Drafts of a report from the top U.S. inspector in Iraq conclude there
were no weapons stockpiles, but say there are signs the fallen Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein had dormant programs he hoped to revive at a
later time, according to people familiar with the findings. In a
1,500-page report, the head of the Iraq Survey Group, Charles Duelfer,
will find Saddam was importing banned materials, working on unmanned
aerial vehicles in violation of U.N. agreements and maintaining a
dual-use industrial sector that could produce weapons. Duelfer also
says Iraq only had small research and development programs for chemical
and biological weapons. As Duelfer puts the finishing touches on his
report, he concludes Saddam had intentions of restarting weapons
programs at some point, after suspicion and inspections from the
international community waned. After a year and a half in Iraq,
however, the United States has found no weapons of mass destruction --
its chief argument for overthrowing the regime. [more ]