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U.S. believes Russians aiding Iraq
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miscellaneous |
news report
Monday March 24, 2003 21:21 by Evil Dave
By Arshad Mohammed WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States believes Russian company technicians are in Baghdad helping the Iraqis operate electronic jamming systems that could impair the U.S.-led war against Iraq, a U.S. official says.
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov of Russia, which along with France strongly opposed the U.S.-led war against Iraq, denied Russia had supplied Iraq with any military equipment in breach of U.N. sanctions. But U.S. officials said Washington had been worried about the alleged sales by Russian companies for months and had protested to Moscow at increasingly senior levels, culminating in Bush's telephone call to Putin on Monday. "The two also discussed United States' concerns, which President Bush discussed, involving prohibited hardware that has been transferred from Russian companies to Iraq," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said at his daily briefing. Asked if Washington had evidence the items were being used by Iraq as it seeks to fend off the U.S. and British bombing campaign and ground forces marching on Baghdad, he said: "They were not provided for the purpose of sitting on shelves." The spokesman added: "We do have concerns that some aspects of this may be ongoing. those concerns were raised in the phone call today." U.S. officials believe the alleged sales have been carried out by private Russian firms and they want greater oversight by Russian authorities to stop them. Speaking to reporters earlier in the day, Fleischer said: "The United States has credible evidence that Russian companies have provided assistance and prohibited hardware to the Iraqi regime, things such as night vision goggles, GPS jammers and antitank guided missiles." A U.S. official who asked not to be named said Washington made its accusations public late last week when it discovered Russian technicians in Baghdad aiding the Iraqis with the GPS jamming system after the start of the U.S.-led war. "They are there in Baghdad ... trying to make the system work, the jamming system," said the U.S. official. "It was the discovery that there are ... Russian technicians helping to make this GPS jamming work in Baghdad that prompted the internal debate in the U.S. government about what to do and (whether) to go public," the official added. Allegations of such alleged Russian military sales surfaced on Sunday in the Washington Post, which reported that the United States had protested against the sales late last week. The newspaper reported that U.S. officials, citing intelligence sources, believe the jamming devices were initially imported to counter U.S. and British jets patrolling the "no-fly" zones of northern and southern Iraq and were deployed last week when U.S. forces began their attack. |
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