Huge Stash of Surface-to-Air Missiles Missing in Libya
by Ben Wedeman and Ingrid Formanek for CNN
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
A CNN team and Human Rights Watch found dozens of empty
crates marked with packing lists and inventory numbers that identified the
items as Igla-S surface-to-air missiles. The list for one box, for example,
written in English and Russian, said it had contained two missiles, with inventory number "Missile
9M342," and a power source, inventory number "Article 9B238." Grinch
SA-24s are designed to target front-line aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles
and drones. They can shoot down a plane flying as high as 11,000 feet and can
travel 19,000 feet straight out. Fighters aligned with the National
Transitional Council and others swiped armaments from the storage facility,
witnesses told Human Rights Watch. The warehouse is located near a base of the
Khamis Brigade, a special forces unit in Gadhafi's military, in the
southeastern part of the capital. The warehouse contains mortars and artillery
rounds, but there are empty crates for those items as well. There are also empty
boxes for another surface-to-air missile, the SA-7.
Peter Bouckaert, Human Rights Watch emergencies director,
told CNN he has seen the same pattern in armories looted elsewhere in Libya ,
noting that "in every city we arrive, the first thing to disappear are the
surface-to-air missiles." He said such missiles can fetch many thousands
of dollars on the black market. "We are talking about some 20,000
surface-to-air missiles in all of Libya , and I've seen cars packed
with them." he said. "They could turn all of North
Africa into a no-fly zone." There was no immediate comment
from NTC officials. The lack of security at the weapons site raises concerns
about stability in post-Gadhafi Libya
and whether the new NTC leadership is doing enough to stop the weapons from
getting into the wrong hands.
A NATO official, who asked to not be named because he was
not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said 575 surface-to-air
missiles, radar systems and sites or storage facilities were hit by NATO
airstrikes and either damaged or destroyed between March 31 and Saturday. He
didn't elaborate on the specifics about the targets.
Gen. Carter Ham, chief of U.S. Africa Command, has said he's
concerned about the proliferation of weapons, most notably the shoulder-fired
surface-to-air missiles. He said there were about 20,000 in Libya when the international
operation began earlier this year and many of them have not been accounted for.
"That's going to be a concern for some period of time," he said in
April. Gilles de Kerchove, the European Union counterterrorism coordinator,
raised concerns Monday about the possibility that al Qaeda in the Islamic
Maghreb, based in North Africa , could gain
access to small arms, machine guns and surface-to-air missiles. Western
officials worry that weapons from the storage sites will end up in the hands of
militants or adversaries like Iran . The governments of neighboring Niger
and Chad
have both said that weapons from
An ethnic Tuareg leader in the northern Niger city of Agadez also said many weapons have come across the border. He said he and other
Tuareg leaders are anxious about Gadhafi's Tuareg fighters returning home -
with their weapons - and making common cause with al Qaeda cells in the region.
Gadhafi's fighting
forces have included mercenaries from other African nations.
The missing weapons also conjure fears of what happened in Iraq , where people grabbed scores
of weapons when Saddam Hussein's regime was overthrown. Bouckaert said one or
two of the missing artillery rounds are "enough to make a car bomb."
"We should remember what happened in Iraq ," he said, when the
"country was turned upside down" by insurgents using such weaponry.
There have been similar concerns in Afghanistan ,
where the United States
provided thousands of Stinger missiles to the Afghan mujahedeen when they were
fighting the Soviets in the 1980s. The United States has spent hundreds of
millions of dollars trying to buy them back, fearful that they would fall into
the hands of terrorists.
[Now doesn’t that make you feel safe…….. War? What is it
good for – unintended consequences, that’s what]
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