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Three
mystery
ships
are
tracked
over
suspected
"weapons"
cargo
By Michael
Harrison,
Independent.,
19 February 2003
Three
giant
cargo
ships
are
being
tracked
by
US
and
British
intelligence
on
suspicion
that
they
might
be
carrying
Iraqi
weapons
of
mass
destruction.
Each
with
a
deadweight
of
35,000
to
40,000
tonnes,
the
ships
have
been
sailing
around
the
world`s
oceans
for
the
past
three
months
while
maintaining
radio
silence
in
clear
violation
of
international
maritime
law,
say
authoritative
shipping
industry
sources.
The
vessels
left
port
in
late
November,
just
a
few
days
after
UN
weapons
inspectors
led
by
Hans
Blix
began
their
search
for
the
alleged
Iraqi
arsenal
on
their
return
to
the
country.
Uncovering
such
a
deadly
cargo
on
board
would
give
George
Bush
and
Tony
Blair
the
much
sought-after
"smoking
gun"
needed
to
justify
an
attack
on
Saddam
Hussein`s
regime,
in
the
face
of
massive
public
opposition
to
war.
The
ships
were
chartered
by
a
shipping
agent
based
in
Egypt
and
are
flying
under
the
flags
of
three
different
countries.
The
continued
radio
silence
since
they
left
port,
in
addition
to
the
captains`
failure
to
provide
information
on
their
cargoes
or
their
destinations,
is
a
clear
breach
of
international
maritime
laws.
The
vessels
are
thought
to
have
spent
much
of
their
time
in
the
deep
waters
of
the
Indian
Ocean,
berthing
at
sea
when
they
need
to
collect
supplies
of
fuel
and
food.
They
have
berthed
in
a
handful
of
Arab
countries,
including
Yemen.
American
and
British
military
forces
are
believed
to
be
reluctant
to
stop
and
search
the
vessels
for
fear
that
any
intervention
might
result
in
them
being
scuttled.
If
they
were
carrying
chemical
and
biological
weapons,
or
fissile
nuclear
material,
and
they
were
to
be
sunk
at
sea,
the
environmental
damage
could
be
catastrophic.
Washington
and
London
might
also
want
to
orchestrate
any
raids
so
that
they
can
present
the
ships
as
"evidence"
that
President
Saddam
is
engaged
in
"material
breach"
of
UN
resolutions.
This
could
provide
the
trigger
for
military
strikes.
While
security
sources
in
London
last
night
were
unable
to
provide
information
on
any
surveillance
operation,
the
movement
of
the
three
ships
is
the
source
of
growing
concern
among
maritime
and
intelligence
experts.
A
shipping
industry
source
told
The
Independent:
"If
Iraq
does
have
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
then
a
very
large
part
of
its
capability
could
be
afloat
on
the
high
seas
right
now.
These
ships
have
maintained
radio
silence
for
long
periods
and,
for
a
considerable
time,
they
have
been
steaming
around
in
ever-decreasing
circles."
The
ships
are
thought
to
have
set
sail
from
a
country
other
than
Iraq
to
avoid
running
the
gauntlet
of
Western
naval
vessels
patrolling
the
Gulf.
Defence
experts
believe
that,
if
they
are
carrying
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
these
could
have
been
smuggled
out
through
Syria
or
Jordan.
Despite
hundreds
of
searches
by
UN
inspectors,
no
evidence
has
yet
been
found
of
Iraq`s
weapons
of
mass
destruction
programmes.
A
succession
of
"dossiers"
presented
by
Downing
Street
has
been
criticised
for
providing
inaccurate
information,
with
the
most
recent
one
subject
to
ridicule
because
a
student`s
11-year-old
doctoral
thesis
was
being
passed
off
as
current
intelligence.
There
was
a
further
setback
for
Washington
and
London
when
the
accuracy
of
satellite
photographs
shown
to
the
United
Nations
by
Colin
Powell,
the
Secretary
of
State,
purporting
to
show
Iraqi
officials
moving
incriminating
evidence
from
a
suspected
site,
was
questioned
by
Hans
Blix.
Mr
Blix
said:
"The
reported
movement
of
munitions
at
the
site
could
just
as
easily
have
been
a
routine
activity
as
a
movement
of
proscribed
munitions
in
anticipation
of
an
imminent
inspection."
Attempts
to
link
the
Iraqi
regime
to
al-Qa`ida
and
other
Islamist
groups
have
also
been
met
with
scepticism.
The
UN
says,
though,
that
Iraq
has
failed
to
account
for
1,000
tonnes
of
chemical
agents
from
the
war
against
Iran;
to
reveal
the
whereabouts
of
6,500
missing
chemical
rockets;
to
produce
evidence
it
has
destroyed
8,500
litres
of
anthrax;
and
to
account
for
380
rocket
engines
smuggled
into
Iraq
with
chemicals
used
for
missile
propellants
and
control
systems.
Intelligence
reports,
and
some
Iraqi
defectors,
have
maintained
that
incriminating
material
and
documents
relating
to
weapons
of
mass
destruction
have
been
buried
in
remote
parts
of
the
country
and
have
also
been
hidden
in
a
variety
of
locations
including
homes
of
officials
and
scientists,
as
well
as
mosques.
There
have
also
been
claims
that
chemical
and
biological
products
have
been
smuggled
into
Syria.
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