U.S. ACCUSES SOVIET OF POISONING 3,000

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000402700058-9
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 26, 2012
Sequence Number: 
58
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 9, 1982
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000402700058-9.pdf116.59 KB
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STAT ;, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402700058-9 5 . i . _FL, D U.S. ACCUSES SOVIET OF POISONING 3,000 Says Use of Chemical Weapons on Afghans Violates Treaty Special to The New Yort Timm WASHINGTON, March 8' The Rea-` gan Administration asserted today that Soviet forces had killed at least 3,000 people in Afghanistan with poison gas and other chemical weapons in violation of an international treaty the Soviet Union signed. Deputy Secretary of State Walter J.: Stoessel Jr. told the Senate Foreign' Relations Committee that the informa- tion came from Afghan Army defectors who had been trained by the Soviet Union in chemical warfare and from refugees in Pakistan who purportedly were victims of chemical attacks. "Asa result of chemical attacks, 3,042 deaths attributed to 47 separate inci- dents between the summer of 1979 and the summer of 1981 have been report.. ed," Mr. Stoessel said. He said the num- ber was based on conservative analyses and was reliable. A State Department intelligence offi- cial, Deputy Assistant Secretary Philip H. Stoddard, who accompanied Mr. Stoessel to the hearing, said, "We think the actual total of numbers killed by chemical weapons was considerably higher." In his testimony, Mr. Stoessel said, "Analysis of all the information avail- able leads us to conclude that attacks have been conducted with irritants, in- capacitants, nerve agents, phosgene oxime and perhaps mycotoxins, mus- tard, lewisite and toxic smoke." He said, "Afghan military defectors have provided information on chemical weapons containing lethal nerve agents, where they were stockpiled and where and when they have been used." Mr. Stoddard said some of the defectors were Afghan officers trained in chemi- cal warfare by the Soviet Union. Mr. Stoddard, in testimony and later in a telephone interview,' said the sources of information included the do- fectors, refugees in Pakistan who said they had seen chemical attacks, doctors who said they had treated victims of chemical attacks, victims who said they had survived attacks and journalists who had been in Afghanistan. NEW YORK TIDIES 9 MARCH 1982 He said, however, that they had no' Increase in Refugees Reported samples, no pictures and no cannisters or bombs. "Nobody can put on the table Mr. Stoessel suggested that the num- a projectile or bomb," he said, although ber of Afghan refugees had increased the United States has been trying to ob- j from two million to three million in re- tain one. cent months. He said: "About three mil- Toll May Be Higher lion Afghan refugees have fled their homeland seeking freedom, principally "Since you don't have a sample," he j, in neighboring Pakistan. Almost one- " said, you look at the symptoms." He said that analysts took all the reports of chemical attacks, arranged them in clusters around an alleged incident, then checked the reports against each other in an effort to corroborate them. Mr. Stoddard said reports not measur- ing up to stringent criteria were not used. He said further details would be made public later and the number of deaths might be twice the 3,042 reported today. Mr. Stoddard also later cleared up confusion about Mr. Stoessel's testi- mony that the Soviet Union began the chemical attacks in the summer of 1979. The Soviet thrust into Afghaninstan came on Dec. 27,1979. Mr. Stoddard said that Afghan forces trained and equipped by the Soviet Union conducted the first few chemical attacks, but he said he did not know how many. Mr. Stoessel said that the United States had brought up the issue of chem- ical warfare in Afghanistan with the Soviet Union several times at different levels, which he did not specify, and that Moscow had denied using the weapons. A Change of Position for U.S. The United States has several times accused the Soviet Union of using chem- ical weapons in violation of a pact signed in Geneva in 1925. But today's testimony, the officials said, was the most specific allegation made against the Soviet Union. Publicizing information supporting the charges of Soviet use of chemical weapons in Afghanistan is a reversal for the Reagan Administration. Just last week officials in the Defense Intelli- gence Agency, in the International Se- curity Agency In the Defense Depart- i ment and in the State Department said they had no evidence that Soviet forces used chemical weapons in Afghanistan. Why the position was changed was not clear. President Reagan has just de. cided that the United States will resume production of chemical weapons and has asked for a substantial increase in the military budget for such weapons. To focus American attention on the Afghan situation, Mr. Stoessel said, President Reagan plans to sign a meas- ure on Wednesday declaring the first day of spring Afghanistan Day. Afghans celebrate the day as the beginning of the new year. Afghanistan-the largest group of refu- gees in the world - has so voted with its feet." He also asserted,' without citing a sources, "There are thousands of politi- cal prisoners. We have frequent reports of torture, of summary executions and a, long list of other violations which testify to the brutality of the Afghan regime and its Soviet masters." Mr. Stoessel further testified, again without citing a source, that Soviet troops had recently subjected Kanda- har, Afganistan's second largest city, "to a savage artillery and air bombard- ment in which hundreds of innocent civilians lost their lives." "After the bombardment," he contin- ued, "Soviet forces entered the city and engaged in wanton looting and killing among the civilian population. Many of the city's buildings were severely dam- aged; two-thirds of its population fled." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402700058-9