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Russian technicians are now helping Iraq jam crucial
satellite signals needed to guide bombs and military
aircraft.
MOSCOW, March 23 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies)
The U.S. on Sunday, March 23, complained that
Russia has not adequately dealt with its concerns about
arms sales to Iraq by Russian firms which it said threatened
the safety of U.S., British and Australian troops now
invading Baghdad, adding that Russian technicians are
helping Iraq jam satellite signals that currently guide
bombs and military aircraft.
The State Department said it had repeatedly brought
sales of "militarily sensitive equipment"
to Iraq to the attention of senior officials in Moscow,
including in the days leading up to the current conflict,
but had not yet received a satisfactory response.
"Such equipment in the hands if the Iraqi military
may pose a direct threat to U.S. and coalition armed
forces," Brenda Greenberg, a department spokeswoman,
was quoted by the Agence France-Presse (AFP) as saying.
"We regard this as a very serious matter,"
she said. "We thus have raised this issue with
the Russian government a number of times, including
at senior levels and particularly over the past two
weeks."
"Their response so far has not been satisfactory,"
Greenberg said, adding: "We hope that the responsible
Russian agencies will take our concerns seriously."
Meanwhile, a senior U.S. official told AFP Sunday that
Russian technicians are now helping Iraq jam crucial
satellite signals needed to guide bombs and military
aircraft.
Washington had evidence that personnel from a Russian
firm were now in Iraq and attempting to help set up
and operate a sophisticated system that interferes with
the U.S. global positioning technology, he said on condition
of anonymity.
"The system is complex and there is evidence that
they (Russian technicians) have been trying to bring
this system on-line and help the Iraqis operate it,"
the official told AFP.
"We are extremely upset and have raised this at
very senior levels with the Russians," the official
said.
The official stressed that there was no indication
that the Russian government was involved in the efforts,
but said Moscow had been "extremely unhelpful"
in addressing the U.S. concerns.
The Washington Post reported earlier Sunday that U.S.
officials were deeply concerned by evidence that three
Russian firms were selling weapons and sophisticated
electronic military equipment to Iraq.
One firm has helped the Iraqi military deploy electronic
jamming equipment against U.S. planes and bombs while
the other two have sold antitank missiles and thousands
of night-vision goggles, the Post said, citing unidentified
sources.
The sources told the paper that despite being confronted
with a paper trail of documents supporting the concerns,
the Russians had first denied the existence of the company
selling the jamming equipment and then said only they
would watch its activities very closely.
Last month, the Post said Washington learned that an
Iraqi order for thousands of night vision goggles was
due to be shipped by one of the Russian firms and asked
Moscow to halt it.
Instead, Russian officials replied by saying either
that a few goggles had been given as gifts to Middle
Eastern leaders or that it was the weekend and nothing
could be done, the paper said, citing the sources.
In addition, over the past two months Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein's government has boosted its procurement
of anti-tank missiles made by a Russian company named
KBP Tula, the Post said.
Of greatest concern to Washington, the paper said,
is the sales of the jamming devices which can interfere
with U.S. global positioning equipment needed for aircraft
navigation and ground forces.
U.S. officials began to complain about the sales of
the equipment by Moscow-based firm Aviaconversiya in
June 2002 but were met with denials that the company
existed despite its Internet site and extensive media
coverage.
Russians Deny
The Russian company on Sunday flatly denied that its
technicians are helping Iraq jam crucial satellite signals
needed to guide bombs and military aircraft as U.S.-led
forces advance on Baghdad.
"They (U.S.) are just making this up. Let them
capture one of our personnel," said Oleg Antonov,
director of Moscow-based Aviaconversiya.
"They won't find any of our technicians in Iraq.
The Americans are trying to find a scapegoat because
their bombs are not falling as accurately as they want,"
he told AFP.
The company's director flatly denied it had been selling
jamming equipment to the Iraqis, though he admitted
Baghdad had been interested in acquiring the system.
Antonov told AFP that Iraqi representatives had expressed
interest repeatedly in the jammers, designed to confound
global positioning system guidance gear used in aircraft
and bombs.
But he denied that his firm had sold any such devices
to Iraq, suggesting that the Baghdad regime had either
manufactured the jammers themselves or bought them from
a third country.
"We didn't sell anything to Iraq. Over the past
four years, Iraq sent us their representatives expressing
an interest in placing orders.
"They came some 15 times, held negotiations, promised
to transfer funds, but they left and we never saw them
again. They didn't buy anything," said Antonov.
"I told the Americans and our presidential administration
that probably Iraq made these jammers itself or with
the help of Yugoslavia," Antonov said.
Contacted by AFP, the Russian foreign ministry and
the U.S. embassy in Moscow say that they could not comment
on the matter.
Another Russian firm, KBP Tula, which is accused of
selling anti-tank missiles to Iraq over the past two
months, could not be reached for comment.
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