The war on Iraq was an atrocity

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#61 Postby JTD » Mon Dec 01, 2003 6:24 pm

coriolis wrote:1. True, no WMD's have been found (yet). But why was the UN performing all those inspections prior to the US intervention? If I remember correctly, France and Germany accepted that the WMD's existed but wanted diplomacy to "have a chance." Even if SH was a tinpot dictator and was lying to his neighbors about having them, then he needed to be dealt with. And don't forget that SH did in fact use poison gas against the Kurds.

2. What about the atrocities committed by Saddam and his people? Mass graves and torture chambers have been found.

3. With the terror he imposed on the Iraquis, no internal opposition had a chance. I read a story about his rise to power through murder, fear and 5. Same question on the report that soldiers "executed" Iraquis. And were these Iraquis combatents or noncombatents?

6. Newsworld International was started by the Canadian Broadcasting Network, and is now run by a French media company. Al Gore is working towards buying this service to set up a left-leaning rival to FOX.
http://www.nydailynews.com/business/sto ... 9917c.html

terror.

4. In that incident where the Palestine Hotel was targeted, were shots fired, and were journalists killed? Can you find another source for that story, because I watched the coverage pretty closely, and I don't remember it.


OK. Many of you have echoed Coriolis's statements so let me respond to him/her point by point.

All right. Coriolis, it is now clear that the evidence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, especially, nuclear weapons was highly exaggerated. The reason France and Germany thought WMD's existed is that they too bought into the Iraqi exiles tales of stashes of WMD's waiting to be used. In fact, Donald Rumsfeld thought that these exiles were so convincing, that he used just what they told him in secret meetings before the war and said that he knew where stashes of weapons could be found. They had told him, he said. The exiles were lying because they had their own motives to see the end of Saddam Hussein. Rumself bought their line so readily because he too was desperate for war. Here's a more detailed explanation on the lack of WMD's:
WHY have American and British Forces not found any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? The most plausible answer is that there are none, in the true sense of the word, even though forces are likely eventually to come across some very unpleasant weapons created by Saddam Hussein.

But Tony Blair and President Bush cannot give this answer, as they asserted unambiguously that these weapons existed in justifying the war. So members of Blair’s Cabinet and Bush’s Administration have felt obliged to offer less plausible accounts of where the elusive weapons might be.

The most ambitious so far were put forward yesterday by Geoff Hoon, the Defense Secretary, in a fabulously implausible narrative which contradicted earlier statements by his Prime Minister, his colleagues and himself.

It is an understatement to say that the failure to find such weapons is an embarrassment for the British and American governments. Hans Blix, the chief United Nations weapons inspector, was always very careful to say that he was looking for weapons which were “unaccounted for”, discrepancies between what Iraq could have produced and what it had declared.

Blix never said they definitely existed. But Blair, Bush and their henchmen stepped repeatedly over that line, particularly in the frenetic and ultimately unsuccessful attempts to secure the backing of a second UN resolution.

In particular, Blair presented Parliament with a “dossier” on September 24 last year, headlined Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction — The Assessment of the British Government. It said that “Intelligence has established beyond doubt . . . that Saddam has continued to produce chemical and biological weapons”.

The most dramatic claim of the dossier, much publicized, was that Saddam’s “military planning allows for some of the WMD (weapons of mass destruction) to be ready within 45 minutes of an order to use them”.

You do not have to be a fan of BBC Radio’s Today program, or its breathlessly shrill style of interrogation, to concede that there is such a thing as a bad performance. Hoon delivered one yesterday in response to a shrewd series of questions, also the ones which any ordinary, interested person would ask first.

Top of that list is why the Saddam regime, facing annihilation, did not use weapons of mass destruction if it had them. According to Hoon, this is because the weapons were “scattered across Iraq (and) were well hidden” while UN inspectors were in the country.

But then they weren’t ready to use in 45 minutes, surely? Hoon appeared unaware of this claim. “I do not recall ever saying that. I specifically did not put a time on it,” he said.

No, he didn’t say it, but his Government did, and the claim is central to Britain’s justification for pressing ahead with the war. Hoon himself, just before the outbreak of war, made a speech that gave warning of the “very real threat today . . . of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction”.

Hoon then alleges that the sudden onslaught of war disrupted command structures and prevented the weapons being reassembled. It didn’t seem that sudden at the time. Several days passed between the departure of the UN inspectors and the start of the bombing. There was also a solid two weeks after the bombing started in which Iraqi command structures looked anything but shattered, to the point where Washington was grimly bracing itself for a long war.

Why, on Hoon’s “well hidden” account, has nothing of significance been found, even though American forces have been in the country for more than a month? There is a limit to the number of possible hiding places. US Intelligence had identified about 150 sites worth investigation, and are already believed to have visited about half, according to analysts. Not one of these has yet yielded a “smoking gun”.

On Hoon’s account, the regime was organized and skilful enough to dismantle, transport and hide all these weapons beyond the detective skills of US forces, and yet so disorganized that it could not retrieve and deploy even one.

What about the chance that weapons have been smuggled out, to Syria, or sold to terrorists? This possibility has been gaining currency; it has been raised by David Kay, a former UN weapons inspector, and Alexander Downer, the Australian Foreign Minister, although citing reports he said he could not verify.

But that, too, is implausible. Smuggled out to Syria? Not likely. Damascus is certainly capable of making serious misjudgments, but knowingly allowing Iraq’s banned weapons across its border would be only slightly short of accepting Saddam himself, a risk which no sane regime, looking at the American force camped in the region, would contemplate.

Could they have been sold to terrorist groups? It is unlikely that they would want them, or pay much for them. The kind of chemical or biological weapons Saddam is accused of making are needed in large quantities, say a tonne, to be of any use. They need complex, expensive and conspicuous delivery systems, such as aircraft equipped with sprays or missiles. Terrorists targeting subway trains or water supplies can make do with something far simpler, such as ricin.

The exception is weapons-grade uranium or plutonium. That is scarce, small in volume and easily hidden, and could be sold for a lot of money. But the nuclear part of the weapons program is widely thought to have been the least developed; Saddam is not believed to have overcome the difficulty of buying or making weapons-grade material.

Gary Samore, director of studies at the International Institute of Strategic Studies, and an expert on Iraq’s weapons program, also questions the motivation. “If I were an Iraqi fleeing for my life, I’d take cash before bottles of liquid anthrax,” he says. True, documents can be easily destroyed or transported, he says, but missiles are particularly hard to transport or conceal.

The most plausible account so far is the one given by Robin Cook, the former Foreign Secretary, in his resignation speech. This is that Iraq certainly made highly unpleasant weapons but not in large enough quantities or at a level of readiness to warrant the term “mass destruction”.

“Iraq probably has no weapons of mass destruction in the commonly understood sense of the term — namely a credible device capable of being delivered against a strategic city target,” he said.

“It probably still has biological toxins and battlefield chemical munititions, but it has had them since the 1980s when US companies sold Saddam anthrax agents and the then British Government approved chemical and munitions factories.”

There is no question that Saddam’s regime produced, and used, terrible weapons. The odds are that forces will uncover evidence of them. But this is a long way from the claims made in the run-up to war, or the accounts now offered about why the weapons remain so hard to find.

What they said about weapons of mass destruction:

“If we know Saddam has weapons of mass destruction — and we do — does it make any sense for the world to wait to confront him?” “It (Iraq regime) possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons. It is seeking nuclear weapons . . . we know that the regime has produced thousands of tons of chemical agents, including mustard gas, sarin nerve gas, and VX gas” George Bush, October 7, 2002

“We are dealing with a very real threat today, that of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction” Geoff Hoon, March 10, 2003

“His (Saddam Hussein’s) regime has large, unaccounted-for stockpiles of chemical and biological weapon sand he has an active program to acquire and develop nuclear weapons” Donald Rumsfeld, January 20, 2003

“Every statement I make today is backed up by sources, solid sources. These are not assertions. What we’re giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence.

“In fact, they (Iraqi regime) can produce enough dry biological agent in a single month to kill thousands upon thousands of people. “Saddam Hussein has never accounted for vast amounts of chemical weaponry: 550 artillery shells with mustard, 30,000 empty munitions, and enough precursors to increase his stockpile to as much as 500 tons of chemical agents. If we consider just one category of missing weaponry, 6,500 bombs from the Iran-Iraq war. . . Our conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between 100 and 500 tonnes of chemical-weapons agent. Even the low end of 100 tonnes of agent would enable Saddam Hussein to cause mass casualties across more than 100 square miles of territory, an area nearly five times the size of Manhattan” Colin Powell, address to the UN Security Council, February 5, 2003

“It is right (going to war) because weapons of mass destruction, chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, are a real threat to the security of the world and this country” Tony Blair, House of Commons, January 15, 2003

“What I believe the assessed intelligence has established beyond doubt is that Saddam has continued to produce chemical and biological weapons, and that he has been able to extend the range of his ballistic missile program

His (Saddam Hussein’s) military planning allows for some of the WMD to be ready within 45 minutes of an order to use them.” Tony Blair, Foreword to Iraq “dossier”

All right. Newsworld international is not some type of propaganda station. It is owned by the CBC, which is as respected as the BBC. Is the BBC propaganda too? Is anything you disagree with propaganda? Look at the list of people interviewed for the deadline iraq documentary? These people, who told the horrid tales, are well respected:
Omar Bec, Head of Newsgathering, Al Jazeera - english Al Jazeera website
Jim Axelrod, Reporter, CBS - CBS Iraq war coverage
Rym Brahimi, Correspondent, CNN - CNN Iraq war coverage
William Branigin, Reporter, Washington Post - washingtonpost.com Iraq war coverage
Ben Brown, Special Correspondent, BBC - BBC Iraq war coverage
Patrick Brown, Beijing Correspondent, CBC - CBC Iraq war coverage
Molly Bingham, Photographer, World Picture News - World Picture News website
John F. Burns, Chief Foreign Correspondent, The New York Times - New York Times Iraq war coverage
Seamus Conlan, Photographer, worldpicturenews.com/People Magazine - World Picture News website
Lachlan Carmichael, Deputy Bureau Chief, Agence France Presse - AFP website
Jacques Charmelot, Diplomatic Correspondent, Agence France Presse - AFP website
David Chater, Correspondent, Sky News - Sky News website
Rob Curtis, Photographer, Army Times - Rob Curtis homepage
Jim Dwyer, Reporter, New York Times - New York Times Iraq war coverage
Margaret Evans, European Correspondent, CBC News - CBC Iraq war coverage
Matthew Fisher, Reporter, National Post - the National Post website
Jonathan Foreman, Reporter, New York Post - the New York Post website
Ruth Fremson, Photographer, New York Times - New York Times Iraq war coverage
Maurizio Gambarini, Photographer, DPR (Germany)
Patrick Graham, Freelance Reporter
William Hammond, Senior Historian, U.S. Army Center of Military History - U.S. Army Center of Military History website
Steven Hird, Photographer, Reuters - Reuters website
Mishal Husain, Anchor, BBC - BBC Iraq war coverage
Marina Jimenez, Reporter, National Post/Global TV - the National Post website
Ted Koppel, Anchor, ABC - ABC NEW Iraq war coverage
Donald Lee, Cameraman, CBS - CBS Iraq war coverage
Peter Mansbridge, Chief Correspondent, CBC News - CBC Iraq war coverage
Barry Moody, Middle East/Africa Editor, Reuters - Reuters website
Don Murray, Senior European Correspondent, CBC News - CBC Iraq war coverage
Samia Nakhoul, Gulf Bureau Chief, Reuters - Reuters website
Andy Nelson, Photographer, Christian Science Monitor - Christian Science Monitor Iraq war coverage
Stephanie Nolen, Reporter, Globe and Mail - the Globe & Mail website
Don North, Freelance Reporter
Kurt Pitzer, Reporter, worldpicturenews.com/People Magazine - World Picture News website
John Roberts, Reporter, CBS - CBS Iraq war coverage
Lloyd Robertson, Anchor, CTV - CTV News Iraq war coverage
Walter Rodgers, Reporter, CNN - CNN Iraq war coverage
Danny Schechter, Executive Producer, Globalvision - Globalvision website
Fred Scott, Cameraman, BBC - BBC Iraq war coverage
John Simpson, World Affairs Editor, BBC - BBC Iraq war coverage
Ross Simpson, Reporter, Associated Press Radio - Associated Press website
Caroline Sinz, Reporter, France-3 TV - FR3 website
Sean Smith, Photographer, Guardian - Sean Smith photo gallery on the Guardian website
Alexandre Trudeau, Independent filmmaker - more information about embedded in Baghdad, Trudeau's documentary
Peter Turnley, Photojournalist, Corbis - view some of Peter Turnley's photos
Ann Scott Tyson, Reporter, Christian Science Monitor - Christian Science Monitor Iraq war coverage
Craig White, Cameraman, NBC - NBC news war coverage
Paul William Roberts, Reporter, Harper’s Magazine - Harper's Magazine website
Michael Wolff, Media Critic, New York Magazine - a collection of Michael Wolff articles for New York Magazine
Paul Workman, Paris Correspondent, CBC - CBC Iraq war coverage
Geoffrey York, Beijing Bureau Chief, Globe and Mail - the Globe & Mail website

Are all of these people part of a conspiracy to bring down Bush?

Need to make a phone call. Much more later. This is just a preliminary reply.
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#62 Postby chadtm80 » Mon Dec 01, 2003 6:35 pm

Ah yes... Hes back!! Just got in from work.. Let me get some dinner in my belly, then its game on ;-)
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#63 Postby Pburgh » Mon Dec 01, 2003 7:07 pm

:vote: :vote:

Ticka, I'm so proud of you!!!! Way to go!!

Paolo :4: Why do you even post in America if you hate us so much??
:boared: The only reason that you have the freedom to post here is because our men and women in World War II fought for your freedom. You bore me.
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#64 Postby JTD » Mon Dec 01, 2003 8:01 pm

As for the argument that Saddam needed to be removed because of atrocities against his own people. This argument has some reasonance with me but what gets to me is that Bush didn't use that argument for war. He tried to make it sound like Iraq was an imminent threat and Dick Cheney said on Meet the Press on March 16, 2003 that Hussein was building nuclear weapons. He also said Al Qaeda=Saddam Hussein. Even Bush backed away from that. His reasons for going to war turned out to be false. If, on the other hand, he had said that Iraq needed to be invaded because of human rights violations (the way Pres. Clinton) justified Kosovo), I probably would have agreed. I'm just mad at the lies.
But then again.... there are equally horrid dictators. What about the genocide in Rwanda, what about the butchers in Bejing (Tinnamen Square), Zimbabwe. Should we remove them all? Do we honestly want the U.S to be the world's police force. That will exhaust the citizens of the U.S and her resources.
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#65 Postby blizzard » Mon Dec 01, 2003 8:48 pm

Lindaloo wrote:Yeah, he would have responded by, dropping one little bomb and then that would have been it.


Pretty much what papa Bush did in '91. I still think that we all would have been better off if they would have finished what they started in '91. They had more opportunities to take out SH then, but decided against it. Big Mistake IMO. So to criticize any President for what they did or didn't do or what they would have done (which no-one can know) needs to start with Papa Bush.

I have to say that this thread has been an interesting one. I plan on stayin out of the rest of it except to read it. But keep it going.

Oh, yeah and one more thing. All points posted here I am sure could find some kind of backing in some media somewhere, just depends on what side of the fence you are on and what you are reading.
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#66 Postby wxid » Mon Dec 01, 2003 9:10 pm

j wrote:urrrrghhhh..........*%&##**^$

Fact - The worst day so far for casualties, has been less than the "best" day for casualties during the Vietnam War.

Let's put things in perspective for all those who think this War is such a waste. Suppose things were reversed. You are now the Iraqi innocent person, and in the next room your wife is being raped repeatedly while the children are tied in chairs and forced to watch. Outside, your brother is having his hands chopped off. You are next, and they have decided to be kind to you and only push you off the top of a 4 story building.

I think that anybody that can label this War an "atrocity", can't possibly have a sympathetic bone in their body. Perhaps they would be better off over there in Iraq or Afghanistan fighting for the other side, since they feel we are so wrong!




AGAIN ******************************************************************** as MENTIONED ABOVE, 80-100 KIA in 1 month represents AS GOOD AS YOU COULD ASK FOR !!!! If one looks at this in CONTEXT, that is only a 1-2 % failure rate, if that. REMEMBER, in Vietnam, the US was loosing 100 GUYS PER DAY !!!!!!!!!!!!! That equals 2800 per week and totaled 58,000 plus over 10 years. Think about that! Can you imagine it? THAT was worth being concerned about. THIS is not. Remember WE don't know the facts, we blindly believe what we see in media and won't know the facts. What if Saddam did 911? We don't know. He was and is my first choice as to who stould to gain, wanted to and had the cash. The pilots were just low level pawns.
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#67 Postby stormchazer » Mon Dec 01, 2003 9:45 pm

jason0509 wrote:As for the argument that Saddam needed to be removed because of atrocities against his own people. This argument has some reasonance with me but what gets to me is that Bush didn't use that argument for war. He tried to make it sound like Iraq was an imminent threat and Dick Cheney said on Meet the Press on March 16, 2003 that Hussein was building nuclear weapons. He also said Al Qaeda=Saddam Hussein. Even Bush backed away from that. His reasons for going to war turned out to be false. If, on the other hand, he had said that Iraq needed to be invaded because of human rights violations (the way Pres. Clinton) justified Kosovo), I probably would have agreed. I'm just mad at the lies.
But then again.... there are equally horrid dictators. What about the genocide in Rwanda, what about the butchers in Bejing (Tinnamen Square), Zimbabwe. Should we remove them all? Do we honestly want the U.S to be the world's police force. That will exhaust the citizens of the U.S and her resources.


From the Bush State of the Union Address in Jan. 2003:

The dictator who is assembling the world's most dangerous weapons has already used them on whole villages -- leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind, or disfigured. Iraqi refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtained -- by torturing children while their parents are made to watch. International human rights groups have catalogued other methods used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape. If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning. (Applause.)

From his speech to the UN on Sept 12, 2002:

In 1991, Security Council Resolution 688 demanded that the Iraqi regime cease at once the repression of its own people, including the systematic repression of minorities -- which the Council said, threatened international peace and security in the region. This demand goes ignored.

Last year, the U.N. Commission on Human Rights found that Iraq continues to commit extremely grave violations of human rights, and that the regime's repression is all pervasive. Tens of thousands of political opponents and ordinary citizens have been subjected to arbitrary arrest and imprisonment, summary execution, and torture by beating and burning, electric shock, starvation, mutilation, and rape. Wives are tortured in front of their husbands, children in the presence of their parents -- and all of these horrors concealed from the world by the apparatus of a totalitarian state.

In 1991, the U.N. Security Council, through Resolutions 686 and 687, demanded that Iraq return all prisoners from Kuwait and other lands. Iraq's regime agreed. It broke its promise. Last year the Secretary General's high-level coordinator for this issue reported that Kuwait, Saudi, Indian, Syrian, Lebanese, Iranian, Egyptian, Bahraini, and Omani nationals remain unaccounted for -- more than 600 people. One American pilot is among them.


Bush Ultimatum to Saddam on March 18, 2003

In free Iraq there will be no more wars of aggression against your neighbors, no more poison factories, no more executions of dissidents, no more torture chambers and rape rooms.

The tyrant will soon be gone. The day of your liberation is near.


Need I say more?
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#68 Postby Bestofour » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:00 pm

If you support the war or not, it's important to support our troops who are fighting the war. I think we should reserve our opinions until everyone is back home.
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#69 Postby coriolis » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:01 pm

Jason, that all sounds impressive, but are those your words or are you re-typing (or worse copying and pasting) what you read somewhere? If it is the latter, please document your source. I HATE it when people type long posts that they are just copying from another source. (a copyright violation?) If all that was straight from your head, I'm impressed. If it's from a 3rd source, then we need to consider the source. I don't have time to seach the internet for sources that suit me and then copy them here. I'll say what I believe in my own words and keep it to the point.
Last edited by coriolis on Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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#70 Postby Miss Mary » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:08 pm

coriolis wrote:Jason, that all sounds impressive, but are those your words or are you re-typing (or worse copying and pasting) what you read somewhere? If it is the latter, please document your source. I HATE it when people type long posts that they are just copying from another source. (a copyright violation?) If all that was straight from your head, I'm impressed. If it's from a 3rd source, then we need to consider the source.


Good points Ed. A major pet peeve of mine too, I try to include the URL in addition to a heading - CNN, ABC, Time, etc. And a date.

With a nephew fighting over there with the 101st, this is a touchy subject for me. So I'm staying out of it. None of us wanted war, but now we're in it. To not support our President, is unthinkable to me. Oops, gave an opinion and I didn't intend to.

Back to citing sources, hopefully, and debating.

Mary
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#71 Postby coriolis » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:12 pm

My nephew is shipping out to Iraq after the holidays too.
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#72 Postby mf_dolphin » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:13 pm

I'll take exception to several of your points...

jason0509 wrote:WHY have American and British Forces not found any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? The most plausible answer is that there are none, in the true sense of the word, even though forces are likely eventually to come across some very unpleasant weapons created by Saddam Hussein.


Saddam had over 12 years to hid the WMD that he possessed. Based on his own declarations following the 1st war he could not account for large stockpiles of chemical weapons. Remember, Iraq is roughly the same size as California. With absolute control over the country it's not hard for me to imagine that these are still concealed somewhere in country. With somewhere around 150,000 troops, how long do you think it would take you to search the country if you had nothing else to do?

It is an understatement to say that the failure to find such weapons is an embarrassment for the British and American governments. Hans Blix, the chief United Nations weapons inspector, was always very careful to say that he was looking for weapons which were “unaccounted for”, discrepancies between what Iraq could have produced and what it had declared.

Blix never said they definitely existed. But Blair, Bush and their henchmen stepped repeatedly over that line, particularly in the frenetic and ultimately unsuccessful attempts to secure the backing of a second UN resolution.


Blix did demand that Iraq account for many chemical weapons which were catalogued but not destroyed before the inspectors were kicked out of the country the first time. Check your facts. Your statement about Blix is dead wrong.

Top of that list is why the Saddam regime, facing annihilation, did not use weapons of mass destruction if it had them.


There are several possible reasons for the failure of the Iraqi forces to use the WMD. 1 - The weapons were indeed dispersed and could not be moved in time for use. 2 - A consious decision not to use them in fear of the possible mass retaliation by allied forces. 3 - The WMD had been moved out of Iraq.


Why, on Hoon’s “well hidden” account, has nothing of significance been found, even though American forces have been in the country for more than a month? There is a limit to the number of possible hiding places. US Intelligence had identified about 150 sites worth investigation, and are already believed to have visited about half, according to analysts. Not one of these has yet yielded a “smoking gun”.


How many places do you count as limited in a country the size of Iraq? Again, this is roughly the same size as California. I could come up with a couple million sites without much of a problem. The 150 sites you mentioned were just the major known suspected labs. With 12 years without inspections and plenty of time during the final buildup these could have been sanitized fairly simply. Remember, chemical weapons can be produced in many multi-purpose type facilities. The same equipment used to produce medicine, processed food and even agricultural products can be used for chemical and biological weapons.

What about the chance that weapons have been smuggled out, to Syria, or sold to terrorists? This possibility has been gaining currency; it has been raised by David Kay, a former UN weapons inspector, and Alexander Downer, the Australian Foreign Minister, although citing reports he said he could not verify.

But that, too, is implausible. Smuggled out to Syria? Not likely. Damascus is certainly capable of making serious misjudgments, but knowingly allowing Iraq’s banned weapons across its border would be only slightly short of accepting Saddam himself, a risk which no sane regime, looking at the American force camped in the region, would contemplate.


How can you dismiss this as implausible? It certainly isn't back by any evidence that I can find. Syria has long been a very strong ally of Iraq and is long suspected of stockpiling it's own chemical arsenal. Where did Saddam's family turn up during the war? Damascus, Syria. They got there during the assault on Bagdad and yet you think it implausible that the WMD could have been shipped there? Syria was also helping Saddam sell oil illegally during the entir oil embargo in spite of UN sanctions. IMO Syria would have welcomed Saddam's arsenal with open arms.

Could they have been sold to terrorist groups? It is unlikely that they would want them, or pay much for them. The kind of chemical or biological weapons Saddam is accused of making are needed in large quantities, say a tonne, to be of any use. They need complex, expensive and conspicuous delivery systems, such as aircraft equipped with sprays or missiles. Terrorists targeting subway trains or water supplies can make do with something far simpler, such as ricin.


This whole statement is full of gross innaccuracies. Ricin is a much less effective chemical agent than any of those preduced by Iraq. The ease with which anthrax was disperssed in the US shows just how easily and deadly this toxin is. WHere was the " complex, expensive and conspicuous delivery systems" that you state were required? Ricin was developed for use as an assassination agent. It is not effectively dispersed by either air or water so it's practicaly useless on any kind of large scale attack.
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#73 Postby Miss Mary » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:19 pm

coriolis wrote:My nephew is shipping out to Iraq after the holidays too.


Ed - so sorry to hear that. What's his first name? I'll keep him in my prayers too. Kris went back on Saturday and is supposed to come back in February. If he does, that will make it a year he's been in either Iraq and/or Kuwait. But with the Army, no date is firm.

Mary
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#74 Postby coriolis » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:40 pm

Mary, his name is Dan Lyons. I'm very proud of him. Thanks for the concern and prayers.


(handing the baton to Marshall) Go Marshall!
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#75 Postby mf_dolphin » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:49 pm

Ed I'll add Dan to my prayer list!

As far as the chemical / biological weapons information, I had some rather close experience with it during my military service. I spent 2 years at Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah. That's the center of the Army's chemical and biological weapons program. We were well briefed when we got assigned there and it was the only time in my 9 years where family members were issued gas masks to be kept at home "just in case". :-( There were areas on their test ranges that were considered too hot for anyone 20+ years after open air testing was stopped. The agents that we know Saddam developed and tested were some of the most lethal known to God or man! These categories of weapons are far easier to produce and distribute than any nuclear weapon by far.

As far as the baton...we can always run a relay ;-)
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#76 Postby coriolis » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:52 pm

OK, you bombard with the facts, I'll dazzle with the BS.
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#77 Postby blizzard » Mon Dec 01, 2003 10:53 pm

I was also trained in NBC during my stint in the Army. Was our Troop NBC NCO for Spt troop 3rd ACR, Ft. Bliss Tx (at the time, now Ft. Carson Co.). There are many agents out there that can be manufactured at home that are lethal in small quantities and can be delivered in a vast variety of home-made methods also. Scared the He!! out of me knowing that agents can be so readily had.

I was tasked with getting all NBC items ready to ship and to distribute to troops in our unit before the deployment to Iraq the first go around. Our unit shipped out in October, 1990. Not a very fun job at all.
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#78 Postby stormraiser » Mon Dec 01, 2003 11:10 pm

This one is a little to heated for me. It seems like someone has a bit of vengeance in his keyboard. Sure there have been mistakes made, but in the long wrong, it will have to be judged by whether the people of Iraq are better off (when this thing is over and the rebuilding has taken place) and the world a safer place. I think the right decision was made. At least the President wasn't engaged in some lewd act and decided to drop the bombs to get the attention off of himself.
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#79 Postby mf_dolphin » Mon Dec 01, 2003 11:27 pm

What a team Ed! :-)

Blizzard, most people just don't realize how lethal this stuff is. Several of the agents developed by Iraq could be delivered by something as simple as an aerosol can just like room deoderizer. In a confined space or large crowd the casualties could run into the thousands.

Here's an interesting article I found concerning Iraq's use of chemical/biological weaons during the Iran/Iraq war.

http://projects.sipri.se/cbw/research/f ... -1984.html
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#80 Postby GalvestonDuck » Tue Dec 02, 2003 12:15 am

coriolis wrote:Jason, that all sounds impressive, but are those your words or are you re-typing (or worse copying and pasting) what you read somewhere? If it is the latter, please document your source. I HATE it when people type long posts that they are just copying from another source. (a copyright violation?) If all that was straight from your head, I'm impressed. If it's from a 3rd source, then we need to consider the source. I don't have time to seach the internet for sources that suit me and then copy them here. I'll say what I believe in my own words and keep it to the point.


Yeah...what Ed said. :)

Seriously, Jason...did you type all that out or use speech-to-text software or was it copied from another source?

Painfully long. But I do hope it's your own thoughts. I would hate to see a debate between a Storm2K member and a non-credited journalist who can't respond.
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