Ispettori pronti ad andare in Iraq, ma non alla IAEA (16 ottobre)

Nota: quello di cui ci sarebbe necessità è una ispezione approfondita negli uffici della IAEA per capire come questa agenzia infame sia riuscita a nasconderci per 40 anni la verità sugli incidenti nucleari, sui test atomici, sul cancro, sull'immunodeficenza, sui difetti genetici, etc. etc. Ci vorrebbe una inchiesta congiunta di Interpol, FBI e Corte Internazionale Penale per condannare tutti i dipendenti di questa associazione internazionale a delinquere di stampo mafioso per genocidio, istigazione al genocidio, manipolazione di dati e coercizione dell'ONU, attentato alla salute planetaria, attentato alla biosfera, etc. etc. Sapete perché non lo fanno? Perché hanno accordato a questi criminali una super immunità diplomatica, e anche l'Italia "antinuclearista" ha firmato l'accordo osceno per concedergliela. VERGOGNAAAAAA!!! Ma verrà il giorno, Dio voglia, del redde rationem.



Nuclear inspectors ready to resume work in Iraq at 'short notice'
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/meast/10/16/iraq.un.ap/index.html
October 16, 2000
Web posted at: 8:09 PM EDT (0009 GMT)

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The U.N. nuclear agency said Monday it could resume work in Iraq at "short notice" if Baghdad allows inspectors back in the country, echoing an assessment by the chief U.N. weapons inspector for Iraq six weeks ago.

The International Atomic Energy Agency said in a report that once its experts return, they could move to a less intrusive type of monitoring as long as Iraq hadn't acquired any new nuclear weapons or begun any new nuclear activities since inspectors left in December 1998.

"This plan, as designed, would enable the agency to investigate the few remaining questions and concerns that relate to Iraq's past clandestine nuclear program, along with any other aspect of this program that may come to its knowledge," said the report from IAEA chief Mohamed El Baradei.

He noted that in May, the agency's inspectors destroyed a machine and raw materials that Iraq had purchased in mid-1990 to use in its clandestine uranium enrichment gas centrifuge program. The machine, called a filament-winding machine, had been stored since 1991 in Jordan, where it was destroyed.

El Baradei's report, like many in the past year and a half, said that the IAEA couldn't be sure that Iraq wasn't acquiring new banned weapons because inspectors aren't on the ground.

U.N. weapons inspectors pulled out of Iraq in December 1998 ahead of U.S. and British air strikes launched to punish Baghdad for failing to cooperate with the arms experts.

Last December, the Security Council created the U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, to replace the U.N. Special Commission, which had been tainted by allegations that its inspectors spied on Iraq on behalf of the United States.

The Special Commission and the Vienna-based IAEA had worked since 1991 to oversee the destruction of Iraq's chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, and the missiles used to deliver them. U.N. sanctions cannot be lifted until inspectors report Iraq is weapons-free.

UNMOVIC's executive chairman, Hans Blix, reported August 30 that he had hired enough staff and lined up the inspectors to resume work in Iraq. But Baghdad officials have said inspectors are not welcome.

Iraq says it has rid itself of all its banned weapons and has demanded sanctions be immediately lifted.

Copyright 2000 The Associated Press.