Greenpeace opposed the war on Iraq.
We don't believe war is the answer to ridding the world of Weapons of
Mass Destruction and this is one of the reasons why we took particular
issue with the war on Iraq. We joined with people all over the world in
months of global action to promote a non-violent solution to the
conflict in Iraq.
We
believed the war was more about oil than about effectively dealing with
weapons of mass destruction. It has resulted in devastating human and
environmental consequences, and set a dangerous (not to mention
illegal) precedent.
Though the occupying forces were quick to
secure Iraqi oil fields, they neglected to safeguard dangerous nuclear
material. Now that material has made its way to homes and schools.
Weapons of mass destruction, the alleged reason for the war in the
first place, were never found.
Uranium and other nuclear
materials stored under UN control in Iraq until the fall of Saddam
Hussein have been stolen and local residents are reportedly displaying
symptoms of radiation poisoning. Six weeks after the occupying forces
took control of the country, the US finally conceded that the UN
nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), could
return to assess what has been stolen at part of one site, Tuwaitha.
Yet the IAEA has been refused access to the nearby population or to
other sites it wants to visit, in contravention of UN resolutions.
We went to Iraq in June 2003 with a small,
specialist team
to examine the local environment and to assess the extent of any
nuclear contamination. The team took samples of soil and water for
laboratory analysis and conducted on-site monitoring with specialist
radiation detection equipment. While the extent of the Greenpeace
radiological survey will not be comprehensive, it will provide some
idea of the true level of risk to the people of the area and to the
environment.
We are calling for a full assessment of the situation at Tuwaitha and other nuclear sites in Iraq:- The
Iraqi government must ask the IAEA to remain in Iraq with an
unrestricted mandate to test as well as document all nuclear sites.
- The
Iraqi government must ask the IAEA to oversee an urgent medical and
environmental assessment of the impact of the radioactive material that
has spread in the local community - a practice that would be standard
in any other country and circumstance.
- A hunt for all the industrial radioactive isotopes in Iraq must be conducted urgently as these are all potential dirty bombs.
See our Iraq war archive