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No Sign of Scuds or Banned Arms in Iraq Yet - U.S.
Updated 8:50 PM ET March 22, 2003
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. forces in Iraq have yet to find any evidence of the suspected chemical or biological weapons that prompted the invasion, a U.S. general said on Saturday.Oops.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, vice director for operations on the U.S. military's Joint Staff, also told a briefing that none of the missiles fired by Iraq so far in the war had been a Scud.
Scud missiles, along with chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, are among the arms that Iraq was barred from possessing by U.N. resolutions after the 1991 Gulf War.
President Bush and his ally British Prime Minister Tony Blair accuse Iraq of having violated the resolutions and say President Saddam Hussein could provide weapons of mass destruction to groups like al-Qaeda.
Asked if any Scuds had been found by the U.S.-British forces that have invaded Iraq, McChrystal said:
"To my knowledge, we have not discovered any to this point," adding: "So far there have been no Scuds launched, which is very positive today."
Asked if any signs of chemical or biological weapons had been found, the general replied: "We have found no caches of weapons of mass destruction to date."
Iraq says it has destroyed all its stocks of chemical and biological weapons.