LOS DOCUMENTOS burdamente falsificados que indicaban que Saddam intentó comprar uranio en Niger y que tanta polvareda levantaron parece que, en efecto, fueron "plantados" precisamente para que la superchería fuera descubierta y se desacreditara así uno de los argumentos para la guerra de Iraq, dañando la imagen de países que abogaban por una intervención militar para derrocar al sátrapa de Bagdad.
El truco funcionó a la perfección, porque a partir del momento en que quedó claro que los documentos eran falsos se instaló en la opinión pública mundial la idea de que Saddam no había intentado comprar uranio, a pesar de que la afirmación de que sí lo había hecho se basaba en informaciones distintas a esos documentos concretos y se referían a Africa, y no necesariamente a Níger. Posteriormente, tanto la comisión de inteligencia del senado estadounidense (informe completo en pdf aquí) como el informe Butler en Gran Bretaña (informe completo en pdf aquí) demostraron no sólo que era cierto que el tirano iraquí había hecho gestiones para adquirir el material radioactivo en Níger, sino que ya había cerrado un acuerdo en Congo, otro de los principales países productores del mineral en el continente africano.
¿Quién podía estar interesado en deslegitimar la acción militar contra Iraq haciendo circular unos documentos que iban a poner en duda por lo menos parte del argumentario para la misma? No hay que ser Einstein para sospechar de cualquiera de los países abanderados del "No a la guerra", sobre todo los que habían estado y estaban todavía haciendo pingües negocios con el tirano. Es decir, Francia:
A row has broken out between France and Italy over whose intelligence service is to blame for the Niger uranium controversy, which led to Britain and America claiming wrongly that Saddam Hussein was trying to buy material for nuclear bombs.No es por tirarme flores, pero recordad: lo leísteis aquí en Barcepundit primero, en junio.
Italian diplomats say that France was behind forged documents which at first appeared to prove that Iraq was seeking "yellow-cake" uranium in Niger - evidence used by Britain and America to promote the case for last year's Gulf war.
They say that France's intelligence services used an Italian-born middle-man to circulate a mixture of genuine and bogus documents to "trap" the two leading proponents of war with Saddam into making unsupportable claims.
They have passed to The Sunday Telegraph a photograph which they claim shows the Italian go-between, sometimes known as "Giacomo" - who cannot be identified for legal reasons - meeting a senior French intelligence officer based in Brussels. "The French hoped that the bulk of the documents would be exposed as false, since many of them obviously were," an Italian official said.
"Their aim was to make the allies look ridiculous in order to undermine their case for war."
According to an account given to The Sunday Telegraph, France was driven by "a cold desire to protect their privileged, dominant trading relationship with Saddam, which in the case of war would have been at risk".
The allegation, which has infuriated French officials, follows reports last month that "Giacomo" claimed to have been unwittingly used by Sismi, Italy's foreign intelligence service, to circulate the false documents.
The papers found their way to the CIA and to MI6, and in September 2002 Tony Blair accused Saddam of seeking "significant quantities" of uranium from an undisclosed African country - in fact, Niger. President George W Bush made a similar claim in his State of the Union address to Congress four months later, using information passed to him by MI6.
The International Atomic Energy Agency expressed doubts over the documents' authenticity, however, and in March 2003 declared them false.
The suggestion that Italy, driven by its government's support for America, had forged the documents to help to justify the war in Iraq, has caused a furore and has now led to the revelation of new information about "Giacomo".
The Sunday Telegraph has been told that the man has a criminal record for extortion and fraud, but draws a monthly salary of €4,000 (£2,715) from the DGSE - the French equivalent of MI6 - for which he is said to have worked for the past five years.
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