nothing to
justify the criticisms of Iraq's weapons declaration expressed last
week by chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei, head
of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
"We have nothing to add, really, of new
information, because the information we gave is the real and
complete information," Gen. Hossam Mohammed Amin said Tuesday.
However, Baghdad was "willing to reach an
understanding" with Blix and ElBaradei, Amin said.
Last week, Blix and ElBaradei said Iraq's Dec. 7
declaration largely rehashed old information, and they would be
seeking more data from Iraq.
"An opportunity was missed in the declaration to
give a lot of evidence," Blix said reporters after reporting to the
U.N. Security Council.
The declaration, required by council Resolution
1441, was supposed to be a comprehensive account of Iraq's nuclear,
biological and chemical weapons, the long-range missiles to carry
them and the programs to produce them.
The United States said the declaration was so
inadequate it amounts to a "material breach" of the council
resolution, while Britain said the declaration was a lie. The two
allies have threatened to invade Iraq unless it cooperates fully
with the U.N. inspection commission and eliminates its weapons of
mass destruction.
Amin said his government would not threaten any
Iraqi scientist accepting an invitation from the inspectors to leave
the country for further interviews.
The U.N. resolution gives inspectors the right to
interview scientists outside Iraq, with their families accompanying
them, to reduce the chance they may be pressured by the Baghdad
government.
Amin said inspectors had been interviewing Iraqi
scientists for about 10 days, and his government saw no need to take
them abroad. |