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Unease Grows in Washington Over Fruitless Weapons Search

 
 
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 10:38 am
Did anyone watch Ted Koppel's Nightline last night 5/27? The entire show was on this subject. ---BumbleBeeBoogie

IRAQ: Unease Grows in Washington Over Fruitless Weapons Search
Jim Lobe - IPS - 5/28/03

The failure of the U.S. military to find any strong evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (WMD), let alone links between former President Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda, is creating growing unease within both Congress and the administration of President George W. Bush.

WASHINGTON, May 27 (IPS) - The failure of the U.S. military to find any strong evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (WMD), let alone links between former President Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda, is creating growing unease within both Congress and the administration of President George W. Bush.

The administration sold the war it launched in March with allies the United Kingdom and Australia based on its contention that Baghdad had massive quantities of WMD, some of which could have been transferred to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda or similar groups to carry out an attack against the United States or its allies.

But after seven weeks of uncontested control of Iraq's territory, it has yet to find even one gram of biological, chemical or nuclear material designed for weapons use, despite an intensive search by specially trained teams that have investigated all of the sites identified by the intelligence community before the war as most likely to hold WMD.

''The Bush team's extensive hype of WMD in Iraq as justification for a pre-emptive invasion has become more than embarrassing,'' said Democratic Senator Robert Byrd, the longest-serving lawmaker in Congress, who has emerged as its most scathing critic of the war.

''It has raised serious questions about prevarication and the reckless use of power. Were our troops needlessly put at risk? Were countless Iraq civilians killed and maimed when war was not really necessary? Was the American public deliberately misled? Was the world?'' he asked in a blistering address on the Senate floor last week.

It is not only Democrats who are raising such questions. ''Obviously, it concerns us that we have what I think are credible reports that weapons exist that cannot be accounted for,'' said the chairman of the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, Representative Porter Goss of Florida.

Goss and his Senate counterpart, Pat Roberts, are already planning hearings to assess information acquired by the intelligence community and used by the administration to rally public opinion behind the war.

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has also launched a review, reportedly at the behest of Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, whose own pressure on the intelligence community to unearth evidence of WMD and links between Baghdad and al-Qaeda ironically has been blamed by retired intelligence officers for distorting the process that led to the U.S.-led attack.

Rumsfeld last year created an Office of Special Plans (OSP) under the direction of Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and Undersecretary William Luti precisely because they were unhappy that the evidence compiled by the CIA and other intelligence agencies, particularly about alleged ties between Baghdad and al-Qaeda, was extremely weak.

As explained by W. Patrick Lang, former director of Middle East analysis at the Defense Intelligence Agency, to the 'New York Times', the OSP ''started picking out things that supported their thesis and stringing them into arguments that they could use with the president''.

''It's not intel,'' he said, using an insider's word for intelligence, ''it's political propaganda''.

The Pentagon naturally strongly denies this, and even the CIA, some of whose analysts were reportedly furious about what they saw as manipulation of intelligence by the Pentagon, insists that, while the al-Qaeda evidence was always considered shaky, its own evidence that Baghdad did retain significant quantities of WMD in violation of United Nations resolutions was strong.

Both agencies have offered explanations for why no WMD have been uncovered. Pentagon Undersecretary for Policy Douglas Feith recently told Congress that only about 20 percent of roughly 600 suspected sites have been investigated, although he conceded that most of those considered most likely to hold WMD have been examined.

''I am confident that we will eventually be able to piece together a fairly complete account of Iraq's WMD programmes, but the process will take months and perhaps years,'' he testified 12 days ago. ''We're learning about new sites every day.''

Other Pentagon officials have suggested that perhaps Saddam Hussein did destroy all his WMD just before the war, or that he had a ''just-in-time'' weapons system that kept key chemicals separated in civilian neighbourhoods or other unlikely areas until the moment they would be combined and used, or that the weapons remain hidden in remote mountain areas deep in the ground where they are unlikely ever to be discovered, or that all the suspect sites were looted before U.S. troops could secure them, as happened with a major nuclear site.

Some have even suggested that Baghdad may have destroyed all the weapons in the early 1990s, but then acted as if it still had them in order to deter an attack. Kenneth Adelman, a member of Rumsfeld's Defense Policy Board and a major war booster, said he thought that Hussein might have launched a ''massive disinformation campaign'' to that end.

The strongest evidence collected to date, aside from special chemical warfare gear that could have been left over from the Iran-Iraq war, is the discovery two weeks ago of two mobile trailers of the kind that Secretary of State Colin Powell described to the U.N. Security Council before the war as mobile units used to create biological weapons on site.

While Pentagon officials have insisted that no other purpose for the vans could be explained, they have still failed to find any specific biological or chemical evidence, such as residues in the equipment, which proves they were used for that purpose. The trailers remain under investigation.

Even before their discovery, however, the chief task force created by the Pentagon to find the weapons--consisting of biologists, chemists, arms-treaty experts, nuclear operators, translators and computer experts--was told to wind down its operations and prepare to return home.

Meanwhile, the administration, in addition to reducing expectations over WMD, has tried to focus public attention instead on the discovery and exhumation of mass graves of alleged victims of Hussein's rule, in part to provide an alternative justification for going to war.

Some analysts have argued that the administration relied far too heavily on defectors, particularly those supplied by the Iraqi National Congress (INC) led by Ahmed Chalabi who has made little secret of his ambitions since 1992--when he created the group--to replace Hussein in Baghdad.

Indeed, the highest-ranking Iraqi official ever to defect from Iraq and Hussein's own son-in-law, Hussein Kamel, told U.S., British and U.N. interrogators in 1995 that Iraq had destroyed all its WMD after the first Gulf War, and also warned them against Kidhir Hamza, a nuclear scientist who defected in 1994, as ''a professional liar''.

Like other defectors used by the INC, Hamza played a key role in persuading Washington that Hussein was revving up his nuclear programme, for which no evidence has been found. Hamza is now in Baghdad working with the U.S. occupation.

''This could conceivably be the greatest intelligence hoax of all time,'' noted Representative Jane Harman, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee last week. ''I doubt it, but we have to ask.''
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 10:42 am
BBB, What is more disconcerting at this point are the orphans of Iraq; they are not being cared for. Damn the WMD's, it's a waste of time and money. Why we keep concentration on the past when children are in need of food and shelter, who cares about what WMD's are hidden or not hidden? c.i.
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Dartagnan
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 11:03 am
What concerns me is that the neocons who control our foreign policy are now banging the same drums about Iran. "They'd better stop what they're doing. We know what they're up to. They're not doing enough to satisfy our concerns..."

Sound familiar?
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Frank Apisa
 
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Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 11:09 am
Hopefully, Bush and his gangster handlers will be gone after the next election -- and this whole sad episode will be something for historians to deal with.

To think that many of his staunchest backers are the same people who constantly harped on Bill Clinton for embarrassing the United States!

The world community had absolutely no problem understanding and overlooking the foibles of Bill Clinton -- but this petty little man is truly holding us up to ridicule.
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GreenEyes
 
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Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 11:32 am
Frank Apisa wrote:
Hopefully, Bush and his gangster handlers will be gone after the next election -- and this whole sad episode will be something for historians to deal with.

To think that many of his staunchest backers are the same people who constantly harped on Bill Clinton for embarrassing the United States!

The world community had absolutely no problem understanding and overlooking the foibles of Bill Clinton -- but this petty little man is truly holding us up to ridicule.


Sad but true.
0 Replies
 
Jim
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 12:37 pm
I admit it - several months ago I bought the administration line that vast quantities of WMD would be found after the liberation. If I had known then what we all know now I probably wouldn't have supported the action.

So, what do we do now? I'm afraid we have a tiger by the tail in Iraq.
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sozobe
 
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Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 12:39 pm
Jim, thanks so much for saying that. It is something I have really wondered about -- who bought it, what they think now. Big of you.
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Booman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 01:02 pm
During the incursion,I was asking, "why aren't they using the WMD's"? In the aftermath, I asked why wern't they found. Three months later, I have gloating, and "I told you so" rights, but there's no fun in it. Too many lives were lost. And the horror of it is, Bush may continue his treachery, because the economy has bounced back. You know, like the German economy bounced back in the late thirties....Hey!...I'm just sayin'.....
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Frank Apisa
 
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Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 01:53 pm
One of the things that is bothering me a lot is the fact that so many people who bought into the WMD reasoning -- are now saying, "Oh, so what? We did a good thing -- and it really doesn't matter if there are weapons there."

I'm with Sozobe: My congratulations and respect go out to Jim who felt comfortable with the reasoning for the war -- now sees that things are not what they were supposed to be -- and acknowledges discomfort with that situation.

It is a heads up thing to do.
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Dartagnan
 
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Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 02:13 pm
Seems like the new party line is that the Iraqis somehow destroyed their vast store of WMDs before the US took over. That's Rumsfeld's latest explanation of why things have turned out so unpredictably...
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cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 02:32 pm
We will never know the truth.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 02:39 pm
especially with 'this' administration. c.i.
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Booman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 04:44 pm
D'artagnan,
...Wouldn't you like to be tere when hesays that, so you could ask, "So if they were telling the truth,we eally didn't have to invade them did we?"
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 06:10 pm
Here's another twist: I always thought Saddam had WMD's, but I still didn't feel we were justified to a pre-emptive attack, because our military is maintained for "Defensive" use - not aggressive use. I really thought it was just a matter of time before WMD's would be discovered in Iraq. Saddam and his henchmen really made a huge mistake by not coming clean in their 12,000 page declaration; they just reiterated what was known back in 1998. If they really destroyed their WMD's, they needed to show when, where, and how they did it. By playing cat and mouse, they lost it BIG time. c.i.
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Mr Stillwater
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 06:41 pm
CI - nice to think so, but I remember Colin Powell showing us all pictures and diagrams, 'clear evidence' of WMDs that have left no traces EVEN WHEN DESTROYED. Saddam liked being in charge of that country, if they had been destroyed and the evidence of that destruction would have kept him there - then he would have been in front of the cameras with Hans Blix watching it.

The scenario was played out with the expectation that there would be either some sort of weaponry or at least the evidence of manufacture. At this point you can't 'uninvade' Iraq and it's lucrative oil resources and frankly the USMC would be invading Canada and Mexico to neutralise their WMDs before that's going to happen.
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dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 06:53 pm
Indeed - but there is a certain grim humour in saying - as I said months ago - if you don't find anything, you gonna give iraq back?
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 07:03 pm
<bm>
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Booman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 09:48 pm
C.I,
...That's sorta' like saying, the rape victim shoudn't have been such a slut in the first place...... Which means I'm not saying you are incorrect in your assessment, but it doesn't justify the violation.
0 Replies
 
mamajuana
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 10:07 pm
CI - what I don't understand is why, if they reiterated what they said in 1998, is it considered not true now? And how exactly did they not come clean?

When Colin Powell made his famous speech at the UN, using all that cobbled together evidence, and it proved to be not true, wouldn't the same argument hold for the WH not to have come clean?

I don't think we will ever know the truth, either, but then, throughout history we've never really known all the truth about anything.

But truth? A made-up story by the WH and given out by them about a rescue of a private in Iraq, and all of the details were fabricated? A nice little story about top gun and the aircraft carrier landing, when those details were also shown to have been made up? All those justifications made to the American people for liberating Iraq, when it turns out that almost none of them are true? What's the track record here?
0 Replies
 
Booman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 May, 2003 11:37 pm
Hmm..... White House man speaks with forked tongue.
0 Replies
 
 

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