Wednesday August 6, 2003
NewsMax.com has obtained exclusive photos of a buried Iraqi jet fighter
being recovered by U.S. Air Force troops. The Iraqi jet, an advanced Russian
MiG-25 Foxbat, was found buried in the sand after an informant tipped off
U.S. troops. The MiG was dug out of a massive sand dune near the Al Taqqadum
airfield by U.S. Air Force recovery teams. The MiG was reportedly one of
over two dozen Iraqi jets buried in the sand, like hidden treasure, waiting
to be recovered at a later date. Contrary to what some in the major media
have reported, not all the jets found were from the Gulf War era.
The Russian-made MiG-25 Foxbat being recovered by U.S. Air Force troops
in the photos is an advanced reconnaissance version never before seen in the
West and is equipped with sophisticated electronic warfare devices. U.S. Air
Force recovery teams had to use large earth-moving equipment to uncover the
MiG, which is over 70 feet long and weighs nearly 25 tons. The Foxbat is
known to be one of Iraq's top jet fighters. The advanced electronic
reconnaissance version found by the U.S. Air Force is currently in service
with the Russian air force. The MiG is capable of flying at speeds of over
2,000 miles an hour, or three times the speed of sound, and at altitudes of
over 75,000 feet.
The recovery of the advanced MiG fighter is considered to be an
intelligence coup by the U.S. Air Force. The Foxbat may also be equipped
with advanced Russian- and French-made electronics that were sold to Iraq
during the 1990s in violation of a U.N. ban on arms sales to Baghdad. The
buried aircraft at Al Taqqadum were covered in camouflage netting, sealed
and, in many cases, had their wings removed before being buried more than 10
feet beneath the Iraqi desert.
X Marks the Spot.
The discovery of the buried Iraqi jet fighters illustrates the problem
faced by U.S. inspection teams searching Iraq for weapons of mass
destruction. Iraq is larger in size than California, and the massive deserts
south and west of Baghdad were used by Saddam Hussein to hide weapons during
the first Gulf war. U.S. intelligence sources have already uncovered several
mass grave burial sites in the open deserts with an estimated 10,000 dead
hidden there. In addition, Iraq previously hid SCUD missiles, chemical
weapons and biological warheads by burying them under the desert sand. U.N.
inspection teams found the weapons in the early 1990s after detailed
information of the exact locations was obtained.
Top U.S. weapons inspector Dr. David Kay is known to favor human
intelligence as the primary means to find Iraq's hidden treasure trove of
weapons and secrets. While there are rumors of Iraqi chemical and biological
weapons being shipped to nearby Syria, the weapons may very well still
remain inside Iraq buried under the vast desert wastelands. Some critics of
the Bush administration have claimed that the inability of U.S. forces to
uncover weapons of mass destruction is proof that the president misled the
nation into the war with Iraq. However, in recent days the critics have
fallen silent as word quietly leaked from Iraq that major discoveries have
already been made and are now being documented completely. Bush
administration officials are keeping any such discoveries secret for the
moment.