Additional footage shows the IAEA seals that were on the doors of the bunkers where the 380 tons of explosives were stored. http://kstp.com/article/stories/S3741.html?cat=1
It appears that video mentioned earlier is that of the bunkers where the explosives were stored. This means that the explosives were there when Saddam felled and the US took over. In addition, from can be determined from the footage, there was a large number of bunkers with seals and explosives which should lay to rest the silly concept that there was only 3 tons.A 5 Eyewitness News crew in Iraq may have been just a door away from materials that could be used to detonate nuclear weapons. The evidence is in videotape shot by Reporter Dean Staley and Photographer Joe Caffrey at or near the Al Qaqaa munitions facility.
The video shows a cable locking a door shut. That cable is connected by a copper colored seal.
A spokesperson for the International Atomic Energy Agency told 5 Eyewitness News that seal appears to be one used by their inspectors. "In Iraq they were used when there was a concern that this could have a, what we call, dual use purpose, that there could be a nuclear weapons application."

) an explosives expert (I'll admit, I can't vouch for his expertise) said the explosives and fuses shown in the story were the type used in clearing rock in construction projects, not the more dangerous kind that were referred to in the NYT story this week. I wouldn't draw a conclusion based solely on this expert's opinion, but since KSTP TV's information on the facility was really misleading, I'm reluctant to believe that these explosives were those favored by the military, or by terrorists.