Netherlands and weapons of mass destruction

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See also
Dirty bomb
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edit

Although the Netherlands does not have its own weapons of mass destruction it does participate in the NATO nuclear weapons sharing arrangements and trains for delivering U.S. nuclear weapons.

The Netherlands is also one of the producers of components that can be used for creating deadly agents, chemical weapons and other kinds of weapons of mass destruction. Several Dutch companies provided Iraq with components for these illegal weapons during the 1980s.

United States-NATO nuclear weapons sharing

The United States provides about 20 tactical B61 nuclear bombs for use by the Netherlands under a NATO nuclear weapons sharing agreement. The weapons are stored at Airbase Volkel, and in time of war would be delivered by Royal Netherlands Air Force F-16 warplanes [1].

Many countries believe this violates Articles I and II of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), where the Netherlands has committed:

"... not to receive the transfer from any transferor whatsoever of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or of control over such weapons or explosive devices directly, or indirectly ... or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices ...".

The U.S. insists its forces control the weapons and that no transfer of the nuclear bombs or control over them is intended "unless and until a decision were made to go to war, at which the [NPT] treaty would no longer be controlling", so there is no breach of the NPT. However Dutch pilots and other staff practice handling and delivering the U.S. nuclear bombs. Even if the NATO argument is considered legally correct, such peacetime operations contravene both the objective and the spirit of the NPT.

Dutch production of weapons of mass destruction

Alongside other companies from the United Kingdom, Germany, the United States, Belgium, Spain, India, and Brazil, Dutch companies provided Saddam Hussein with chemical agents needed to engage in chemical warfare for use against Iranians and Kurdish civilians.

Two thousand Iranians who suffered from chemical warfare during the Iraqi imposed war (1980-1988) submitted an indictment some years ago with a Tehran court against nine companies that had provided Saddam Hussein with the deadly weapons. 455 American and European companies provided aid to Iraq during its aggression on Iran and two thirds of the companies were German. The United Nations published a 12,000-page report about the conflict and named the entire companies involved in the fiasco. An Iraqi special tribunal started trial of dictator Saddam Hussein after his fall. Iranian Chemical victims were absent in the closed-door trial and the grievances of Iran's victims was not a part of the agenda in the tribunal.[2]

Sale of WMDs by Dutch businessmen

A Dutch businessman named Frans van Anraat, 62, was accused of complicity in genocide for selling chemicals to Iraq in the 1980s while knowing that Saddam Hussein might use them as weapons against Iranians and others. He has acknowledged that he sold chemicals to Saddam's regime. He exported tons of European-made chemicals between 1984 and 1988 that were turned into mustard and nerve gas. He continued delivering materials even after the gas attack on Halabja.[3]



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