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Report: U.S suspects Iraqi WMD in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley
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SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Tuesday, August 26, 2003
U.S. intelligence suspects
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction have finally been located.
Unfortunately, getting to them will be nearly impossible for
the United States and its allies, because the containers with the
strategic materials are not in Iraq.
Instead they are located in Lebanon's heavily-fortified Bekaa
Valley, swarming with Iranian and Syrian forces, and Hizbullah and
ex-Iraqi agents,
Geostrategy-Direct.com will
report in Wednesday's new weekly edition.
U.S. intelligence first identified a stream of tractor-trailer
trucks moving from Iraq to Syria to Lebanon in January 2003. The
significance of this sighting did not register on the CIA at the
time.
U.S. intelligence sources believe the area contains
extended-range Scud-based missiles and parts for chemical and
biological warheads.
Mutually-lucrative Iraqi-Syrian
arms transactions are nothing new. Firas Tlas, son of Syrian
Defense Minister Mustafa Tlas, has been the key to Syria's rogue
alliance with Iraq. He and Assad made hundreds of millions of
dollars selling weapons, oil and drugs to and from Iraq, according
to the May 13, 2003 edition of Geostrategy-Direct.com.
The CIA now believes a multi-million dollar deal between Iraq
and Syria provided for the hiding and safekeeping of Saddam's
strategic weapons.
Not surprisingly, U.S. inquiries in Beirut and Syria are being
met with little substantive response, U.S. officials said.
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