>
>  /** mideast.gulf: 329.0 **/
>  ** Topic: IRAQ/USA: Clinton Manufactured Iraq Crisis, Violated
>  Constitution **
>  ** Written  2:36 PM  Dec 31, 1998 by [EMAIL PROTECTED] in
>  cdp:mideast.gulf **
>
>  [THE WISDOM FUND: News & Views]
>
>       Released December 22, 1998
>       The Wisdom Fund, P. O. Box 2723, Arlington, VA 22202
>       Website: http://www.twf.org -- Press Contact: Enver Masud
>
>       Clinton Manufactured Iraq Crisis, Violated Constitution
>
>       Rep. Ron Paul calls on President Clinton to resign
>
>            WASHINGTON, DC -- President Clinton, in launching the
>            massive Dec. 16 attack on Iraq, used a manufactured
>            crisis to deceive the American people, and to bypass
>            Congress' power to declare war.
>
>            Warplanes aboard the USS Enterprise, combined with more
>            than 200 cruise missiles from eight Navy warships,
>            converged on Iraqi targets at 5:06 p.m. EST (1:06 a.m.
>            Baghdad time). Over a four-day period, reports U.S.
>            Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who oversaw the Iraq attack,
>            300 strike fighters, bombers and support aircraft flew
>            600 sorties, more than half of them at night. Another 40
>            ships took part in the attack, with 10 of them firing
>            cruise missiles. More than 600 bombs were dropped, 90
>            cruise missiles fired from the air and another 300 from
>            ships at sea.
>
>            The UNSCOM report Mr. Clinton used as cause for war,
>            says syndicated columnist Robert D. Novak (Wag the
>            Congress, The Washington Post, Dec. 21), contains six
>            complaints cited by Richard Butler, executive chairman
>            of UNSCOM. These complaints "reflect Saddam Hussein's
>            obnoxious style but do not compare to more than 400
>            unimpeded inspections reported by Iraq since cooperation
>            resumed Nov.14."
>
>            Mr. Novak provides an example of the type of incidents
>            Mr. Clinton used to justify the attack on Iraq. "On Dec.
>            9 weapons inspectors from UNSCOM, acting on a tip,
>            showed up without notification at the Baghdad
>            headquarters of the ruling Baath Party to search for
>            ballistic missile components. The Iraqi escorts, citing
>            a 1996 agreement, said only four inspectors could
>            enter."
>
>            The Butler report itself was a setup.
>
>            According to Rowan Scarborough (Did White House
>            orchestrate a crisis? The Washington Times, Dec. 18)
>            Scott Ritter, a former U.N. inspector, said Mr. Butler
>            conferred with the Clinton administration's national
>            security staff on how to write his report of
>            noncompliance before submitting it to the U.N. Security
>            Council. The former inspector said the White House
>            wanted to ensure the report contained sufficiently tough
>            language on which to justify its decision to bomb Iraq.
>            "I'm telling you this was a preordained conclusion. This
>            inspection was a total setup by the United States," said
>            Ritter. Mr. Ritter resigned from UNSCOM in August,
>            accusing the Clinton administration of interfering in
>            how and when inspections were carried out.
>
>            The decision to attack Iraq was made before the Bultler
>            report was submitted to the U.N. Security Council.
>
>            Reports the MacLaughlin Group (NBC, Dec. 18), that while
>            the president told the nation Wednesday night that the
>            attack was triggered by this Butler report, the "time
>            line into the bombing itself shows that the president
>            ordered airstrikes 48 hours before he saw the report."
>
>            Mr. Clinton's reference to Iraq's nuclear weapons was
>            completely at odds with the report of the agency charged
>            with reporting on Iraq's clandestine nuclear weapons
>            capabilities.
>
>            Says the MacLaughlin Group, there is another report that
>            was filed with the UNSCOM report: the International
>            Atomic Energy Agency report. The IAEA worked hand in
>            glove with UNSCOM. The agency is charged with
>            determining any Iraqi clandestine nuclear weapons
>            capabilities. This week the IAEA filed a companion
>            separate report, accompanying the UNSCOM report, that
>            went largely unnoticed. In it, the IAEA gives Iraq a
>            clean nuclear bill of health, describing Iraq's level of
>            cooperation as, "efficient and effective," reported the
>            McLauglin Group.
>
>            President Clinton told another lie, says Howard Zinn,
>            professor emeritus of history at Boston University, and
>            author of the best-seeling "A People's History of the
>            United Sates."
>
>            Mr. Clinton said that other nations besides Iraq have
>            weapons of mass destruction, but Iraq alone has used
>            them. Says Prof. Zinn, "He could only say this to a
>            population deprived of history. The United States has
>            supplied Turkey, Israel, and Indonesia with such weapons
>            and they have used them against civilian populations.
>            But the nation most guilty is our own. No nation in the
>            world possesses greater weapons of mass destruction than
>            we do, and none has used them more often, or with
>            greater loss of civilian life. In Hiroshima hundreds of
>            thousands died, in Korea and Vietnam millions died as a
>            result of our use of such weapons."
>
>            Mr. Zinn's words echo those of Rev. Martin Luther King,
>            Jr. cited by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark,
>            in a Dec. 20 letter sent to each member of the Security
>            Council. Said Rev. King, "The greatest purveyor of
>            violence on earth is my own government."
>
>            Presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan (Failed
>            President, Flawed Policy, Dec. 18) says, "It is time to
>            ask how grave a threat Iraq is to America. In the Gulf
>            War, Iraq did not attack us; we attacked Iraq. We
>            launched the 'round-the-clock air strikes with 2,000
>            planes for six weeks; Iraq fired back a handful of
>            Scuds. Iraq killed scores of Americans; we killed
>            thousands of Iraqis. Yes, Saddam makes "war on his own
>            people," but who inflicts the greater suffering --
>            Saddam or a U.S.-led embargo that has claimed the lives
>            of 239,000 children, 5 years old and under, since 1990?"
>
>            Matthew Rothschild, Editor of the Progressive Magazine,
>            writes (An Attack That Makes No Sense, Los Angeles
>            Times, Dec. 17, 1998) , "The U.S. bombing campaign
>            against Iraq is an act of war not sanctioned by
>            international law or by the U.S. Constitution. Within 72
>            hours of his grand jury appearance in August, Clinton
>            bombed Sudan and Afghanistan. Now, the day before he
>            faced impeachment, he attacks Baghdad and other
>            locations in Iraq. Our founders gave Congress the sole
>            power to declare war. Congress has not issued such a
>            declaration in this instance. According to international
>            law, a country can take unilateral action against
>            another country only for the purpose of self-defense.
>            But this bombing attack can hardly be called an act of
>            self-defense. Saddam has not attacked the United States
>            and does not pose an imminent threat to us."
>
>            At least one congressman has dared to speak out against
>            Mr. Clinton's attack on Iraq, and his usurpation of
>            Congress' power.
>
>            Last Wednesday, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) called on President
>            Clinton to resign for the good of the country and the
>            safety of American soldiers. "Once again President
>            Clinton is using American troops to deflect attention
>            from his record of lies, distortions, obstruction of
>            justice and abuse of power. Just a couple months ago,
>            the president launched an attack against the nation of
>            Sudan in an attempt to cover over his personal problems;
>            an attack which we know now had no basis whatsoever in
>            protecting US interests."
>
>            Copyright C 1998 The Wisdom Fund - All Rights Reserved.
>            This article may be reproduced only in printed
>            newspapers and magazines provided that it is not edited,
>            and our name and URL are included. It may not be saved
>            in digital form without our written permission.
>
>  The Wisdom Fund
>  http://www.twf.org
>
>            http://www.iraqi-mission.org/iraq.htm
>
>   >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
>      >>   Further Informations about Iraq and Palestine:
>      >>   http://www.germany.net/teilnehmer/101,88843/
>   >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
>
>                                * * * * *
>
>  ** End of text from cdp:mideast.gulf **
>
>  **********************************************************************
>  This material came from the Institute for Global Communications (IGC), a
>  non-profit, unionized, politically progressive Internet services
>  provider.  For more information, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (you
>  will get back an automatic reply), or visit their web site at
>  http://www.igc.org/ . IGC is a project of the Tides Center, a 501(c)(3)
>  charitable organization.
>  **********************************************************************



/** mideast.gulf: 329.0 **/
** Topic: IRAQ/USA: Clinton Manufactured Iraq Crisis, Violated
Constitution **
** Written  2:36 PM  Dec 31, 1998 by [EMAIL PROTECTED] in
cdp:mideast.gulf **

[THE WISDOM FUND: News & Views]

     Released December 22, 1998
     The Wisdom Fund, P. O. Box 2723, Arlington, VA 22202
     Website: http://www.twf.org -- Press Contact: Enver Masud

     Clinton Manufactured Iraq Crisis, Violated Constitution

     Rep. Ron Paul calls on President Clinton to resign

          WASHINGTON, DC -- President Clinton, in launching the
          massive Dec. 16 attack on Iraq, used a manufactured
          crisis to deceive the American people, and to bypass
          Congress' power to declare war.

          Warplanes aboard the USS Enterprise, combined with more
          than 200 cruise missiles from eight Navy warships,
          converged on Iraqi targets at 5:06 p.m. EST (1:06 a.m.
          Baghdad time). Over a four-day period, reports U.S.
          Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who oversaw the Iraq attack,
          300 strike fighters, bombers and support aircraft flew
          600 sorties, more than half of them at night. Another 40
          ships took part in the attack, with 10 of them firing
          cruise missiles. More than 600 bombs were dropped, 90
          cruise missiles fired from the air and another 300 from
          ships at sea.

          The UNSCOM report Mr. Clinton used as cause for war,
          says syndicated columnist Robert D. Novak (Wag the
          Congress, The Washington Post, Dec. 21), contains six
          complaints cited by Richard Butler, executive chairman
          of UNSCOM. These complaints "reflect Saddam Hussein's
          obnoxious style but do not compare to more than 400
          unimpeded inspections reported by Iraq since cooperation
          resumed Nov.14."

          Mr. Novak provides an example of the type of incidents
          Mr. Clinton used to justify the attack on Iraq. "On Dec.
          9 weapons inspectors from UNSCOM, acting on a tip,
          showed up without notification at the Baghdad
          headquarters of the ruling Baath Party to search for
          ballistic missile components. The Iraqi escorts, citing
          a 1996 agreement, said only four inspectors could
          enter."

          The Butler report itself was a setup.

          According to Rowan Scarborough (Did White House
          orchestrate a crisis? The Washington Times, Dec. 18)
          Scott Ritter, a former U.N. inspector, said Mr. Butler
          conferred with the Clinton administration's national
          security staff on how to write his report of
          noncompliance before submitting it to the U.N. Security
          Council. The former inspector said the White House
          wanted to ensure the report contained sufficiently tough
          language on which to justify its decision to bomb Iraq.
          "I'm telling you this was a preordained conclusion. This
          inspection was a total setup by the United States," said
          Ritter. Mr. Ritter resigned from UNSCOM in August,
          accusing the Clinton administration of interfering in
          how and when inspections were carried out.

          The decision to attack Iraq was made before the Bultler
          report was submitted to the U.N. Security Council.

          Reports the MacLaughlin Group (NBC, Dec. 18), that while
          the president told the nation Wednesday night that the
          attack was triggered by this Butler report, the "time
          line into the bombing itself shows that the president
          ordered airstrikes 48 hours before he saw the report."

          Mr. Clinton's reference to Iraq's nuclear weapons was
          completely at odds with the report of the agency charged
          with reporting on Iraq's clandestine nuclear weapons
          capabilities.

          Says the MacLaughlin Group, there is another report that
          was filed with the UNSCOM report: the International
          Atomic Energy Agency report. The IAEA worked hand in
          glove with UNSCOM. The agency is charged with
          determining any Iraqi clandestine nuclear weapons
          capabilities. This week the IAEA filed a companion
          separate report, accompanying the UNSCOM report, that
          went largely unnoticed. In it, the IAEA gives Iraq a
          clean nuclear bill of health, describing Iraq's level of
          cooperation as, "efficient and effective," reported the
          McLauglin Group.

          President Clinton told another lie, says Howard Zinn,
          professor emeritus of history at Boston University, and
          author of the best-seeling "A People's History of the
          United Sates."

          Mr. Clinton said that other nations besides Iraq have
          weapons of mass destruction, but Iraq alone has used
          them. Says Prof. Zinn, "He could only say this to a
          population deprived of history. The United States has
          supplied Turkey, Israel, and Indonesia with such weapons
          and they have used them against civilian populations.
          But the nation most guilty is our own. No nation in the
          world possesses greater weapons of mass destruction than
          we do, and none has used them more often, or with
          greater loss of civilian life. In Hiroshima hundreds of
          thousands died, in Korea and Vietnam millions died as a
          result of our use of such weapons."

          Mr. Zinn's words echo those of Rev. Martin Luther King,
          Jr. cited by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark,
          in a Dec. 20 letter sent to each member of the Security
          Council. Said Rev. King, "The greatest purveyor of
          violence on earth is my own government."

          Presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan (Failed
          President, Flawed Policy, Dec. 18) says, "It is time to
          ask how grave a threat Iraq is to America. In the Gulf
          War, Iraq did not attack us; we attacked Iraq. We
          launched the 'round-the-clock air strikes with 2,000
          planes for six weeks; Iraq fired back a handful of
          Scuds. Iraq killed scores of Americans; we killed
          thousands of Iraqis. Yes, Saddam makes "war on his own
          people," but who inflicts the greater suffering --
          Saddam or a U.S.-led embargo that has claimed the lives
          of 239,000 children, 5 years old and under, since 1990?"

          Matthew Rothschild, Editor of the Progressive Magazine,
          writes (An Attack That Makes No Sense, Los Angeles
          Times, Dec. 17, 1998) , "The U.S. bombing campaign
          against Iraq is an act of war not sanctioned by
          international law or by the U.S. Constitution. Within 72
          hours of his grand jury appearance in August, Clinton
          bombed Sudan and Afghanistan. Now, the day before he
          faced impeachment, he attacks Baghdad and other
          locations in Iraq. Our founders gave Congress the sole
          power to declare war. Congress has not issued such a
          declaration in this instance. According to international
          law, a country can take unilateral action against
          another country only for the purpose of self-defense.
          But this bombing attack can hardly be called an act of
          self-defense. Saddam has not attacked the United States
          and does not pose an imminent threat to us."

          At least one congressman has dared to speak out against
          Mr. Clinton's attack on Iraq, and his usurpation of
          Congress' power.

          Last Wednesday, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) called on President
          Clinton to resign for the good of the country and the
          safety of American soldiers. "Once again President
          Clinton is using American troops to deflect attention
          from his record of lies, distortions, obstruction of
          justice and abuse of power. Just a couple months ago,
          the president launched an attack against the nation of
          Sudan in an attempt to cover over his personal problems;
          an attack which we know now had no basis whatsoever in
          protecting US interests."

          Copyright C 1998 The Wisdom Fund - All Rights Reserved.
          This article may be reproduced only in printed
          newspapers and magazines provided that it is not edited,
          and our name and URL are included. It may not be saved
          in digital form without our written permission.

The Wisdom Fund
http://www.twf.org

          http://www.iraqi-mission.org/iraq.htm

 >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
    >>   Further Informations about Iraq and Palestine:
    >>   http://www.germany.net/teilnehmer/101,88843/
 >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<

                              * * * * *

** End of text from cdp:mideast.gulf **

**********************************************************************
This material came from the Institute for Global Communications (IGC), a
non-profit, unionized, politically progressive Internet services
provider.  For more information, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (you
will get back an automatic reply), or visit their web site at
http://www.igc.org/ . IGC is a project of the Tides Center, a 501(c)(3)
charitable organization.
**********************************************************************




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