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U.S. firms, agencies said to be on list of Iraq arms suppliers in U.N. report December 19, 2002 The radio news program Democracy Now and the Berlin newspaper Die Tageszeitung as well as the British newspaper Independent have published reports that implicate U.S. agencies and corporations as suppliers of arms technology to Iraq. According to all three reports, the list comes from a leaked copy of the required declaration Iraq made to the United Nations Security Council on December 7 on whether it harbors weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Democracy Now reports: Hewlett Packard, Dupont, Honeywell and other major U.S. corporations, as well as governmental agencies including the Department of Defense and the nation’s nuclear labs, all illegally helped Iraq to build its biological, chemical and nuclear weapons programs. On Wednesday, December 18, Geneva-based reporter Andreas Zumach broke the story on the US national listener-sponsored radio and television show “Democracy Now!” Zumach’s Berlin-based paper Die Tageszeitung plans to soon publish a full list of companies and nations who have aided Iraq. The paper first reported on Tuesday that German and U.S. companies had extensive ties to Iraq but didn’t list names. Zumach obtained top-secret portions of Iraq’s 12,000-page weapons declaration that the US had redacted from the version made available to the non-permanent members of the UN Security Council. “We have 24 major U.S. companies listed in the report who gave very substantial support especially to the biological weapons program but also to the missile and nuclear weapons program,” Zumach said. “Pretty much everything was illegal in the case of nuclear and biological weapons. Every form of cooperation and supplies… was outlawed in the 1970s.” The list of U.S. corporations listed in Iraq's report include Hewlett Packard, DuPont, Honeywell, Rockwell, Tectronics, Bechtel, International Computer Systems, Unisys, Sperry and TI Coating. Zumach also said the U.S. Departments of Energy, Defense, Commerce, and Agriculture quietly helped arm Iraq. U.S. government nuclear weapons laboratories Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos and Sandia trained traveling Iraqi nuclear scientists and gave non-fissile material for construction of a nuclear bomb.The list of corporations include the following, according to United for Peace: USA A - nuclear K - chemical B - biological R - rockets (missiles) 1)Honeywell (R,K) 2)Spektra Physics (K) 3)Semetex (R) 4)TI Coating (A,K) 5)UNISYS (A,K) 6)Sperry Corp. (R,K) 7)Tektronix (R,A) 8)Rockwell )(K) 9)Leybold Vacuum Systems (A) 10)Finnigan-MAT-US (A) 11)Hewlett Packard (A.R,K) 12)Dupont (A) 13)Eastman Kodak (R) 14)American Type Culture Collection (B) 15)Alcolac International (C) 16) Consarc (A) 17) Carl Zeis -U.Ss (K) 18)Cerberus (LTD) (A) 19)Electronic Assiciates (R) 20)International Computer Systems 21)Bechtel (K) 22)EZ Logic Data Systems,Inc. (R) 23)Canberra Industries Inc. (A) 24)Axel Electronics Inc. (A) The British newspaper The Independent included the following information in its report: Iraq's 11,000-page report to the UN Security Council lists 150 foreign companies, including some from America, Britain, Germany and France, that supported Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction programme, a German newspaper said yesterday. Berlin's left-wing Die Tageszeitung newspaper said it had seen a copy of the original Iraqi dossier which was vetted for sensitive information by US officials before being handed to the five permanent Security Council members two weeks ago. An edited version was passed to the remaining 10 members of the Security Council last night. British officials said the list of companies appeared to be accurate. Eighty German firms and 24 US companies are reported to have supplied Iraq with equipment and know-how for its weapons programmes from 1975 onwards and in some cases support for Baghdad's conventional arms programme had continued until last year. It is not known who leaked the report, but it could have come from Iraq. Baghdad is keen to embarrass the US and its allies by showing the close involvement of US, German, British and French firms in helping Iraq develop its weapons of mass destruction when the country was a bulwark against the much feared spread of Iranian revolutionary fervour to the Arab world.For Democracy Now's report, visit: http://www.democracynow.org For the Independent's report, visit: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/
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