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War in Iraq ‘stimulated terrorism,’ ex-U.N. weapons inspector says

Former chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix said on Wednesday the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq had failed tragically in its aim of making the world a safer place and succeeded only in stimulating terrorism.
Blix former Head of the United Nations Weapons Monitoring Commission in Iraq attends International Security Forum
Hans Blix of Sweden, former head of the U.N. Weapons Monitoring Commission in Iraq Arc / Reuters file
/ Source: Reuters

Former chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix said on Wednesday the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq had failed tragically in its aim of making the world a safer place and succeeded only in stimulating terrorism.

Blix, in implicit criticism of the war’s main protagonists — President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair — said the action had also failed to deter any ambitions on the part of Iran or North Korea to develop nuclear weapons.

“The acknowledged gain of the war was that a treacherous and murderous dicator (Saddam Hussein) was removed, but the rest has been tragedy and failure,” he told Reuters in an interview. “It has stimulated terrorism.”

‘Is the world safer?’
Many critics of the invasion argue it opened Iraq to Islamist militants involved in an insurrection against coalition forces, while distracting attention from a campaign against the al-Qaida terror group blamed for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

“Is the world safer? No. It’s not safer in Iraq,” he said in his native Stockholm. “If North Korea and Iran are contemplating going for weapons of mass destruction, then it hasn’t stopped them. It has not solved the Middle East conflict.”

Blix suggested Washington and London had lost perspective in focusing on Saddam, who, it has since emerged, was not involved in developing nuclear arms.

“Of course they were concerned with North Korea and Iran. But ... they focused a great deal of their efforts on Iraq while other things were left simmering.”

Iran denies U.S. accusations it is developing nuclear arms. Experts say North Korea has an arsenal of between two and nine nuclear bombs.

Blix questions Iraqi official's invitation
Blix, who retired from the U.N. last year and now chairs a Swedish-sponsored Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission, also cast doubt on the Iraqi government’s comments on Tuesday that U.N. weapons inspectors were welcome to return.

“The Iraqi government would need to offer guarantees of safety,” said the 75-year-old former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, who led the U.N. inspections team until 2003. “But to go to sites which satellites have already found to be empty is perhaps not meaningful.”

Iraqi Science and Technology Minister Rashad Omar issued the invitation after an IAEA report on Monday said neither Baghdad nor Washington appeared to have noticed the disappearance of nuclear equipment and materials once closely monitored by IAEA.