Intelligence sources, Iraqi declarations to the IAEA, and international inspections following the Gulf war indicate that Iraq also planned for six other facilities to handle or process nuclear material (see inset).
The Ash Sharqat facility, located south of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, was a twin to the Tarmiya Uranium Enrichment Facility. We are confident, however, that the facilities at Ash Sharqat, which was also bombed, contained no nuclear materials on the basis of IAEA inspections that revealed it was still under construction.
Ar Rashidiyah was an R&D site for the centrifuge method for enrichment and probably held at least laboratory quantities of uranium feed materials. Al Furat was an empty shell at the time of the war, but would have been able to produce centrifuges and house at least a pilot-scale enrichment cascade. None of these facilities, located close to Baghdad, were bombed in the war.
The Al Atheer facility is known to have participated in nuclear weapons design activities, and Al Hadre was probably capable of doing so. Nuclear materials such as natural or depleted uranium would have been a logical surrogate for highly enriched uranium as various design concepts were tested. Given what we now know of the Iraqi nuclear weaponization program, we doubt Iraq would have been using very much uranium for device testing/development, so any contamination, if present, would be localized.
At the time of the war, Iraq also had several burial sites and warehouses that would have held nuclear material or equipment. None of these additional facilities were bombed in the war, so there was no mechanism by which nuclear contaminants from these locations could have reached Coalition forces. These storage sites were located around the main facility at Tuwaitha, as part of uranium ore operations from the Al Qaim plant, or part of waste handling at Mosul. Some of this equipment and material was moved after the war in an attempt to deceive inspectors.