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For instance, at one point Blix said, "Governments have many sources of intelligence that are not available to inspectors"—which could be read as a warning to Bush, Cheney, and Rice that, if they want more cooperation from him, they're going to have to give him the tools to do the job. When Powell unveiled satellite photos and telephone intercepts to the Security Council on Feb. 5, Blix looked noticeably angry, no doubt wondering why he didn't get this stuff first so he could send his inspectors to verify the claims. Later in his briefing today, Blix even contested some of Powell's interpretations of the stash. In one satellite photo of a chemical munitions site, Powell saw a "decontamination vehicle," indicating the site was active. Blix said this might have just been an ordinary truck engaged in "routine activity." (He did not wonder why any activity at all should be going on around supposedly deactivated chemical bunkers.) Blix also said that Iraq routinely moves around conventional weapons that don't necessarily have anything to do with weapons of mass destruction. His reference was a bit oblique, but on reflection, he was clearly addressing the telephone intercept of two Iraqi officers talking about removing something from a weapons site the day before a visit from U.N. inspectors. (Had he been clearer in his meaning, someone might have asked him why the officers would have mentioned clearing away the site before inspectors came if the stuff in question was not prohibited.)