HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------


The following article appears in the latest issue of Green Left Weekly
(http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2002/511/511p12.htm), Australia's
radical newspaper.

*****************************************************

Bush's and Blair's war threat based on lies

On September 24, British Prime Minister Tony Blair presented his
much-anticipated ``dossier'', Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction, to the
parliament. Supporters of a US attack on Iraq had promised that Blair
would provide the definitive ``evidence'' that Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's regime has retained chemical and biological weapons, is
continuing to produce them and is on a crash program to build a nuclear
weapon. It did nothing of the sort.

Blair's dossier was originally scheduled for release in April. However,
it was ``deferred'' because, according the April 8 Financial Times, the
British government feared ``it would inflame matters while not
presenting a convincing case''.

Six months later  --  desperate to convince an increasingly sceptical
British and world population that a US-British invasion of Iraq is
urgently required  --  Blair brazenly recycled the litany of lies,
half-truths, hypocrisies and unsubstantiated allegations that have been
repeated by US President George Bush, embroidered by his influential
underlings and an army of establishment ``independent experts'', and
regurgitated without question by the mainstream capitalist media.

To add a touch of originality, Blair spiced his dossier up with a few
extra unsubstantiated allegations and some unprovable ``judgments''
about Hussein's ``intentions'' and motives, based on ``secret
intelligence sources'' (meaning the notoriously unreliable '' regularly
produced by the US-puppet Iraqi National Congress).

However, the quality of Blair's ``evidence''  --  and of all similar
efforts by the Bush administration and its allied ``experts'', think
tanks and ``institutes''  --  is betrayed by the dossier's surfeit of
what respected journalist Robert Fisk calls ``weasel words'': the ifs,
mights, possiblys, probablys, believes, suspects and coulds that qualify
almost every assertion and allegation.

In Australia, every claim, no matter how dubious or fantastic, uttered
by the Bush gang and its British sidekick has been dutifully parroted
within hours by Prime Minister John Howard and foreign minister
Alexander Downer.

Bush, Blair and Howard have perfected the age-old technique of the ``big
lie'' to justify the coming US-led invasion of Iraq: say it loud enough
and often enough and it will become accepted as fact.

On September 24, Downer claimed on the ABC's Lateline program that
Blair's document ``puts beyond any question the fact that Saddam Hussein
does have a chemical and biological weapons capability''.

Even Kevin Rudd, the ALP's foreign affairs spokesperson, chose to repeat
the Bush-Blair-Howard big lie when he told Lateline: ``There is no
debate or dispute as to whether Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass
destruction.''

Below Green Left Weekly's NORM DIXON sorts the truth from some of the
lies and misinformation being spread by Washington, London and Canberra
to justify a massive and bloody war against the people of Iraq.

Lie #1: Iraq retained biological and chemical weapons after 1998.

A central claim of those advocating an attack on Iraq is that  --  after
almost seven years of the most intrusive inspections regime in history,
following Iraq's defeat in the 1990-91 Gulf War  --  Hussein's regime
still retains chemical and biological weapons and the facilities to
produce more.

While the Western press and the likes of Bush, Blair, Howard and Rudd
continually claim that everybody ``agrees'' that there is ``no doubt''
about this, the simple fact is that there is not a trace of evidence
that Iraq retained these weapons, can produce more or is attempting to.

Blair's September 24 dossier states: ``Iraq has claimed that all its
biological agents have been destroyed. No convincing proof of any kind
has been produced to support this claim.''

US vice-president Dick Cheney told the national convention of Veterans
of Foreign Wars in Nashville on August 26 that ``even as [UN] inspectors
were conducting the most intrusive system of arms control in history,
the inspectors missed a great deal''.

Bush, in his September 12 speech to the UN General Assembly, stated:
``In 1991, the Iraqi regime agreed to destroy and stop developing all
weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles and to prove this to
the world it has done so by complying with rigorous inspections. Iraq
has broken every aspect of this fundamental pledge85 Iraq likely
maintains stockpiles of VX, mustard and other chemical agents.''

However, contrary to these assertions, the UN Special Commission
(UNSCOM) weapons inspectors between 1991 and 1998 successfully disarmed
Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction and destroyed its facilities to
produce them.

According to Scott Ritter, who as head weapons inspector until 1998 led
the inspections and the subsequent destruction of what was found, 90-95%
of Iraq's biological and chemical weapons, its research facilities and
factories used to produce them, and the means to deliver them had been
destroyed by mid 1996. These included the massive Muthanna State
Establishment, Iraq's main production site for chemical warfare agents,
and al Hakem, Iraq's main biological weapons facility.

UNSCOM found that Iraq had not mass-produced VX nerve agent. The
equipment purchased for its mass production was found still packed in
crates and was destroyed in 1996. Tests showed the equipment had never
been used.

UNSCOM destroyed 12,747 of Iraq's 13,500 mustard gas shells; Baghdad
reported that the remaining shells were destroyed by US and British
warplanes in the Gulf War.

In 1992, UNSCOM certified the destruction of 817 of Iraq's 819
long-range Scud missiles. The oft-repeated ``fact'' that Iraq still has
a dozen of these missiles is based on a claim that they could have been
rebuilt from parts salvaged from the destroyed missiles. But there is no
evidence that this has taken place and the chances of building workable
missiles from the debris must be considered highly unlikely.

Blair's dossier claims that Iraq has 20 Scuds, without offering any
proof.

Likewise, the Blair dossier's main headline-grabber was that Iraq has
developed missiles that can take out British bases in Cyprus. This claim
is based on unspecified ``intelligence'' that Iraq's UN-permitted
short-range missiles have been modified. The claim that Iraq is
developing a 1000km-range missile is based solely on a grainy photo that
purports to show a new rocket engine test bed that is larger than the
others.

Washington and London base their charge that Iraq has ``hidden''
biological and chemical weapons (BCW) on the fact that some chemical
agents, biological ingredients, munitions and missiles remained
``unaccounted for'' when the inspectors left in 1998. This assumption is
based on the difference between the quantity the UN estimated Iraq had
produced during the 1980s and what UNSCOM was able to verify as having
been destroyed.

As British Labour MP Alan Simpson and Glen Rangwala, lecturer in
politics at Cambridge University, point out in their informative
``counter-dossier'' (available at http://www.traprockpeace.org), ``the
fact that these quantities are unaccounted for does not mean they still
exist''. This is because it is not known how accurate UN estimates were
in the first place, how much of Iraq's BCW stockpile was expended during
the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war or how much of it was destroyed in US bombing
raids during the Gulf War.

US bombing also destroyed documents and killed officials with knowledge
of the true size of Iraq's stocks.

Ritter has stated that for these reasons, it is impossible to achieve
100% verification of Iraq's complete disarmament.

Lie #2: Since 1998, Iraq has continued to produce chemical and
biological weapons.

According to Bush on September 12: ``It has been almost four years since
the last UN inspectors set foot in the country. Are we to assume that he
stopped when they left?''

In the foreword to his government's dossier, Blair states: ``I believe
the assessed intelligence has established beyond doubt that Saddam has
continued to produce chemical and biological weapons.''

However, the dossier fails to deliver a single scrap of evidence that
such weapons have continued to be produced. Instead, the document's
writers use all their literary skills to imply sinister motives to
Iraq's legitimate and legal pursuit of a civilian chemical industry.
Here are some examples:

``Although the main chemical weapon production facility at al Muthanna
was completely destroyed by UNSCOM and has not been rebuilt, other
plants formerly associated with the chemical warfare program have been
rebuilt. These include the chlorine and phenol plant at Fallujah 285 In
addition to their civilian uses, chlorine and phenol are used for
precursor chemicals which contribute to the production of chemical
agents85

``Parts of the al Qaqa chemical complex damaged in the Gulf War have
also been repaired and are operational. Of particular concern are
elements of the phosgene production plant at al Qaqa85 While phosgene
does have industrial uses it can also be used by itself as a chemical
agent or as a precursor for nerve agent85 The Castor Oil Plant at
Fallujah 85 was damaged in UK/US air attacks in 1998 but has been
rebuilt. The residue from the castor bean can be used in the production
of the biological agent ricin.'' (Emphasis added.)

Similar attempts to link rebuilt or repaired factories to the production
of banned weapons have been made previously by US and British officials.
However, Western journalists who have visited the plants within hours of
them being named have found no suspicious activities (and in some cases
no activity of any kind, just empty buildings used for storage of
foodstuffs).

One of the favourite excuses used by Cheney and US defence secretary
Donald Rumsfeld for why the resumption of UN weapons inspections cannot
succeed is the claim that Iraq has ``mobile'' laboratories for the
production of chemical and biological weapons. This unprovable charge is
based on the claims of a single Iraqi ``defector''.

However, even the September report of the conservative, pro-war
International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS)  --  edited by Gary
Samore, who was a senior member of President Bill Clinton's staff  --
concluded that claims of mobile laboratories were ``hard to confirm''.

Lie #3: Iraq is developing a nuclear weapon.

According to Ritter, UNSCOM and International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) inspectors eliminated Iraq's nuclear weapons program ``from the
face of the Earth'' before they were ordered out of Iraq by the US in
1998. ``If Iraq is on the verge of building a nuclear weapon, it would
be a miracle'', Ritter said on July 23.

The IAEA reported to the Security Council in October 1997 that Iraq had
provided a ``full, final and complete'' account of its nuclear projects.
In April this year, the IAEA stated that there ``were no indications
that there remains in Iraq any physical capability for the production of
amounts of weapons-usable nuclear material of any practical
significance''.

All the facilities for Iraq's nuclear weapons programs were destroyed in
the Gulf War. Prior to 1990, despite massive imports of sophisticated
technology and materials from European and US corporations (with the
full knowledge of Western governments), the IAEA concluded that Iraq had
never mastered the enrichment of uranium, despite persistent attempts.

This suggests that claims that Iraq was ``within three years'' of making
a nuclear device in 1991 were a wild over-estimation, even if Western
support had been maintained at pre-1990 levels. Claims that, 10 years
later, impoverished and devastated Iraq is even closer to building a
nuclear bomb are simply ridiculous.

Nevertheless, as the first anniversary of 9/11 approached, Cheney, Bush,
Rumsfeld and US national security advisor Condoleezza Rice embarked on a
calculated campaign of outrageous lies to convince the world that Iraq,
despite the absence of vital facilities or material, is miraculously on
the verge of acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Cheney has stated on several occasions that Iraq will have a nuclear
bomb ``fairly soon''. Rice stated that the US must ``act'' before the
``smoking gun'' (referring to sceptics' demands for proof that Iraq is
developing nuclear weapons) turns up in the form of a ``mushroom
cloud''. On September 12, Bush told the UN that ``the first time we may
be completely certain he has nuclear weapons is when, God forbid, he
uses one''.

These apocalyptic delusions reached their most ludicrous on September
26, when Bush declared that ``each passing day could be one in which the
Iraq regime gives anthrax or VX nerve gas or some nuclear weapon to a
terrorist ally''.

The mantra of the pro-war forces and their apologists that continually
captures the headlines in the fear-mongering Western press has been
that, if Iraq could obtain sufficient weapons-grade material from
overseas, it could have a nuclear weapon ``within months'' (IISS report,
September 9), ``within a year'' (Bush) or ``within one to two years''
(Blair).

However, as Simpson and Rangwala point out, ``this claim is no more than
a tautology. If Iraq could import the core material for a bomb, then it
would have a bomb. Obtaining the fissile material is the most difficult
part of constructing any nuclear device, and there are not signs that
Iraq has attempted to obtain such material from abroad.''

As the Nuclear Control Institute has pointed out, if science students in
any country could get hold of ``bomb-grade, high-enriched uranium'',
they ``could make a bomb powerful enough to destroy a city''.

Yet the shrill warnings of impending nuclear peril coming from the White
House and 10 Downing Street are not even consistent with the bulk of the
``evidence'' that has been presented by the Bush gang, Blair and others.
What has been proffered relates to the equally dubious charge that Iraq
is attempting to manufacture weapons-grade material on its own.

Even if it was true that Baghdad had embarked on such a course, Iraq
would not even be close to developing a nuclear weapon. In January 2001,
the US Department of Defense showed none of the panic that boss Rumsfeld
has exhibited since 9/11 when it stated: ``Iraq would need five or more
years and key foreign assistance to rebuild the infrastructure to enrich
enough material for a nuclear weapon.''

Blair's dossier also acknowledged this when it stated: ``While sanctions
remain effective Iraq would not be able to produce a nuclear weapon. If
they were removed or prove ineffective, it would take Iraq at least five
years to produce sufficient fissile material for a weapon
indigenously.''

``Iraq has made several attempts to buy high-strength aluminium tubes to
enrich uranium for a nuclear weapon'', Bush told the UN on September 12,
repeating claims made on TV talk shows by other administration officials
on September 8. This was the only ``proof'' presented by Bush to justify
his demands for UN-endorsement for a war to allegedly stop Iraq's
acquisition of nuclear weapons.

The tubes were supposedly ``intercepted'' by an unnamed security service
in an unnamed country. When this interception occurred was left
unstated, as was the country of origin of the shipment or the
manufacturer of the tubes. Why it was concluded they were destined for
Iraq was also not disclosed. US officials refused to give details of the
tubes' dimensions.

Gary Dillon, a former weapons inspector in Iraq, told Associated Press
on September 18 that ``aluminium tubes come in all shapes and forms,
from crutches to centrifuge parts. Nobody has enough information to
decide what was the objective of this piping''. Iraq would need
``miles'' of such tubes if they were to be used in centrifuge equipment
needed to enrich low-grade uranium.

Even if the tubes were destined for Iraq and were to be used in an as
yet unbuilt or secret enrichment plant, no evidence has been provided to
show that any tubes have ever been delivered.

Nor is there evidence that Iraq has begun to rebuild the massively
expensive and technologically sophisticated infrastructure required to
enrich uranium or build a bomb.

As the respected Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists noted soon after the
US administration's aluminium tube tale: ``Just a little tip for those
assigned to leak additional new `evidence' of a stepped-up Iraqi nuclear
threat: The tubing in centrifuges is not nearly as hard to acquire or
assemble as the mechanisms that allow them to spin at rapid speeds;
getting that stuff right, and getting thousands of centrifuges working
in concert, is really hard. Also, leakers, please note: Should you want
to claim that an Iraqi cascade is already in operation, such a facility
uses as much energy as a fairly large city; it could be detected [by US
spy satellites] by its heat signature alone; uranium enrichment requires
a huge supply of electricity, which would be easily detected by US and
commercial spy satellites.''

And as Ritter told the September 19 British Guardian: ``For Iraq to
reacquire nuclear weapons capability, [it] would have to build
enrichment and weaponisation capabilities that would cost tens of
billions of dollars. Nuclear weapons cannot be created in a basement or
a cave. They require modern industrial infrastructure that in turn
require massive amounts of electricity and highly controlled
technologies not readily available on the open market [UNSCOM]
eliminated the nuclear program, and for Iraq to have reconstituted it
would require undertaking activities eminently detectable by
intelligence services''.

Blair's dossier claims that Iraq ``is almost certainly seeking'' an
indigenous ability to enrich uranium to the level needed for a nuclear
weapon. However, it gently distances itself from Bush's discredited
aluminium tube story, stating that ``there is no intelligence that [the
specialised aluminium] is destined for a nuclear program''.

However, it then plays the same dishonest word games by detailing Iraq's
``attempts to purchase'': ``vacuum pumps which could be used in a gas
centrifuge cascade''; ``an entire magnet production line of the correct
specification for use'' in a centrifuge; a chemical that is ``commonly
used in the petrochemical industry but  is also used in'' centrifuge
cascades; ``one large filament winding machine which could be used'' to
manufacture centrifuge motors; and ``a large balancing machine which
could be used in initial centrifuge balancing work'' (emphasis added).

The dossier claims that ``there is intelligence that Iraq has sought the
supply of significant quantities of uranium from Africa''. No details
are provided about which African countries were approached or when. The
September 25 Guardian reported that the claim ``was first made by an
Iraqi defector''.

The dossier's wording suggests that Britain is not claiming that the
uranium (or the equipment that could be used in a centrifuge) ever
reached Iraq. And since the dossier does not claim that Iraq attempted
to get hold of enriched uranium  --  South Africa is the only country in
Africa capable of enriching uranium  --  an approach made to a
non-enriched uranium exporting country cannot be construed as evidence
that Iraq is in a hurry to develop a nuclear device.

One central fact that is glaringly absent from Bush's UN speech and
Blair's dossier is that Iraq was only able to develop weapons of mass
destruction in the 1980s with the active and conscious assistance of
Western governments, most importantly France, Germany, Britain and the
US. Even with that support, Iraq failed to develop nuclear weapons or
master the uranium enrichment process.

Blair and Bush singled out the Hussein regime's use of deadly chemical
weapons during the brutal 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war and against the
oppressed Kurds in Iraq's north in 1988 as evidence that the Iraqi
dictator would do so again.

What they did not mention was that those dreadful attacks were carried
out with the blessing, encouragement and cooperation of the US and
British governments. Washington and London were Hussein's allies
throughout the bloody eight-year war with Iran, which resulted in the
deaths of more than one million people.

Lie #4: Iraq continues to sponsor terrorism and may share its weapons of
mass destruction with the al Qaeda terrorist network.

The US State Department's 2001 report on terrorism stated that Hussein's
regime ``has not attempted an anti-Western terrorist attack'' since
1993.

The marginal Iranian and Palestinian groups based in Iraq that have used
terrorist tactics are largely inactive and have never launched attacks
in the US or Europe, nor are they known to have networks outside the
Middle East.

No credible links have been found between Baghdad and al Qaeda, despite
the best efforts of the Bush administration's hawks to find or invent
them. This is no surprise since Osama bin Laden and his reactionary
followers have long considered Hussein and his secular Baathist party
``infidels''. Bin Laden fell out with the Saudi royal family in 1990
after it refused his offer to raise an army of religious zealots to
drive Iraqi troops from Kuwait and defend Saudi Arabia.

Despite this, elements of the Bush administration continue to try to
resurrect two particularly putrefied ``links'' with al Qaeda. The first
is an alleged meeting between Mohammad Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers,
and an ``Iraqi agent'' in Prague in 2001. However, investigations by the
CIA and Czech intelligence have found that the rumour of the meeting has
no substance.

The other claim is that the tiny fundamentalist Ansar al Islam group in
northern Iraq contains al Qaeda members who have fled from Afghanistan
and is also backed by Baghdad. This is what Bush was referring to on
September 12 when he stated, ``al Qaeda terrorists escaped from
Afghanistan are known to be in Iraq''.

Contrary to repeated assertions by Rumsfeld earlier this year, the Ansar
el Islam group is not being harboured by the Baghdad regime. A few
hundred Ansar al Islam fighters control a handful of villages near the
Iranian border within the area dominated by the anti-Hussein, US-backed
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.

>From Green Left Weekly, October 2, 2002. Visit the Green Left Weekly
home page at http://www.greenleft.org.au.
-----------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^^===============================================================
This email was sent to: archive@jab.org

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^^===============================================================

Reply via email to