The WMD search is over

Wednesday 12 January 2005 @ 01:04

Just when I feel I have reached my capacity for outrage and frustration,
just when I think the sorrow and rage needle is as pegged-over as it can be,
I see articles like this one from MSNBC:

The hunt for biological, chemical and nuclear weapons in Iraq has come to an
end nearly two years after President Bush ordered U.S. troops to disarm
Saddam Hussein. The top CIA weapons hunter is home, and analysts are back at
Langley.

In interviews, officials who served with the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) said
the violence in Iraq, coupled with a lack of new information, led them to
fold up the effort shortly before Christmas.

Four months after Charles A. Duelfer, who led the weapons hunt in 2004,
submitted an interim report to Congress that contradicted nearly every
prewar assertion about Iraq made by top Bush administration officials, a
senior intelligence official said the findings will stand as the ISG's final
conclusions and will be published this spring.

Rather than get off on yet another rant, I am going to fall back on a few of
the things I have written on this subject over the last two years.

---

The Coming October War in Iraq
Wednesday, 24 July, 2002 

"If I were an American, uninformed on Iraq as we all are," said Ritter, "I
would be concerned." Furthermore, continued Ritter, if an unquestionable
case could be made that such weapons and terrorist connections existed, he
would be all for a war in Iraq. It would be just, smart, and in the interest
of national defense. 

Therein lies the rub: According to Scott Ritter, who spent seven years in
Iraq with the UNSCOM weapons inspection teams performing acidly detailed
investigations into Iraq's weapons program, no such capability exists. Iraq
simply does not have weapons of mass destruction, and does not have
threatening ties to international terrorism. Therefore, no premise for a war
in Iraq exists. Considering the American military lives and the Iraqi
civilian lives that will be spent in such an endeavor, not to mention the
deadly regional destabilization that will ensue, such a baseless war must be
avoided at all costs. 

"The Bush administration has provided the American public with little more
than rhetorically laced speculation," said Ritter. "There has been nothing
in the way of substantive fact presented that makes the case that Iraq
possesses these weapons or has links to international terror, that Iraq
poses a threat to the United States of America worthy of war." 

Read the rest here..............

FYI: The WMD Search in Iraq Is Over
http://www.truthout.org/fyi




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