Posted
by
timothy
from the absence-of-evidence dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Severalnewsoutlets are reporting that the United States has officially ended the The Iraq Survey Group's search for WMDs. Prior to the war, WMDs were named as a justification for a 'preemptive' invasion."
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The US Presidential election is over, now we see the following:
Employment again tanks
Trade deficit skyrocketing
Torture still going on in Iraqi prisons
The war is going worse than we thought (the prez actually admitted)
No WMD stockpiles found
Where is the outrage? There's no outrage because people have been so baffled with bullsh!t they don't know what to believe, a 50/50 election
result illustrated this clearly.
"The Iraq Survey Group, which was responsible for the search, goes on, but its focus now is trying to help counter the Iraqi insurgency."
Well, at leas they have full employement.
Don't spend all that political capital at the same gumball machine.
The US Presidential election is over, now we see the following:
I'm not going to get into a debate on the veracity of your statements, but none of the claims you listed are post-election news. The economy and Iraq both received very extensive news coverage before the election so I'm not quite sure what your point is.
I'm not going to get into a debate on the veracity of your statements, but none of the claims you listed are post-election news. The economy and Iraq both received very extensive news coverage before the election so I'm not quite sure what your point is.
Prior to the election it was treated as speculation and downplayed by the Whitehouse (read: the president and his innercicle of advisors) Since the election they are now admitting failures, regarding how badly the war is going (before 'these were isolate
Where is the outrage? There's no outrage because people have been so baffled with bullsh!t they don't know what to believe, a 50/50 election result illustrated this clearly.
I found the whole election to be ironic. This election was about "values," supposedly. Apparently it's morally right to support an administration with a culture of trampling on human rights, "disappearing" thousands of "enemy combatants," outright torture, lying to start a war, killing 100,000 innocent civilians, and destroying the liv
When Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather, two of the more well influential journalists quit in the middle of a war, that's no coincidence. We obviously have alot of things to hide.
Just count 20 years from now, and all of us Americans will be as shocked as the Germans citizens who discovered the prisoner camp mistreatments for the first time.
Like I said, wait 20 years. The gassing and incinerating was not public knowledge until years after Allies troops invaded German territory. At the time of the war, nazi mistreatment was not on your daily newspaper covers.
Vice versa, cheerleader posing is about the only thing acceptable enough to broadcast. Since it won't hurt Bush's chance of getting back in the office.
The US Presidential election is over, now we see the following: Employment again tanks
Trust me, I'm the last person on Slashdot who would hold up Bush for anything but ridicule, but the employment numbers are still going up... for now. In the last year, employment almost recovered the 2+ million jobs lost since Bush took office. Granted, those are false numbers, pumped up by unsupportable tax cuts that are making states go broke. I suspect that Bush supporters may have even hired people as an under-the
No, I'm the last person on Slashdot who would support W.
You are quite correct, that employment is actually increasing. The quality of those jobs relative to the jobs that were lost during the recession I do not know, though I've read that many people switching jobs have ended up taking significant cuts in pay and/or benefits. There are a lot of new jobs that have to be created to employ new people entering the workforce, something like 150k/month.
Also, to be fair, a President has less impact on the day-to
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday January 12, 2005 @03:54PM (#11339826)
Your post says you are angry, but then you sigh and heave and -- inevitably -- you give up, shut up, and go on with your life. Your opposition to the war consists of posting on Slashdot about it, in a section that nobody reads.
LOOK IN THE FUCKING MIRROR! YOU ARE THE PROBLEM! If you want people to be outraged, then BE OUTRAGED YOURSELF and DO SOMETHING WITH THAT ANGER. There are still anti-war speeches taking place -- go and listen to one. Go take part in a rally, hell, START a rally yourself. Get your friends and neighbors to go, and be an ACTIVE citizen, instead of someone who sits back, complains, and votes democrat. Write editorials, get in touch with the public, and get people to channel their own anger with yours.
You talk about the election being 50/50. Well guess what, buddy: BOTH MAJOR CANDIDATES SUPPORTED THE WAR. You think voting for them sent any kind of message? The democrats are the ones that gave Bush the power in the first place. The democrats are the ones that still won't take a stand against it. Why are YOU content to vote for a party that you don't agree with on this incredibly important issue??
Now is the time to start acting, not yet another four years from now when it's too late to change anything. Look up your local Green Party [gp.org] and become an active member of it.
It's worth several hours of my weekend to protest the war and go to political meetings. I don't understand when you say you're too busy watching sitcoms and playing World of Warcraft.
You know, I may dissagree with some of the reasons the two of you are angry. I think Kerry would have been as bad or worse than Bush. I don't think Bush is a complete idiot, or deliberately lied about the wmd's. But I do think he's not interested in reduceing the governments burden on it's citizens and is way to happy to sign rights limiting legislation we niegther need nor want.
But a your post well deserves the insightfull mod. One should not just say "this is wrong" and go back to thier easy chair to
> The government is not intrinsically evil.
> The perversion of the government by corporations is.
If the government didn't have the power that it does, then corporations wouldn't pervert it... there would be no reason to. exactly like the quote said:
"the problem isn't the abuse of power, it's the power to abuse"
The government will always be corrupt, because the corporations will always be more involved with it.
Well put. There's an amusing little article on CNN [cnn.com] that discussed the true complexity of anti-U.S. sentiment in Iraq vs. Bushco's promoted fantasy that it's all bin Laden's doing. And to any and all Bush voters: thanks a lot for flushing the country down the toilet, morons. Your children will enjoy paying off the $500 billion dollar bill for your stupidity while you die in the street after Social Security is bankrupted. Family values my ass.
Social Security is already going to be bankrupt in a few years
That is a deliberate LIE that is repeated over and over again by the Bush administration.
The TRUTH is that Social Security is fully funded until 2042 (according to the Social Security Administration. The Congressional Budget Office thinks it can go until 2052). At that point its trust fund runs out, and benefits will have to be reduced, taxes increased, or a combination of both. Without tax-increases, Social Security should still be able to pa
The bulk of the people don't have good access to information. And they know it. Some of them have a good excuse, busting their ass 60 hours a week makes it difficult to be informed, especially if Rush is what's playing at work. They quite reasonably distrust a very lazy media that's all but completely abdicated it's responsability. So they fall back on what they know. When in doubt trust people who look and speak like you. It's not an accident that the Republicans put so much into their
I'm sure we'll get a lot of war/Bush supporters here that pop up with all sorts of justifications now, but look, the justifications given over and over by Bush and his crew was that they (the wmds) were either there, or that Saddam had the capability to either make them, or get them from someone else.
Not only are they apparently not there (notwithstanding the "Syrian conspiracy theory" and such), a conclusion backed by three reports (Kay, 9/11, Duelfer) and this, the justification cannot be changed now just because it was wrong in the first place (in other words, you can't come back and respond to this news story by saying "but we liberated the iraqis" - yes, we did, but that wasn't the justification given for war, so it's a topic for a different discussion). Bush and his pals didn't say "we're going in because Saddam is an evil wicked little man who mistreats his people" in anything more than the most superficial manner. He did it by evoking images (well, that was more Cheney's job, actually) of an Iraq-backed attack spready doom across the continental United States and saying he knew something we didn't about all this.
Well, he was wrong. You can either sit and make stupid excuses and try to say "well, it doesn't matter because of..", but the fact is, this administration was wrong.
Responsible people would now stand up and explain what happened and what they plan to do about the fallout caused by their error. Irresponsible people, or people who were lying in the first place, will come back and try to change the subject or sweep it under the rug.
I'd like to think that the United States is a responsible nation, but with the way this has been addressed by this administration - attempting to shake its head and say no, really, we were right even though almost nothing we said before the war was true - and the way it's unlikely about to be addressed here, I have serious doubts that this country is currently anything close to responsible.
That's fine though. Keep it up. We'll see how long the rest of the world puts up with us if our trustworthiness turns into a chronic, glaring problem. You can only stay a superpower for so long when you rely on the rest of the world for your way of life and you're not willing to change it when you can't rely on the world anymore. Bring out the "woo woo! america is teh r0xx0rz!" crap instead of admitting you're wrong. We'll see just how well that works in the long run.
(on an unrelated note, why did this disappear from the frontpage...?)
Both the Kay and the Duelfer reports found hard evidence that Iraq was persuing illegal weapons programs. That alone, coupled with the terms of Iraq's cease-fire, was enough to justify a restart of the Gulf War.
When you get defeated in a war, you obey the terms of the cease-fire. When you dick around with inspectors, create a web of corruption at the United Nations, and generally try to weasel your way out of your obligations -- well, don't be surprised if it all comes crumbing
The senate security committee has the exact same intelligence information that Bush had. All of them which included many Democrats, agreed that Saddam was a threat and gave Bush permission to go ahead with the war. Now all of them were wrong, but I have a hard time believing that given the same information one can say that Bush was purposfully misleading us, and that others were simply duped. How bought the obvious conclusion is that they were all wrong, but not
i've never been wrong about starting a war that so far has killed over 100,000 iraqis, 1300 US troops, unkown number of contractors has cost umpty-ump billion dollars, and has people comparing coverring iraqis in their own feces, and piling them in a pyramid to a cheerleading competition.
miscalculated? this isnt a fucking trig class where you go "oops, well, i guess i miscalculated that answer, i guess we should go kill another hundred thousand people"
However, the UN inspectors found (correctly) that there were no WMD prior to the war. The threat of war was essential in getting the inspectors back in, but the rush to war after they found no evidence of WMD was dishonest. The administration made fun of the inspectors, but the fact is they were right. If everyone believed Bush then, we know better now.
the justifications given over and over by Bush and his crew was that they (the wmds) were either there, or that Saddam had the capability to either make them, or get them from someone else
bull-shit. The Bush administration flat out said that he had WMD. They claimed to have proof. At some point they even claimed they had found them. None of that turned out to be true.
Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction - Dick Cheney, Speech to VFW National Convention, Aug. 26, 2002
We know for a fact that there are weapons there. -
Ari Fleischer, Press Briefing, Jan. 9, 2003
Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised. - George W. Bush, Address to the Nation, March 17, 2003
There is no doubt that the regime of Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass destruction. - Gen. Tommy Franks,
Press Conference, March 22, 2003
We know where they are. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat. - Donald Rumsfeld, ABC Interview, March 30, 2003
We found the weapons of mass destruction - George W. Bush, Polish TV Interview, May 29, 2003
Remember when the administration said, RE WMD, it was a "slam dunk case", and that "we know where they are" ? Remember the satellite photos ?
It was all crap. Crapcrapcrap, and they knew it. Bush should be impeached, and the rest of his administration should be in jail.
And, yes, people from both major political parties believed Iraq had WMD. But it was the Republicans who decided to act on this "hunch", with no real evidence, and launch a war.
There were (probably) two reasons Saddam wanted everyone to think he had WMDs. Firstly, he had to look like a strongman at home and locally (Iran, Syria, etc) so he could retain power. Secondly, he was probably hoping he could bluff the US into not attacking. You may remember his frantic backpedal when it became obvious he couldn't.
I also doubt that Bush and his merry band of criminals actually ever believed in WMDs or the connections between al Qaeda and Iraq - people like Rove and Rumsfeld have been advocating invasion of Iraq for about 20 years now.
I agree, however, that post-invasion options are limited. There is a haunting air of familiarity (Vietnam) about it all. I hope all the Americans who voted for Bush enjoy the reintroduction of Selective Service...
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday January 12, 2005 @04:32PM (#11340316)
No, the media spin given over and over was that WMD was the reason America attacked Iraq.
Conjecture. Bush and his administration have gone on record numerous times, in some cases going so far as to claim they actually knew where the weapons were, to say that the justification for invasion was, in fact, WMDs.
The report stated that Saddam had a complete bioweapons infrastructure in place and ready to ramp up to full production within a 6 month period
WHICH report? In fact, provide the page number, because I want to see the exact text, in context.
Knowing now just how rotten and corrupt the oil for food program was, it was only a short matter of time before Saddam was once again cranking out bioweapons.
Pure conjecture. No basis in fact. In addition, you're suggesting that you are psychic by making a statement of fact about something which never happened when you come to the conclusion at the end.
Now, would you rather get the mad man out of there before he was making them or only after they were stockpiled?
The false dillema fallacy. Not only have you have not proven they would ever have been stockpiled, you fail to consider a large number of legitimate options such as the forceful reinstatement of weapons inspectors.
You also criticize Bush because he didn't do enough to prevent 9/11.
Straw man. I haven't said that. Even if I had said it, it would still be immaterial.
Probably in the same breath you attack him for pre-emptively preventing Saddam from hitting this country.
You have not proven this would happen.
I suggest a good duct tape around the temples to prevent your head exploding from the cognitive dissonance.
Concluded strong with a nice argumentum ad hominem.
Needless to say, you have not even begun to convince me, and you're argument needs some serious work.
Inspectors were shown over a 9 year period to be ineffective. And since we know Saddam had a bioweapons program ready to ramp up at a moment's notice and was more than eager to get back into the business, only a fool would think
WASHINGTON [foxnews.com] -- The search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has quietly concluded without any evidence of the banned weapons that President Bush cited as justification for going to war, the White House said Wednesday.
White House press secretary Scott McClellan said there no
Twelve years ago, Saddam Hussein faced the prospect of being the last casualty in a war he had started and lost. To spare himself, he agreed to disarm of all weapons of mass destruction. For the next 12 years, he systematically violated that agreement. He pursued chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, even while inspectors were in his country. Nothing to date has restrained him from his pursuit of these weapons -- not economic sanctions, not isolation from the civilized world, not even cruise missile strikes on his military facilities.
Looks like you're wrong.
WMD Report
That took about 15 seconds in Google.
The ORIGINAL question was "WHICH report? In fact, provide the page number, because I want to see the exact text, in context.
You failed to do so. You presented a link to a CNN story about the report, not to a specific quote in the report. You can't do that because the report does not say what you claim it says.
Inspectors were shown over a 9 year period to be ineffective. Define the level of force to be used in your forceful reinstatement.
"UN sanctions curbed Saddam's ability to import weapons, technology, and expertise into Iraq. Sanctions also limited his ability to finance his military, intelligence, and security forces to deal with his perceived and real external threats."
And since we know Saddam had a bioweapons program ready to ramp up at a moment's notice and was more than eager to get back into the business, only a fool would think he wasn't working to bring down the entire sanctions from within the U.N.
Again, the actual report contradicts your claims. "In practical terms, with the destruction of the Al Hakam facility, Iraq abandoned its ambition to obtain advanced BW weapons quickly. ISG found no direct evidence that Iraq, after 1996, had plans for a new BW program or was conducting BW-specifi c work for military purposes. Indeed, from the mid-1990s, despite evidence of continuing interest in nuclear and chemical weapons, there appears to be a complete absence of discussion or even interest in BW at the Presidential level."
So, in conclusion: #1. Saddam was not a nuclear threat to the US. #2. Saddam was not a chemical threat to the US. #3. Saddam was not a biological threat to the US. #4. Saddam was not a terrorist threat to the US.
Saddam was not a military threat to the US in any way, shape or form.
1. Stop WMDs.
2. Break another support structure for Al Qaeda
3. Liberate the Iraqi people from a brutal, evil monster.
As I said, Cite them. Show me where Bush publicly announced those as the reasons. Come on, the speech transcripts are everywhere. Show me one spot where these three are in the same Bush speech. Your 66% formulation doesn't work if Bush spent 80% of his time on #1. #1 we agree upon. #2 has yet to be proven. The 9/11 commission couldn't even find a direct Al Queda/Saddam link. #3 is almost
Actually, there was never any connection between al Qaeda and Iraq until after the US pretaliatory invasion, so you're down to 33%.
Also, I seriously doubt that Iraq is going to be free of rule by brutal, evil monsters in the near future (whatever the outcome of the coming election and the ensuing civil war), so you're now down to about 0%.
To reiterate: yes, Bush was wrong. Yet his choices remain the least wrong of all the possible ones. America has only wrong moves ahead of it. We have been trying for years to make other countries fear us instead of love us, and if we abandon that policy, they will neither fear us nor like us. It's a wrong policy, but unfortunately, we have no other choice -- we have nobody brave enough to try to change it and risk not managing it.
Upon reading this, I instantly recalled that the same thinking led Germans to support the war effort in 1939-1945. Now, I'm the last person to compare Bush with You Know Who (a clever kludge to avoid the consequences of You Know What Law of Usenet) or today's USA with You Know Which Country, but the mindset is comparable. A country chooses a leader. A leader makes choices. A country starts to see the choices were WRONG. So what? Do they change their course of action? No, that would be too much shock to bear. They think up another justification for it: "we were wrong, but we have no other choice now". WRONG AGAIN. Look into history and see what comes out of it.
We have been trying for years to make other countries fear us instead of love us, and if we abandon that policy, they will neither fear us nor like us.
You're wrong. At least in Europe, which has a rather strained relations with America, most people like America (and have many good reasons for it) and American people (altough this liking sometimes has a bit paternal aspect). What the world doesn't like is a couple of people around, and including, your current president.
I thought about writing a long list to document where Bush or a member his administration said that we had to go to war with Iraq because of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. This was about protecting America, right?
Iraq even allowed the weapons inspectors in to prove they didn't have anything. Remember how the Bush administration mocked the U.N. weapons inspectors whose search turned up nothing? Remember the ultimatum that Bush gave Iraq -- disarm within 72 hours or else? And Fox News gleefully put a countdown clock on the screen? Remember the forged documents--not the ones from CBS; the ones supposedly from Nigeria saying that Iraq tried to acquire fissionable material? Remember the aluminum tubes?
Remember how reasonable, rational people said there was no proof Iraq had WMDs? Remember how millions of people all over the world protested this war before it started? Remember when scores of diplomats resigned from the U.S. Foreign Service because of these false claims of WMDs? John Brady Kiesling [salon.com] wrote in his resignation letter, "We have not seen such systematic distortion of intelligence, such systematic manipulation of the American people, since the war in Vietnam."
However, I think I speak for nearly 50% of the country when I say that my head exploded from the incredible sense of "I told you so." I'm not happy to be right -- I'm sad for our country and what it turned into.
And to all the Conservatives who say, "The weapons of mass destruction may not be found, but hey Iraq is now a peaceful democracy, so it was worth it," I respond with, "The ends do not justify the means."
"We have not seen such systematic distortion of intelligence, such systematic manipulation of the American people, since the war in Vietnam."
George W. Bush avoided serving in the Vietnam war, now he has his own going. Some of us learned something from Brer Rabbit and the Tar Baby while others read about Goats.
Playing the devil's advocate, however, raises some very legitimate arguments in the other direction. Iraq's responsibility was not just to disarm, but to declare how it had disarmed and allow complete, unrestricted access to inspectors to verify that this had taken place. Hussein's regime consistently failed to comply with those aspects of the program, and thus left room for doubt regarding whether disarmament had actually taken place. He was clearly trying to maintain uncertainty on that question to kee
> to declare how it had disarmed and allow complete, > unrestricted access to inspectors to verify that this had taken > place.
One problem is if you give an ultimatum to someone, they should have a reasonable belief that if they cooperate, you will live up to your end of the bargain.
One major problem I had was that Bush was asking Iraq to prove a negative-- prove they don't have WMDs any longer. Of course, even a school child knows that you can't prove you don't have something.
One major problem I had was that Bush was asking Iraq to prove a negative-- prove they don't have WMDs any longer. Of course, even a school child knows that you can't prove you don't have something.
Quite the contrary, it would have been very easy to prove disarmament. Providing documentation as to how and when such activities occured, and allowing inspectors to check out the sites and scrap material to verify the truth of the documentation would have done the job.
positioning our troops there as a local target for every car-bombing extremist in the Middle East.
Because, of course, we all know that it is much more preferable to have car bombing extremists in the middle east targeting civilians in Kansas. I mean, how outrageous. When Bush said war on terrorism he actually meant it? Like for real? I mean, with soldiers and everything?
Hussein deserved to be taken out of power, there's no doubt about that, but I just don't think he was a pressing concern. I seriously doubt that Saddam would have attacked the US if he did have the weapons. Saddam was a secular leader and I don't think he was ever interested in a jihad against the US. I think the only scenario where Saddam might have attacked the US would be if he built his army back up and developed bioweapons then attacked his neighbors again and threatened the US with the bioweapons if w
"... but hey Iraq is now a peaceful democracy,.. "
And even that has not been accomplished. Dozen or more Iraqis die each day at presently in bombings. The violence is worse than ever. The elections later this month might end up boycotted by most Sunnis, if they can even take place. There's a distinct chance of civil war if the USA were to withdraw it's troops , and hence even further violence. OTOH, as long as US troops are actively involved in Iraq's security, there will be violence (insurgents against US and Iraqi National Guard troops, and the resulting retaliatory measures).
Moral arguments aside, on a purely statistical basis, it seems a safe bet Iraqis are more at risk of violent death now than under Saddam. Which makes it very hard to justify this regime-change, especially with the bleak prospect for stability in near-term in Iraq.
And to all the Conservatives who say, "The weapons of mass destruction may not be found, but hey Iraq is now a peaceful democracy, so it was worth it,"...
Now ? Peaceful ? democracy ? Do they really have the gall to say so ?
raq even allowed the weapons inspectors in to prove they didn't have anything. Remember how the Bush administration mocked the U.N. weapons inspectors whose search turned up nothing? Remember the ultimatum that Bush gave Iraq -- disarm within 72 hours or else? And Fox News gleefully put a countdown clock on the screen? Remember the forged documents--not the ones from CBS; the ones supposedly from Nigeria saying that Iraq tried to acquire fissionable material? Remember the aluminum tubes?
Remember how reasonable, rational people said there was no proof Iraq had WMDs? Remember how millions of people all over the world protested this war before it started? Remember when scores of diplomats resigned from the U.S. Foreign Service because of these false claims of WMDs?
I think to most Americans, these things have just become clichés. Each mini-scandal leaked out with so little fanfare that by the time each was proven true, they had lost their bite. Had each of these things been released to the press and proven in a single day, we might have impeached Bush. But instead, half the country is exhausted with hate and the other half is wondering what big deal is.
Really Bush is using the same tactic Clinton used during the Lewinski crap: Deny, deny, deny until it's common knowledge that your wrong, and then admit it. By then, no one cares.
I bet a steak dinner Saddam is gloating with that phrase in his Guantanamo Bay cell.
Guard1: Did you hear, no WMD in Iraq! Guard2: What? You mean the war was unjustified? Guard1: Shh... Saddam will hear you. Saddam: Too late! Told you so! Told you so! *dances*
Don't try to confuse the issue with facts. Leftest raving about how we shouldn't be in Iraq is probably about equal to what it would be if we went to kill Osama Bin Laden on Sept 10th.
"He's not a threat!!!" "He is just sitting in his cave playing cards with his friends and family." "There is no evidence he was orcistrating an attack on the US."
Hussein was in Iraq and was considered as much if not more of a threat than Osama before 9/11.
By who? Most of the military analysts I heard considered Iraq to be "contained". It had been nearly a decade since Hussien had attacked any of his neighbors (no-fly zone attacks, were arguably in Iraqi airspace). We had basically settled down into a routine where his scientists lied to him, every once in a while his boys would take a potshot at us, and we'd destroy an asprin factory in return. Quite peaceful
And the UN inspectors went back in during 2003 and couldn't find anything. Then America invaded, kicked UN inspectors out and rolled its own inspectors. They couldn't find anything as well. So, what was your point? The fact that wherever and how hard they looked and searched, since they didn't exist, they couldn't be found. The problem is, you can't prove a negative statement. Damn logics.
OK, look, I don't know how much enthusiasm I have for re-hashing this whole deal. But I'll respond to your question asking "What was your point?" The point is that whether WMDs are found or not is only of marginal relevance. The UN resolutions required Saddam's regime to cooperate fully and totally with inspectors. No one argues that it ever came close to doing this. (You really ought to read that Ken Pollack book -- it is quite eye-opening.)
Saddam's many obstructions and obfuscations clearly gave the impr
The justification for invading was that Iraq presented a threat. Not finding WMD or any programs proves that the invasion was unnecessary for dealing with the threat. The only reason people were still debating over whether or not he had WMD were Conservative pundits going on crap intelligence from "heroes in error" like Chalibi and the Iraqi National Congress.
No intelligence organization actually believed Saddam Hussein posed a threat to the US or it's allies. They knew that his capabilities were so reduced and that the existing programs had managed to cripple his ability reinstate any WMD programs. Whether or not he intended to honor the cease-fire or any other treaty in the future was irrelevant. We don't invade countries based on such flimsy rationales. The question to invade was based on the nature and level of threat that Saddam in power posed. Rational and reasonable people argued that it was a dumb idea, that the nature and level of threat would not be improved by invasion, especially one as incompetent as the Bush Administration managed to provide.
Your attempt to equivocate Saddam's future intentions with the evidence is part of the intellectual dishonesty and weakness that got us into this mess. You are also attempting to equivocate the claim that Bush thought Iraq had WMD with the claim that Bush thought invading was going to help the situation. The first claim is simply an over-simplification of the second. The fact that you have chosen to attack the first, rather than the second, undermines the credibility of your reasoning.
Personally, I dislike George Bush, because I hate tyranny and totalitarianism. Bush is like Plato, he uses the language of the Open Society to promote the Closed one. His ends justify his means and his idea of Justice is a social ideal, not an individualists one. The pattern of rewarding loyalty to his own power and treating disloyalty as the ultimate crime is also one of Plato's ideals of Justice. I don't need any bogus reasons to dislike Bush, I've got plenty of rational ones based on the historical record.
BTW, perhaps all of your reading can actually provide a meaning to the phrase "WMD-related program activities". I want to make sure my next hobby isn't a cause for invasion -- so far I've been lucky with the fake oil well in the front yard.
None of the programs were active. The materials were all old, quite probably remnants of pre GWI programs. The inspections ' purpose was to disarm and keep Iraq from developing WMD. Today's announcement proves they were successful.
If you are going to take anything Putin says without checking the background or finding some non-Russian corroboration, I can't take your opinion seriously. Putin has even his most ardent Western supporters wondering about his intentions for the future of Russia, he may be Russia
They've already found mountains of conclusive evidence that Saddam had WMDs...they're just buried somewhere in the desert...or hidden in Syria...or Russians Black Ops stole them right before the war...something...
Yeah, pretty much all I read besides/. is NewsMax and the Washington Times. Why do you ask?
> They've already found mountains of conclusive evidence that Saddam had WMDs...they're just buried somewhere in the desert...or hidden in Syria...or Russians Black Ops stole them right before the war...something...
Probably the CIA filched them and sold them to Iran in order to fund black ops in South America.
Over to Little Green Footballs [littlegreenfootballs.com] to watch them contort around this one!
"Oh, this is just the liberal bias media, being biased, really they found some stuff, but the bias you know, the bias, biases out the truth. Israel and a conservative American government actually has never done anything wrong ever, it's just the bias makes it like it is. There's a liberal bias, did you know that?"
Not anti-Semitic jackass, anti-Zionist. If you listen to Air America radio or other progressive programs, some of the main speakers are Jews. They can't stand the Bush/Sharon policies as well. As an aside, there is a large group of Jews in Israel that can't stand the Zionist policies either. These policies are of the "right", not the Jews.
Understand; not anti-Semitic, but anti-religious crusade - whichever religious agenda, it's wrong to push it on other people. If you know ANYTHING about the Israeli/Pales
If you know ANYTHING about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, you know it is pure and simple religious fanaticism.
and if you knew anything about middle east history, you will see that the wars have nothing to do with religious fanaticism, and have everything to do with control of WATER.
religion is just a means to the end. this (and all) ME conflicts are always about control of water.
Here's the classes of WMDs that I find insignificant, first of all (all of which I could, with some research, point to stories about):
1. East German Sarin with an expiration date of 1989. 2. left over poison gas residue of various types on various pieces of scrap metal found in the desert. 3. Aluminum tubes with multiple possible uses. 4. Large ammounts of conventional weapons that the allied forces thought were so insignificant that they didn't even bother to secure them.
Did I miss anything? Was ANYTHING found outside of these categories at all? Note, NONE of these categories were outside of the UN resolutions, as expired gas could be considered to be destroyed, dead ammo could be considered to be destroyed, conventional weapons were allowed, and there WERE other uses for the aluminium tubes.
Several Cans of Raid were found under Saddam's bathroom sink. There may also have been a straight razor in his medicine cabinet. It is no longer there but we have before and after photos of Saddam's face indicating that he may have once had one in his possession.
Well, considering that in 1998 and 1999, Iraq had a very public display of destroying a lot of weapons, and provided us with several thousand pages of documentation on it, I'd suggest that maybe, just maybe, Iraq's weapons destruction progrom was actually NOT the lie that our government thought it was.
It has surprised me that WMD were not faked by CIA / DIA / etc. (insert random agency name here). Getting a hold of some generic sarin, anthrax, botulinin, chlorine gas, etc. would be easy for any U.S. agency determined to do so. Placing it in a couple of buried shipping containers in the desert that we 'accidentally' discovered the location to would have been very easy.
The fact that this was not done says to me: * maybe some was found but they can't talk about it (doubtful); * most of the people in the U.S. armed forces are basically ethical (encouraging); * no one thought of faking it (highly doubtful); * there are too many checks and balances within the agency structures to allow a fake to succeed (highly likely).
The checks-balances scenario is this: CIA decides to fake it. 1. They create the agent/material, bury it, fake up docs, release info about it, "find" it, make news. 2. FBI decides, Hey, let's test it and figure out where it really came from and how it was made. 3. UN / Brits request samples to test, start interviewing all their people about the subject and get nothing or actual denials. 4. FBI figures out this isn't genuine and points fingers, or: 5. ATF decides to test it independently, or: 6. Secret service / Treasury tests it independently, or: 7. GAO / Congressional subcommittee asks lots of questions, or: 8. UN figures it out, points fingers, or: 9. Iraq former-regime muckety-mucks say, "hey, wait, we didn't do that... it's cool, but we didn't do it."
Just some thoughts. I like having multiple levels of power structures all competing for the truth. The whole CIA reorg bill concentrates power too much in my opinion. It'll allow for this kind of potential fakery to succeed.
I wonder when does the "you broke enough enough stuff so you getting kicked out" rule come into force?
Sometime after January 30 is my guess, depending on who gets elected of course (or maybe just as important, who doesn't).
That must happen after they quit looking for WMD and After they give on having election lines where snipers shoot people.
There's that too- right now the Shia and Kurds are looking at being the big winners in the January 30 election- because it's a sure bet anybody voting in the Sunn
most of the people in the U.S. armed forces are basically ethical (encouraging);
Most of the people in the military are more ethical than 99% of the civilian populas. Read up on the military code of conduct. Among other things that are illegal and unethical in the military are officers fraternizing with enlisted personel (this means outside of work)(reasons are to keep officers from making bad decisions in life and death situations) and infidelity to a spouse or with someone who is married.
This is what I first expected to happen when we invaded. Scary-sounding weapons would be "found" right away, and the US public would be eager to accept this retroactive evidence of the morality of our war.
But after some thought, it's just not tenable. Pulling off such a scheme would require the involvement of at least hundreds of people, and more likely thousands. (Military and intelligence agencies are designed to work as large cooperative bureaucracies, with lots of internal checks and paperwork on trans
They are in such disbelief that they got reelected despite all signs that they were cheating, lying and self-serving thiefs that they think now they don't need any justification. They can do as they please so long as it makes military or oil hungry jacks richer.
Anyways not that it matters but they do not need excuses anymore. That war on terror jocker card can be used anytime they please! Thankfully we have conditionned crowds to eat it up.
The lesson here is clear: If you are a nation that the US may not like, and you don't have nuclear weapons, then you are vulnerable to attack and occupation by the US. They will, if they wish to, invent lies about you having said weapons, and attack you, with or without a general concensus from the rest of the civilized world.
So if you want to protect yourself, get WMDs, and get them fast.
So if you want to protect yourself, get WMDs, and get them fast.
*sigh* That's a really bad idea, too. If the US was at war with someone, and they actually used WMDs of any kind to defend themselves, the response would be devastating. Our official policy is to respond to WMD in kind-and that means breaking out our still significant nuclear weapons. Even if we chose not to use them, the response from the military, and the American people at large, would be devastating to say the least. Think of a demand
This is an important and under-repeated point: Iraq was, in fact, our best friend in the region. There's fairly clear evidence that Iraq requested US permission to invade Kuwait in 1991, and believed (mistakenly) that they had gotten it; they were genuinely surprised when we took issue with it.
Iraq consistently exaggerated their weapons capabilities, and were reluctant to admit how completely powerless they were, because they wanted to deter Iran. Y'know, that other society with whom they've been at perio
> Prior to the war, WMDs were named as the justification for a 'preemptive' invasion.
> After the war and during the war, when WMDs were not being found,... not so much.
I liked Umansky's tart assessment [msn.com] at Slate: "the Iraq Survey Group, which when last heard from was still hot on the trail for banned weapons, has in fact folded its tent, and it did so about three weeks ago. (No, you didn't miss the White House announcement.)"
If not oil and "he tried to kill my dad!" causes, why Iraq? If we were looking for nasty guys to invade, there are more than 20 odd petty dictators all around the world. Why US is not invading Myramar? North Korea? A number of African countries including Liberia?
Unfortunately it was all about oil and petty revenge...
Remember the Seinfeld where Babu opens a restaurant at Jerry's suggestion and later regrets it?
It seems oddly fitting here. Just replace the words
'people' with 'WMD' 'Babu' with 'Most of the World' and 'Jerry' with 'GWB'
Most of the World: Quiet!! You shut up!... But where are WMD? You see WMD? Show me WMD. There are no WMD! GWB: You know, I think I'll just take the check. Most of the World: You bad man! You very very bad man! [leaves] GWB thinking: Bad man? Could my mother have been wrong?
The beginning of World War II had a tremendous positive effect on the American economy and helped in large part to pull the country out of the depression. In an age where most of the US military's weaponry is created by a few companies and is largely automated, does a war actually help an economy or simply overburden it with the cost of production without the offsetting abundance of jobs?
Worse than that- what little manufacturing that isn't automated is sent overseas, so the economies this war is helping are not our own, but mainly China and India.
Uh... No. The military has fairly strict requirements about what percentage of a product MUST be made in the USA. (I think it is %80 if it isnt %100) There was an issue a few years ago where a company that made the stocking caps for the navy had a label in it that said made in china. In the contract (this is in all of the contracts) it clearly stated that the caps must be made in the usa or a certain amount of it. The company had to recall all the caps and remake them as per the conditions of the contra
This was true a few years ago- but I doubt it heavily now. The reason why is obvious- there has been little or NO ramp up of production, NO factories re-opening, to support the War in Iraq. The closest we've come is that GM is buying more parts for China to run the military Hummer line at 1/2 capacity- up from 1/1000ths capacity....
The tremedous positive effect on the ecomony was also followed by a tremedous negative effect remember? Roaring 20's to the dirty 30's? If anything large scale war time production is the same as getting drunk off beer, then being hungover the next day when it's worn off.
Now the government is pissing away billions and putting nothing back into the economy with the exception of a few large companies. The return to the American people will be less, plus taxes will soar to keep the gov't from going broke.
It depends. Entering into WWII was a situation where we created a lot of production and jobs that weren't there before. Post-WWII, few American wars have been at the behest of the hearts of the American people, but instead, at least in part, to legitimize the continuance of the military industry birthed for WWII. Sadly, a healthy chunk of our economy still depends on a need for war, or at least military actions. Death is big business, and we as a country are an addict to it, economically and perhaps even ps
Well done warmongers. Do you have any sense of outrage yet, or do you need Bush and his sidekick, Rumsfeld (or is the other way around?) raping your close relatives to grow some balls.
Because they are turning the proverbial blind eye to the killing and maiming of Iraqi civilians in the thousends (collateral damage you know)., so maybe the only way you will react is when they turn against you and experience the horrors you are subsidizing with your taxes. Don't laugh, nightmares have a fucking habit of turn
Any TRUE warmonger would be outraged at how Iraq has been handled. Sorely lacking in the plan for Iraq and the War on Terror:
1. Sacrifices at home to provide needed material for the troops. 2. Wartime production crowding out civilian production. 3. A draft calling up millions- even though it's obvious that cannon fodder would be usefull, as the enemy is highly limited on manpower. 4. Nukes and terror to break the spirit of the enemy.
All the true warmongers I know are calling for all or part of the above
Yes we have completed our search, no we dont have anything to say at this point because we really ended it a month ago but didn't bother to inform you. We dont think its that relavant to the liberation of the country.
> Just a few years ago the people of Iraq were being starved and gassed to death by an evil dictator. Now in less than three weeks there will be free Iraqi elections for the first time in over 30 years.
And that's going to fix everything, just like we were supposed to believe the invasion would, the capture of Saddam would, the handover of power to the transitional government would, the flattening of Fallujah would,...
Well DUH! (Score:3, Insightful)
Employment again tanks
Trade deficit skyrocketing
Torture still going on in Iraqi prisons
The war is going worse than we thought (the prez actually admitted)
No WMD stockpiles found
Where is the outrage? There's no outrage because people have been so baffled with bullsh!t they don't know what to believe, a 50/50 election result illustrated this clearly.
"The Iraq Survey Group, which was responsible for the search, goes on, but its focus now is trying to help counter the Iraqi insurgency."
Well, at leas they have full employement.
Don't spend all that political capital at the same gumball machine.
Re:Well DUH! (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not going to get into a debate on the veracity of your statements, but none of the claims you listed are post-election news. The economy and Iraq both received very extensive news coverage before the election so I'm not quite sure what your point is.
Actually, They Are... (Score:3, Insightful)
Prior to the election it was treated as speculation and downplayed by the Whitehouse (read: the president and his innercicle of advisors) Since the election they are now admitting failures, regarding how badly the war is going (before 'these were isolate
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Insightful)
I found the whole election to be ironic. This election was about "values," supposedly. Apparently it's morally right to support an administration with a culture of trampling on human rights, "disappearing" thousands of "enemy combatants," outright torture, lying to start a war, killing 100,000 innocent civilians, and destroying the liv
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Interesting)
Just count 20 years from now, and all of us Americans will be as shocked as the Germans citizens who discovered the prisoner camp mistreatments for the first time.
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Interesting)
Vice versa, cheerleader posing is about the only thing acceptable enough to broadcast. Since it won't hurt Bush's chance of getting back in the office.
Re:Well DUH! (Score:2)
Employment again tanks
Trust me, I'm the last person on Slashdot who would hold up Bush for anything but ridicule, but the employment numbers are still going up... for now. In the last year, employment almost recovered the 2+ million jobs lost since Bush took office. Granted, those are false numbers, pumped up by unsupportable tax cuts that are making states go broke. I suspect that Bush supporters may have even hired people as an under-the
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Interesting)
No, I'm the last person on Slashdot who would support W.
You are quite correct, that employment is actually increasing. The quality of those jobs relative to the jobs that were lost during the recession I do not know, though I've read that many people switching jobs have ended up taking significant cuts in pay and/or benefits. There are a lot of new jobs that have to be created to employ new people entering the workforce, something like 150k/month.
Also, to be fair, a President has less impact on the day-to
SO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT (Score:5, Insightful)
LOOK IN THE FUCKING MIRROR! YOU ARE THE PROBLEM! If you want people to be outraged, then BE OUTRAGED YOURSELF and DO SOMETHING WITH THAT ANGER. There are still anti-war speeches taking place -- go and listen to one. Go take part in a rally, hell, START a rally yourself. Get your friends and neighbors to go, and be an ACTIVE citizen, instead of someone who sits back, complains, and votes democrat. Write editorials, get in touch with the public, and get people to channel their own anger with yours.
You talk about the election being 50/50. Well guess what, buddy: BOTH MAJOR CANDIDATES SUPPORTED THE WAR. You think voting for them sent any kind of message? The democrats are the ones that gave Bush the power in the first place. The democrats are the ones that still won't take a stand against it. Why are YOU content to vote for a party that you don't agree with on this incredibly important issue??
Now is the time to start acting, not yet another four years from now when it's too late to change anything. Look up your local Green Party [gp.org] and become an active member of it.
It's worth several hours of my weekend to protest the war and go to political meetings. I don't understand when you say you're too busy watching sitcoms and playing World of Warcraft.
Re:SO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT (Score:3, Insightful)
But a your post well deserves the insightfull mod. One should not just say "this is wrong" and go back to thier easy chair to
Re:SO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT (Score:4, Insightful)
the Green Party?
So you are saying the government is screwing up, and I agree, and you want the government to have more power?
"the problem isn't the abuse of power, it's the power to abuse."
they can't screw up so royally if they don't have the power to do so.
I say vote for the constitution and a smaller federal government...
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Re:SO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT (Score:3, Insightful)
> The government is not intrinsically evil.
> The perversion of the government by corporations is.
If the government didn't have the power that it does, then corporations wouldn't pervert it... there would be no reason to. exactly like the quote said:
"the problem isn't the abuse of power, it's the power to abuse"
The government will always be corrupt, because the corporations will always be more involved with it.
-metric
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well DUH! (Score:3)
That is a deliberate LIE that is repeated over and over again by the Bush administration.
The TRUTH is that Social Security is fully funded until 2042 (according to the Social Security Administration. The Congressional Budget Office thinks it can go until 2052). At that point its trust fund runs out, and benefits will have to be reduced, taxes increased, or a combination of both. Without tax-increases, Social Security should still be able to pa
Re:Well DUH! (Score:2, Informative)
And ignorant. And self-righteous.
Not all Americans are like this. Just most of them.
I am embarrassed by my own country.
Survey sez... (Score:2, Insightful)
The bulk of the people don't have good access to information. And they know it. Some of them have a good excuse, busting their ass 60 hours a week makes it difficult to be informed, especially if Rush is what's playing at work. They quite reasonably distrust a very lazy media that's all but completely abdicated it's responsability. So they fall back on what they know. When in doubt trust people who look and speak like you. It's not an accident that the Republicans put so much into their
Great... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not only are they apparently not there (notwithstanding the "Syrian conspiracy theory" and such), a conclusion backed by three reports (Kay, 9/11, Duelfer) and this, the justification cannot be changed now just because it was wrong in the first place (in other words, you can't come back and respond to this news story by saying "but we liberated the iraqis" - yes, we did, but that wasn't the justification given for war, so it's a topic for a different discussion). Bush and his pals didn't say "we're going in because Saddam is an evil wicked little man who mistreats his people" in anything more than the most superficial manner. He did it by evoking images (well, that was more Cheney's job, actually) of an Iraq-backed attack spready doom across the continental United States and saying he knew something we didn't about all this.
Well, he was wrong. You can either sit and make stupid excuses and try to say "well, it doesn't matter because of..", but the fact is, this administration was wrong.
Responsible people would now stand up and explain what happened and what they plan to do about the fallout caused by their error. Irresponsible people, or people who were lying in the first place, will come back and try to change the subject or sweep it under the rug.
I'd like to think that the United States is a responsible nation, but with the way this has been addressed by this administration - attempting to shake its head and say no, really, we were right even though almost nothing we said before the war was true - and the way it's unlikely about to be addressed here, I have serious doubts that this country is currently anything close to responsible.
That's fine though. Keep it up. We'll see how long the rest of the world puts up with us if our trustworthiness turns into a chronic, glaring problem. You can only stay a superpower for so long when you rely on the rest of the world for your way of life and you're not willing to change it when you can't rely on the world anymore. Bring out the "woo woo! america is teh r0xx0rz!" crap instead of admitting you're wrong. We'll see just how well that works in the long run.
(on an unrelated note, why did this disappear from the frontpage...?)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
You must be one of the people who doesn't think that the world is better off with out Saddam Hussein in power.
;P
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Both the Kay and the Duelfer reports found hard evidence that Iraq was persuing illegal weapons programs. That alone, coupled with the terms of Iraq's cease-fire, was enough to justify a restart of the Gulf War.
When you get defeated in a war, you obey the terms of the cease-fire. When you dick around with inspectors, create a web of corruption at the United Nations, and generally try to weasel your way out of your obligations -- well, don't be surprised if it all comes crumbing
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
The senate security committee has the exact same intelligence information that Bush had. All of them which included many Democrats, agreed that Saddam was a threat and gave Bush permission to go ahead with the war. Now all of them were wrong, but I have a hard time believing that given the same information one can say that Bush was purposfully misleading us, and that others were simply duped. How bought the obvious conclusion is that they were all wrong, but not
Re:Great... (Score:2, Insightful)
miscalculated? this isnt a fucking trig class where you go "oops, well, i guess i miscalculated that answer, i guess we should go kill another hundred thousand people"
Re:Great... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
FALSE.
> was attempting to get them.
TRUE.
I invite you to read the Duefler report, or at least the nifty "Key Findings" section.
Re:Great... (Score:2)
do you remember where those reports came from?
Re:Great... (Score:5, Informative)
bull-shit. The Bush administration flat out said that he had WMD. They claimed to have proof. At some point they even claimed they had found them. None of that turned out to be true.
Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction - Dick Cheney, Speech to VFW National Convention, Aug. 26, 2002
We know for a fact that there are weapons there. - Ari Fleischer, Press Briefing, Jan. 9, 2003
Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised. - George W. Bush, Address to the Nation, March 17, 2003
There is no doubt that the regime of Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass destruction. - Gen. Tommy Franks, Press Conference, March 22, 2003
We know where they are. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat. - Donald Rumsfeld, ABC Interview, March 30, 2003
We found the weapons of mass destruction - George W. Bush, Polish TV Interview, May 29, 2003
The list goes on and on and on...
Re:Great... (Score:2, Insightful)
It was all crap. Crapcrapcrap, and they knew it. Bush should be impeached, and the rest of his administration should be in jail.
And, yes, people from both major political parties believed Iraq had WMD. But it was the Republicans who decided to act on this "hunch", with no real evidence, and launch a war.
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
which never happened, either.
Re:Great... (Score:4, Insightful)
I also doubt that Bush and his merry band of criminals actually ever believed in WMDs or the connections between al Qaeda and Iraq - people like Rove and Rumsfeld have been advocating invasion of Iraq for about 20 years now.
I agree, however, that post-invasion options are limited. There is a haunting air of familiarity (Vietnam) about it all. I hope all the Americans who voted for Bush enjoy the reintroduction of Selective Service
Re:Great... (Score:5, Insightful)
Conjecture. Bush and his administration have gone on record numerous times, in some cases going so far as to claim they actually knew where the weapons were, to say that the justification for invasion was, in fact, WMDs.
The report stated that Saddam had a complete bioweapons infrastructure in place and ready to ramp up to full production within a 6 month period
WHICH report? In fact, provide the page number, because I want to see the exact text, in context.
Knowing now just how rotten and corrupt the oil for food program was, it was only a short matter of time before Saddam was once again cranking out bioweapons.
Pure conjecture. No basis in fact. In addition, you're suggesting that you are psychic by making a statement of fact about something which never happened when you come to the conclusion at the end.
Now, would you rather get the mad man out of there before he was making them or only after they were stockpiled?
The false dillema fallacy. Not only have you have not proven they would ever have been stockpiled, you fail to consider a large number of legitimate options such as the forceful reinstatement of weapons inspectors.
You also criticize Bush because he didn't do enough to prevent 9/11.
Straw man. I haven't said that. Even if I had said it, it would still be immaterial.
Probably in the same breath you attack him for pre-emptively preventing Saddam from hitting this country.
You have not proven this would happen.
I suggest a good duct tape around the temples to prevent your head exploding from the cognitive dissonance.
Concluded strong with a nice argumentum ad hominem.
Needless to say, you have not even begun to convince me, and you're argument needs some serious work.
~TxMxP
WAKE UP! (Score:3, Informative)
And since we know Saddam had a bioweapons program ready to ramp up at a moment's notice and was more than eager to get back into the business, only a fool would think
That's below even your low standards. (Score:5, Informative)
Twelve years ago, Saddam Hussein faced the prospect of being the last casualty in a war he had started and lost. To spare himself, he agreed to disarm of all weapons of mass destruction. For the next 12 years, he systematically violated that agreement. He pursued chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, even while inspectors were in his country. Nothing to date has restrained him from his pursuit of these weapons -- not economic sanctions, not isolation from the civilized world, not even cruise missile strikes on his military facilities.
Looks like you're wrong. The ORIGINAL question was "WHICH report? In fact, provide the page number, because I want to see the exact text, in context.
You failed to do so. You presented a link to a CNN story about the report, not to a specific quote in the report. You can't do that because the report does not say what you claim it says. Actually, if you read the final report, it says that they were effective. http://www.cia.gov/cia/reports/iraq_wmd_2004/Comp
"UN sanctions curbed Saddam's ability to import weapons, technology, and expertise into Iraq. Sanctions also limited his ability to finance his military, intelligence, and security forces to deal with his perceived and real external threats." Again, the actual report contradicts your claims. "In practical terms, with the destruction of the Al Hakam facility, Iraq abandoned its ambition to obtain advanced BW weapons quickly. ISG found no direct evidence that Iraq, after 1996, had plans for a new BW program or was conducting BW-specifi c work for military purposes. Indeed, from the mid-1990s, despite evidence of continuing interest in nuclear and chemical weapons, there appears to be a complete absence of discussion or even interest in BW at the Presidential level."
So, in conclusion:
#1. Saddam was not a nuclear threat to the US.
#2. Saddam was not a chemical threat to the US.
#3. Saddam was not a biological threat to the US.
#4. Saddam was not a terrorist threat to the US.
Saddam was not a military threat to the US in any way, shape or form.
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
As I said, Cite them. Show me where Bush publicly announced those as the reasons. Come on, the speech transcripts are everywhere. Show me one spot where these three are in the same Bush speech. Your 66% formulation doesn't work if Bush spent 80% of his time on #1. #1 we agree upon. #2 has yet to be proven. The 9/11 commission couldn't even find a direct Al Queda/Saddam link. #3 is almost
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, I seriously doubt that Iraq is going to be free of rule by brutal, evil monsters in the near future (whatever the outcome of the coming election and the ensuing civil war), so you're now down to about 0%.
Fucking delusionary bozo. (Score:3, Informative)
None, Zero, Zilch.
Your own Congress has said that much, Rumsfeld had accepted it. So stop it please, don't insult our intelligence.
In the run to the war humanitarian causes were never mentioned. Never. Bush's "preocupation" (hypocrate) were uniquely and exclusively WMDs.
For goodness sake, find yourself the idiotic "axis of evil speech" and look how much Iraqi people featured there.
Stop the denial, it will only delay the finding of a slution to the prob
Re:Great... (Score:4, Insightful)
Upon reading this, I instantly recalled that the same thinking led Germans to support the war effort in 1939-1945. Now, I'm the last person to compare Bush with You Know Who (a clever kludge to avoid the consequences of You Know What Law of Usenet) or today's USA with You Know Which Country, but the mindset is comparable. A country chooses a leader. A leader makes choices. A country starts to see the choices were WRONG. So what? Do they change their course of action? No, that would be too much shock to bear. They think up another justification for it: "we were wrong, but we have no other choice now". WRONG AGAIN. Look into history and see what comes out of it.
Re:Great... (Score:4, Insightful)
You're wrong. At least in Europe, which has a rather strained relations with America, most people like America (and have many good reasons for it) and American people (altough this liking sometimes has a bit paternal aspect). What the world doesn't like is a couple of people around, and including, your current president.
Motivation (Score:3, Insightful)
The ends (Score:5, Insightful)
Iraq even allowed the weapons inspectors in to prove they didn't have anything. Remember how the Bush administration mocked the U.N. weapons inspectors whose search turned up nothing? Remember the ultimatum that Bush gave Iraq -- disarm within 72 hours or else? And Fox News gleefully put a countdown clock on the screen? Remember the forged documents--not the ones from CBS; the ones supposedly from Nigeria saying that Iraq tried to acquire fissionable material? Remember the aluminum tubes?
Remember how reasonable, rational people said there was no proof Iraq had WMDs? Remember how millions of people all over the world protested this war before it started? Remember when scores of diplomats resigned from the U.S. Foreign Service because of these false claims of WMDs? John Brady Kiesling [salon.com] wrote in his resignation letter, "We have not seen such systematic distortion of intelligence, such systematic manipulation of the American people, since the war in Vietnam."
However, I think I speak for nearly 50% of the country when I say that my head exploded from the incredible sense of "I told you so." I'm not happy to be right -- I'm sad for our country and what it turned into.
And to all the Conservatives who say, "The weapons of mass destruction may not be found, but hey Iraq is now a peaceful democracy, so it was worth it," I respond with, "The ends do not justify the means."
Why Irony is Dead (Score:2)
George W. Bush avoided serving in the Vietnam war, now he has his own going. Some of us learned something from Brer Rabbit and the Tar Baby while others read about Goats.
Re:Why Irony is Dead (Score:2)
False. Barbara and Jenna are livin' large in the DC party circuit [wonkette.com] while kids their age are getting maimed in Iraq.
Jenna (supposedly) is going to teach while Babs "hasn't announced any career plans" (really putting that Yale degree to good use, huh?).
Re:Why Irony is Dead (Score:2)
Re:The ends (Score:2)
Re:The ends (Score:3, Insightful)
> unrestricted access to inspectors to verify that this had taken
> place.
One problem is if you give an ultimatum to someone, they should have a reasonable belief that if they cooperate, you will live up to your end of the bargain.
One major problem I had was that Bush was asking Iraq to prove a negative-- prove they don't have WMDs any longer. Of course, even a school child knows that you can't prove you don't have something.
The problem is, Iraq
Re:The ends (Score:2)
Quite the contrary, it would have been very easy to prove disarmament. Providing documentation as to how and when such activities occured, and allowing inspectors to check out the sites and scrap material to verify the truth of the documentation would have done the job.
Don't forget that the Iraqis constantly
Re:The ends (Score:2)
Because, of course, we all know that it is much more preferable to have car bombing extremists in the middle east targeting civilians in Kansas. I mean, how outrageous. When Bush said war on terrorism he actually meant it? Like for real? I mean, with soldiers and everything?
Re:The ends (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The ends (Score:4, Insightful)
And even that has not been accomplished. Dozen or more Iraqis die each day at presently in bombings. The violence is worse than ever. The elections later this month might end up boycotted by most Sunnis, if they can even take place. There's a distinct chance of civil war if the USA were to withdraw it's troops , and hence even further violence. OTOH, as long as US troops are actively involved in Iraq's security, there will be violence (insurgents against US and Iraqi National Guard troops, and the resulting retaliatory measures).
Moral arguments aside, on a purely statistical basis, it seems a safe bet Iraqis are more at risk of violent death now than under Saddam. Which makes it very hard to justify this regime-change, especially with the bleak prospect for stability in near-term in Iraq.
WMD: Nope
Democracy in Iraq: Nope (maybe next month?)
Stability in Iraq: Worse than under Saddam
Sigh..
Re:The ends (Score:3, Insightful)
Now ? Peaceful ? democracy ? Do they really have the gall to say so ?
Re:The ends (Score:4)
Remember how reasonable, rational people said there was no proof Iraq had WMDs? Remember how millions of people all over the world protested this war before it started? Remember when scores of diplomats resigned from the U.S. Foreign Service because of these false claims of WMDs?
I think to most Americans, these things have just become clichés. Each mini-scandal leaked out with so little fanfare that by the time each was proven true, they had lost their bite. Had each of these things been released to the press and proven in a single day, we might have impeached Bush. But instead, half the country is exhausted with hate and the other half is wondering what big deal is.
Really Bush is using the same tactic Clinton used during the Lewinski crap: Deny, deny, deny until it's common knowledge that your wrong, and then admit it. By then, no one cares.
Re:The ends (Score:2)
Guard1: Did you hear, no WMD in Iraq!
Guard2: What? You mean the war was unjustified?
Guard1: Shh... Saddam will hear you.
Saddam: Too late! Told you so! Told you so! *dances*
Re:The ends (Score:2)
"He's not a threat!!!"
"He is just sitting in his cave playing cards with his friends and family."
"There is no evidence he was orcistrating an attack on the US."
Re:The ends (Score:3, Insightful)
By who? Most of the military analysts I heard considered Iraq to be "contained". It had been nearly a decade since Hussien had attacked any of his neighbors (no-fly zone attacks, were arguably in Iraqi airspace). We had basically settled down into a routine where his scientists lied to him, every once in a while his boys would take a potshot at us, and we'd destroy an asprin factory in return. Quite peaceful
Re:The ends (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The ends (Score:2)
Saddam's many obstructions and obfuscations clearly gave the impr
Re:The ends (Score:5, Insightful)
No intelligence organization actually believed Saddam Hussein posed a threat to the US or it's allies. They knew that his capabilities were so reduced and that the existing programs had managed to cripple his ability reinstate any WMD programs. Whether or not he intended to honor the cease-fire or any other treaty in the future was irrelevant. We don't invade countries based on such flimsy rationales. The question to invade was based on the nature and level of threat that Saddam in power posed. Rational and reasonable people argued that it was a dumb idea, that the nature and level of threat would not be improved by invasion, especially one as incompetent as the Bush Administration managed to provide.
Your attempt to equivocate Saddam's future intentions with the evidence is part of the intellectual dishonesty and weakness that got us into this mess. You are also attempting to equivocate the claim that Bush thought Iraq had WMD with the claim that Bush thought invading was going to help the situation. The first claim is simply an over-simplification of the second. The fact that you have chosen to attack the first, rather than the second, undermines the credibility of your reasoning.
Personally, I dislike George Bush, because I hate tyranny and totalitarianism. Bush is like Plato, he uses the language of the Open Society to promote the Closed one. His ends justify his means and his idea of Justice is a social ideal, not an individualists one. The pattern of rewarding loyalty to his own power and treating disloyalty as the ultimate crime is also one of Plato's ideals of Justice. I don't need any bogus reasons to dislike Bush, I've got plenty of rational ones based on the historical record.
BTW, perhaps all of your reading can actually provide a meaning to the phrase "WMD-related program activities". I want to make sure my next hobby isn't a cause for invasion -- so far I've been lucky with the fake oil well in the front yard.
Re:The ends (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are going to take anything Putin says without checking the background or finding some non-Russian corroboration, I can't take your opinion seriously. Putin has even his most ardent Western supporters wondering about his intentions for the future of Russia, he may be Russia
Nonsense (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, pretty much all I read besides
Re:Nonsense (Score:2)
Wingnutz have been crowing the "discovery" of WMDs for the past 1.5 years...but this time I'm sure they'll accept the truth....RIGHT?
PS - See ya in the M2
Re: Nonsense (Score:2)
> They've already found mountains of conclusive evidence that Saddam had WMDs...they're just buried somewhere in the desert...or hidden in Syria...or Russians Black Ops stole them right before the war...something...
Probably the CIA filched them and sold them to Iran in order to fund black ops in South America.
Everyone! (Score:2, Funny)
"Oh, this is just the liberal bias media, being biased, really they found some stuff, but the bias you know, the bias, biases out the truth. Israel and a conservative American government actually has never done anything wrong ever, it's just the bias makes it like it is. There's a liberal bias, did you know that?"
Re:Heil Hitler! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Understand; not anti-Semitic, but anti-religious crusade - whichever religious agenda, it's wrong to push it on other people. If you know ANYTHING about the Israeli/Pales
Re:Heil Hitler! (Score:2)
and if you knew anything about middle east history, you will see that the wars have nothing to do with religious fanaticism, and have everything to do with control of WATER.
religion is just a means to the end. this (and all) ME conflicts are always about control of water.
always.
So did they ever find any SIGNIFICANT WMDs? (Score:3)
1. East German Sarin with an expiration date of 1989.
2. left over poison gas residue of various types on various pieces of scrap metal found in the desert.
3. Aluminum tubes with multiple possible uses.
4. Large ammounts of conventional weapons that the allied forces thought were so insignificant that they didn't even bother to secure them.
Did I miss anything? Was ANYTHING found outside of these categories at all? Note, NONE of these categories were outside of the UN resolutions, as expired gas could be considered to be destroyed, dead ammo could be considered to be destroyed, conventional weapons were allowed, and there WERE other uses for the aluminium tubes.
Re:So did they ever find any SIGNIFICANT WMDs? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So did they ever find any SIGNIFICANT WMDs? (Score:2)
Surprising some were not faked (Score:5, Interesting)
The fact that this was not done says to me:
* maybe some was found but they can't talk about it (doubtful);
* most of the people in the U.S. armed forces are basically ethical (encouraging);
* no one thought of faking it (highly doubtful);
* there are too many checks and balances within the agency structures to allow a fake to succeed (highly likely).
The checks-balances scenario is this: CIA decides to fake it.
1. They create the agent/material, bury it, fake up docs, release info about it, "find" it, make news.
2. FBI decides, Hey, let's test it and figure out where it really came from and how it was made.
3. UN / Brits request samples to test, start interviewing all their people about the subject and get nothing or actual denials.
4. FBI figures out this isn't genuine and points fingers, or:
5. ATF decides to test it independently, or:
6. Secret service / Treasury tests it independently, or:
7. GAO / Congressional subcommittee asks lots of questions, or:
8. UN figures it out, points fingers, or:
9. Iraq former-regime muckety-mucks say, "hey, wait, we didn't do that... it's cool, but we didn't do it."
Just some thoughts.
I like having multiple levels of power structures all competing for the truth. The whole CIA reorg bill concentrates power too much in my opinion. It'll allow for this kind of potential fakery to succeed.
-- Kevin
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:2)
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:2)
After all even in the pottery barn they have rules of engagement... or at lest they did when I was shagging one of their cashiers :)
That must happen after they quit looking for WMD and After they give on having election lines where snipers shoot people.
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:2)
Sometime after January 30 is my guess, depending on who gets elected of course (or maybe just as important, who doesn't).
That must happen after they quit looking for WMD and After they give on having election lines where snipers shoot people.
There's that too- right now the Shia and Kurds are looking at being the big winners in the January 30 election- because it's a sure bet anybody voting in the Sunn
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:3, Informative)
So involved are they that they considered opening an office in Yemen. [usatoday.com]
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:2)
Must be due to all the politicians there.
Re:Surprising some were not faked (Score:2)
Most of the people in the military are more ethical than 99% of the civilian populas. Read up on the military code of conduct. Among other things that are illegal and unethical in the military are officers fraternizing with enlisted personel (this means outside of work)(reasons are to keep officers from making bad decisions in life and death situations) and infidelity to a spouse or with someone who is married.
There are
Too unstable. (Score:3, Insightful)
But after some thought, it's just not tenable. Pulling off such a scheme would require the involvement of at least hundreds of people, and more likely thousands. (Military and intelligence agencies are designed to work as large cooperative bureaucracies, with lots of internal checks and paperwork on trans
Finally (Score:2)
Bush and co are laughing right now. (Score:2)
Anyways not that it matters but they do not need excuses anymore. That war on terror jocker card can be used anytime they please! Thankfully we have conditionned crowds to eat it up.
consequences (Score:3, Insightful)
The lesson here is clear: If you are a nation that the US may not like, and you don't have nuclear weapons, then you are vulnerable to attack and occupation by the US. They will, if they wish to, invent lies about you having said weapons, and attack you, with or without a general concensus from the rest of the civilized world.
So if you want to protect yourself, get WMDs, and get them fast.
That, my friends, is the moral of this story.
-Laxitive
Re:consequences (Score:2)
*sigh* That's a really bad idea, too. If the US was at war with someone, and they actually used WMDs of any kind to defend themselves, the response would be devastating. Our official policy is to respond to WMD in kind-and that means breaking out our still significant nuclear weapons. Even if we chose not to use them, the response from the military, and the American people at large, would be devastating to say the least. Think of a demand
Re:consequences (Score:2)
I think you've limited the scope a bit too much there.
Iraq used to be on "our side".
We did this shit to one of our friends... that should be the lesson for all to learn.
Nobody is safe as long as we are around.
Re:consequences (Score:3, Insightful)
Iraq consistently exaggerated their weapons capabilities, and were reluctant to admit how completely powerless they were, because they wanted to deter Iran. Y'know, that other society with whom they've been at perio
Lying by understatement: an object lesson. (Score:5, Insightful)
Prior to the war, WMDs were named as the justification for a 'preemptive' invasion.
After the war and during the war, when WMDs were not being found,
Re: Lying by understatement: an object lesson. (Score:2)
> Prior to the war, WMDs were named as the justification for a 'preemptive' invasion.
... not so much.
> After the war and during the war, when WMDs were not being found,
I liked Umansky's tart assessment [msn.com] at Slate: "the Iraq Survey Group, which when last heard from was still hot on the trail for banned weapons, has in fact folded its tent, and it did so about three weeks ago. (No, you didn't miss the White House announcement.)"
Re:Lying by understatement: an object lesson. (Score:2)
Unfortunately it was all about oil and petty revenge...
Preemption works! (Score:2, Funny)
We invaded them and they didn't attack us with WMD. What more proof do you need!
Seinfeld quote (Score:3, Funny)
It seems oddly fitting here. Just replace the words
'people' with 'WMD'
'Babu' with 'Most of the World'
and 'Jerry' with 'GWB'
Most of the World: Quiet!! You shut up!
GWB: You know, I think I'll just take the check.
Most of the World: You bad man! You very very bad man! [leaves]
GWB thinking: Bad man? Could my mother have been wrong?
Can a War still help the economy (Score:2)
Re:Can a War still help the economy (Score:2)
Uh.. No. (Score:2)
Re:Uh.. No. (Score:2)
Re:Can a War still help the economy (Score:2)
Now the government is pissing away billions and putting nothing back into the economy with the exception of a few large companies. The return to the American people will be less, plus taxes will soar to keep the gov't from going broke.
Not
Re:Can a War still help the economy (Score:2)
It depends. Entering into WWII was a situation where we created a lot of production and jobs that weren't there before. Post-WWII, few American wars have been at the behest of the hearts of the American people, but instead, at least in part, to legitimize the continuance of the military industry birthed for WWII. Sadly, a healthy chunk of our economy still depends on a need for war, or at least military actions. Death is big business, and we as a country are an addict to it, economically and perhaps even ps
The silence around here is deafeaning. (Score:2, Insightful)
Because they are turning the proverbial blind eye to the killing and maiming of Iraqi civilians in the thousends (collateral damage you know)., so maybe the only way you will react is when they turn against you and experience the horrors you are subsidizing with your taxes. Don't laugh, nightmares have a fucking habit of turn
Re:The silence around here is deafeaning. (Score:2)
1. Sacrifices at home to provide needed material for the troops.
2. Wartime production crowding out civilian production.
3. A draft calling up millions- even though it's obvious that cannon fodder would be usefull, as the enemy is highly limited on manpower.
4. Nukes and terror to break the spirit of the enemy.
All the true warmongers I know are calling for all or part of the above
Official response: (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Informative)
Re: look people (Score:3, Insightful)
> Just a few years ago the people of Iraq were being starved and gassed to death by an evil dictator. Now in less than three weeks there will be free Iraqi elections for the first time in over 30 years.
And that's going to fix everything, just like we were supposed to believe the invasion would, the capture of Saddam would, the handover of power to the transitional government would, the flattening of Fallujah would,