Just another conspiracy....

White House Sets Up Group To Market War In Iraq In 2002

By Xinhuanet


10/17/05 WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- The White House set up,
without announcement, a group to market a war in Iraq in August 2002,
seven months before the March 2003 invasion, according to an article
published by the New York Times on Sunday.

Very little has been written about the White House Iraq Group, or
WHIG, and only one newspaper article or two have mentioned it in
passing reporting that it had been set up by Andrew Card, the White
House chief of staff, said the article in the newspaper's opinion page.

The group had eight members, including Karl Rove, the top political
adviser to President George W. Bush, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice
President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, and then presidential
security adviser Condoleezza Rice and others, and itsmission was to
market a war in Iraq.

On July 23, 2002, a week or two before the WHIG first convened in
earnest, a British official said that the Bush administration was
ensuring that "the intelligence and facts" about Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction "were being fixed around the policy" of going to
war, said the article, written by columnist Frank Rick.

On Sept. 6, 2002, a few weeks after the WHIG first convened, Card
alluded to the group's existence that there was a plan afoot to sell
a war against Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein: "From a marketing point of
view, you don't introduce new products in August," the article noted.

The official introduction of that product began two day later, the
article said. On the Sunday talk shows of Sept. 8, 2002, Rice warned
that "we don't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud," and
Cheney, who had already started the nuclear doomsday drumbeat in
three August speeches, described Saddam Hussein as "actively and
aggressively seeking to acquire nuclear weapons."

Cheney cited as evidence a front-paged article, later debunked,about
supposedly nefarious aluminium tubes in that morning's New York
Times, the article said.

Throughout those crucial seven months between the creation of the
WHIG and the start of the US invasion of Iraq, there were indications
that evidence of a Saddam nuclear program was fraudulent or
nonexistent. Joseph Wilson's CIA mission to Niger, in which he failed
to find any evidence to back up uranium claims,took place nearly a
year before the infamously fictional 16 words about "uranium from
Africa" in Bush's January 2003 State of the Union address on the eve
of the war, the article said.

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