ISIS terrorists take control of Iraqi sarin nerve gas weapons depot
Bare Naked Islam
WMDs? I thought there were no WMDs
in Iraq? The Iraqi government has informed the United Nations that it
has lost control of a former chemical weapons depot to Islamist
insurgents affiliated with ISIS, or IS, and cannot carry out its
obligations to destroy what’s stored in the compound.
Reuters In a letter penned by Iraq’s UN Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim, it was revealed that “armed terrorist groups” took
over the Muthanna complex on June 11. Located north of Baghdad, the
facility was the main center for chemical weapons production prior to
the 1991 Gulf War, and is still home to 2,500 rockets containing the
lethal nerve agent sarin.
According to the Associated Press,
the compound is now in the hands of the Islamic State extremist group,
also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In the letter
to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Alhakim said that Iraqi officials
witnessed the intruders looting some of the equipment before the
surveillance system was taken offline.
As RT reported previously,
ISIS’ rapid gains through northern and western Iraq – the militants
also control portions of Syria – have led it to shed part of its name
and declare the territory under its control to be a new Islamic state,
or caliphate. The group is primarily composed of radical Sunni Muslims,
and has won support among those in Iraq disgruntled with the exclusive
nature of Iraq’s Shia-dominated central government.
Until the
Iraqi government can recover control of the Muthanna facility and
stabilize the country’s security situation, Alhakim said it cannot make
progress in eliminating the leftover chemical weapons
stockpile. Alhakim’s letter to the UN highlighted two specific bunkers
when referring to the compound’s capture, the contents of which were
revealed by the AP via a 2003-era UN report.
In Bunker 13 were 2,500 sarin-filled chemical rockets – all produced before 1991 – and 180 tons of the“very toxic chemical” sodium
cyanide. Bunker 41, meanwhile, contained 2,000 empty artillery shells
that were contaminated with mustard gas, more than 600 one-ton mustard
containers holding residue, and severely contaminated construction
material. These could not be used for warfare, but they are still“highly toxic.”
When the Iraqi government will be able
to regain control of the chemical weapons depot also remain unknown, as
lawmakers are still debating over what kind of government to form in
order give themselves the best opportunity to unite the country and
strike back against the Islamic State militants.
Maybe they are coming in from Syria? After all, Saddam Hussein shipped all his WMDs to Syria before the U.S. invasion.
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