US Returns 4,000 Years Old Artifacts to Iraq

The Gilgamesh Dream Tablet, stolen from Iraq in 1991 and returned to Iraq after it was seized by the US government (Reuters)
The Gilgamesh Dream Tablet, stolen from Iraq in 1991 and returned to Iraq after it was seized by the US government (Reuters)
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US Returns 4,000 Years Old Artifacts to Iraq

The Gilgamesh Dream Tablet, stolen from Iraq in 1991 and returned to Iraq after it was seized by the US government (Reuters)
The Gilgamesh Dream Tablet, stolen from Iraq in 1991 and returned to Iraq after it was seized by the US government (Reuters)

US federal agents on Thursday returned two ancient stone artifacts to representatives of the Iraqi government at the country's consulate in Los Angeles.

Authorities said the artifacts, a fragment of a stone tablet inscribed with cuneiform characters and a hexagonal prism used to teach schoolchildren the cuneiform alphabet, are believed to be about 4,000 years old, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The German News Agency (DPA) said that the tablet fragment was purchased in an online auction, but US Customs and Border Protection flagged the item because it lacked the documentation needed for import.

Agents showed the artifact to an expert, who determined that it was originally from Iraq.

Items of cultural significance cannot be imported from Iraq without the Iraqi government’s consent, which it had not granted in this case, said Chad Fredrickson, a special agent from Homeland Security Investigations who handled the case.

The purchaser agreed to turn over the artifact to federal agents, who arranged for the tablet fragment to be returned to the Iraqi government.

The hexagonal prism was being held by a private gallery in Los Angeles, whose operators approached agents with “several items of interest,” Fredrickson said, “but the most interesting item they had was this cuneiform prism.”

Agents showed the artifact to an expert, who said it had likely been used to teach children the alphabet during the Old Babylonian period.

Fredrickson said the expert had only seen two other such prisms, one of which is kept by Yale University and another that has since gone missing.

While the exact provenance of the two artifacts was unclear, they “almost certainly” were looted from Iraq, Fredrickson said.

Iraq’s consul general in Los Angeles, Salwan Sinjaree, said the two artifacts would be returned to Iraq and transferred to the custody of the Ministry of Cultural Affairs, which will place them in a museum.



‘Secret City’ Discovered Underneath Greenland’s Ice Sheets

Construction on the mysterious base began in 1959 (Getty)
Construction on the mysterious base began in 1959 (Getty)
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‘Secret City’ Discovered Underneath Greenland’s Ice Sheets

Construction on the mysterious base began in 1959 (Getty)
Construction on the mysterious base began in 1959 (Getty)

Deep below the thick ice of Greenland lies a labyrinth of tunnels that were once thought to be the safest place on Earth in case of a war.

First created during the Cold War, Project Iceworm saw the US plan to store hundreds of ballistic missiles in a system of tunnels dubbed “Camp Century,” Britain’s the METRO newspaper reported on Wednesday.

At the time, it said, US military chiefs had hoped to launch a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union during the height of Cold War tensions if things escalated.

But less than a decade after it was built, the base was abandoned in 1967 after researchers realized the glacier was moving.

Now, the sprawling sub-zero tunnels have been brought back to attention in the stunning new images.

Alex Gardner, a cryospheric scientist at Nasa’s jet propulsion laboratory said: “We were looking for the bed of the ice and out pops Camp Century. We didn’t know what it was at first. In the new data, individual structures in the secret city are visible in a way that they’ve never been before.”

The underground three-kilometer network of tunnels played host to labs, shops, a cinema, a hospital, and accommodation for hundreds of soldiers.

But the icy Greenland site is not without its dangers – it continues to store nuclear waste.

Assuming the site would remain frozen in perpetuity, the US army removed the nuclear reactor installed on site but allowed waste – equivalent to the mass of 30 Airbus A320 airplanes – to be entombed under the snow, the magazine said.

But other sites around the world – without nuclear waste – could also serve as a safe haven in case of World War 3.

Wood Norton is a tunnel network running deep into the Worcestershire forest, originally bought by the BBC during World War 2 in case of a crisis in London.

Peters Mountain in Virginia, US, serves as one of several secret centers also known as AT&T project offices, which are essential for the US government’s continuity planning.

Further north in the states, Raven Rock Mountain Complex in Pennsylvania is a base that could hold up to 1,400 people.

And Cheyenne Mountain Complex in El Paso County, Colorado, is an underground complex boasting five chambers of reservoirs for fuel and water – and in one section there’s even reportedly an underground lake.