NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Theft of Cobalt in Iraq Prompts Security Inquiry
By JOHN F.
BURNS

MIRIYA,
Iraq — A seeming lapse in surveillance by American forces has led to the
looting of dangerously radioactive capsules from Saddam Hussein's main
battlefield testing site in the desert outside Baghdad and the
identification of at least one 30-year-old Iraqi villager, and possibly
a village boy, as suffering from radiation sickness.
The two capsules, taken from a site
once used by Mr. Hussein's government to test the effects of radiation
on animals and perhaps humans, have since been recovered after an
American sweep through the area.
But American officers fear that more
cases of the sickness may follow, and that they will be powerless to
help unless people in the villages of Amiriya and Shamiya break their
silence and identify men who looted the desert site in early September.
Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the American
commander in Iraq, has ordered an investigation to discover why an arc
of eight 75-foot radioactive testing poles at the site was not more
closely guarded after American nuclear experts filed a report to the
Pentagon identifying them as dangerous after a visit to the site on May
9, American officers said. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has also
taken a personal interest in the case.
Under investigation is how American
surveillance of the area, now under the control of the 82nd Airborne
Division, failed to spot villagers entering the testing site with heavy
vehicles to dismantle three of the poles, or towers, for scrap, leaving
heavy tire tracks in the desert.
One of the cobalt capsules was found
by American troops on Oct. 6 lying in the yard of a villager's house in
Amiriya, less than 15 feet from the outdoor clay oven the family used to
bake bread.
The second capsule was found partly
buried about 75 feet from a house in Shamiya, just east of Amiriya and
about 10 miles north of the nuclear testing site, in a position where
it, too, would have been approached by family members and neighbors.
Along with the capsules, parts of the giant testing poles were found,
dismantled for scrap metal.
"We've made every effort to unscramble
this thing," said Lt. Col. George Krivo, a spokesman for the American
command in Baghdad.
Looting of military depots has been a
persistent problem since the fall of Mr. Hussein, prompting suggestions
that the 130,000 American troops in Iraq may be too stretched.
The radioactive capsules, less than
five inches high and shaped like stainless steel miniatures of the
Apollo spacecraft's command module, contained thumbnail amounts of
cobalt-60, a radiation source commonly used in X-ray machines and in
other medical and industrial applications. The capsules were situated in
concrete crypts at the base of the towers, and raised on cables into the
towers to create an irradiated environment on the simulated battlefield.
American experts say they have not
been able to verify whether the radioactive poles were used under Mr.
Hussein for live tests on humans and animals that simulated battlefield
conditions under nuclear attack, as reports from Iraqi exiles in the
years before the American occupation suggested.
But documents recording tests on
humans, including dust-covered strips of film showing the naked upper
bodies and heads of men who appeared to have been alive when the films
were made, were found by The New York Times at the site during two
visits there in mid-November.
American officers who oversaw the
complex operation to recover the two unshielded capsules of cobalt-60
have hinted that the failure to identify the looting in September until
two weeks later may have resulted from a work overload among experts who
gather data from spy satellites.
In a somber reflection of the
hostility toward Americans in this area at the southern end of the
so-called Sunni triangle, Colonel Krivo said, "If for any reason there
are people in those villages who cannot or will not come forward to be
tested, that would be very much to their detriment." He added, "The
attitude out there is `Why should we trust the Americans?' "
The two houses where the cobalt-60
capsules were found were identified after United States Army Black Hawk
helicopters fitted with powerful radiation detectors flew wide patterns
across the desert near the testing site, the officers said.
American experts say cobalt could be
used in the making of "dirty bombs" — cheap, improvised nuclear devices.
But American commanders here are convinced that the looters wanted the
metal only for scrap.
American experts, and others from the
Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, which had the towers
under surveillance for much of the 1990's and just before the American
invasion of Iraq, say the cobalt capsules were strong enough when Mr.
Hussein's scientists first used them in the early 1980's to emit
potentially lethal gamma rays. Recent American tests have shown that the
radioactivity of the capsules has decayed to about 10 percent of its
original potency. But the fact that the capsules were unshielded,
American experts say, still posed a danger to anyone exposed to them for
a protracted period.
At both villages, local people have
steadfastly refused to identify the men who dismantled the towers and
moved them to the villages, along with the two capsules, or to tell
American and Iraqi investigators where the men are now.
The officers said they believed that
after the lapses in spotting the looting, the American command —
particularly a Pentagon unit called the Defense Threat Reduction Agency,
working in Iraq to dispose of materials found at former chemical,
biological and nuclear weapons sites — deserved credit for moving
quickly into the villages and taking the capsules back to the testing
site.
The testing site was then made safe by
moving the capsules from all eight towers to an undisclosed but "safe"
place.
In a measure of how concerned the
Americans were when they reached the two villages to recover the
capsules, the officers described how an American soldier in Amiriya
wearing no protective equipment had approached the capsule, mounted atop
a 60-pound steel counterweight, had run with it, and had "heaved it over
the fence, 100 feet from the house."
So far, about 70 villagers have been
tested by teams from the Iraqi Ministry of Health and assisted by
Americans, who took blood samples and conducted other tests.
Of those villagers, American officers
say, four showed "abnormal results," and two, the 30-year-old man and
the 4-year-old boy, were found to have symptoms consistent with
radiation sickness. The man, who has the more serious of the two cases,
had muscle pains, fatigue and multiple ulcerations in his mouth, the
officers say, all classic symptoms of radiation sickness.
The officers did not identify the two
victims or give their current state of health, but said they remained
under observation.
In the case of the house in Amiriya,
only women and children remain there, a situation almost unknown in the
male-dominated life of Iraqi villages. American officers did not say in
which village the two suspected radiation victims lived, or whether they
believed that the 30-year-old man was among the looters.
The officers quoted the Iraqis living
at the Amiriya house as saying that all the men in the family had been
killed in the American invasion of Iraq, and that they knew nothing
about how the radioactive capsule and the two 38-foot lengths of heavy
steel lying just beyond a fence marking their yard had gotten there.
In Shamiya, the officers said, the
family offered an even less credible explanation, given that American
experts inspected all eight towers in May and found the capsules intact.
"They said, `An Iraqi soldier came to
the house in April and told us to bury the object here, and to stay away
from it,' " the officers said.
The American investigation set in
motion by General Sanchez appears to be a rigorous one. "He's
investigating this in great detail, and he's personally engaged,"
Colonel Krivo said of the general. "We will get to the bottom of this."
For years, Western human rights groups
reported claims by Iraqi defectors that prisoners were being taken from
Mr. Hussein's overcrowded prisons, including his main fortress at Abu
Ghraib, about 30 miles north of the testing site, to be used as human
guinea pigs.
NYTimes.com >
International >
Middle East
|