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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (524)1/14/2004 11:08:46 PM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
Seem's I'm not the only person to think this way......
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Lies About the President's Policy in Iraq
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By Eleana Gordon
FrontPage Magazine
January 14, 2003
The Foundation for the Defense of Democracies
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A rising chorus of new studies, articles, opinion pieces and interviews is accusing the Bush administration of lying about Iraq and misleading America into an unnecessary war. Ironically, the proponents of this narrative are validating their thesis by doing exactly what they accuse the Bush administration of doing: selectively highlighting some facts and ignoring others, unabashedly presenting quotes out of context, and ignoring the broader issues that substantiated the case for war, such as Iraq's violation of more than 17 UN Security Council resolutions. The result is a skewed picture of the administration's case for removing Saddam Hussein from power, and the emergence of two myths in particular that trivialize the very real dangers and challenges America faces in the international arena in the wake of 9/11:

Myth 1: The case for the war in Iraq was based on the belief that Iraq's advanced program of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) posed an “imminent” threat.<font size=3> According to this view, the failure to find massive stockpiles of WMD proves the threat was not imminent, that the policy of “containment” was working and that war was therefore unnecessary. Bush simply made a bogeyman out of Saddam Hussein because his hard-line advisors were war-hungry.
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Myth 2: Saddam and al-Qaeda are so ideologically opposed that they would never work together, even against their common enemy -- the United States. Therefore, there was no need to be concerned about Iraqi weapons ever falling into the hands of al-Qaeda.
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The chorus singing these myths reached its crescendo last weekend when former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill's told "60 Minutes" that the Bush administration was eyeing an invasion of Iraq "from the very beginning,” and that he had never seen anything he would characterize as evidence of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
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O'Neill's remarks came in the wake of recently published books and articles on President Bush's alleged deceptiveness by prominent liberal writers such as David Corn at the Nation, Michael Kinsley of Slate and syndicated columnist Molly Ivins.<font size=3> The newly minted Center for American Progress has issued numerous reports purporting to expose the White House's rhetoric against the “facts” in Iraq. <font size=4>MoveOn.org<font size=3>, the Web-based grassroots organization that became famous for its unprecedented success in raising funds online for anti-war candidate Howard Dean -- and more recently by its connection to an ad comparing Bush's invasion of Iraq to Hitler's invasion of Czechoslovakia -- <font size=4>is now promoting a documentary that claims to tell “the story of how the truth became the first American casualty of the Iraq war.”<font size=3> And the liberal <font size=4>Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has issued “WMD in Iraq: Evidence and Implications,” which claims to uncover the truth about how intelligence was manipulated for political purposes.

These self-described exposes of the Bush administration's
“mistruths” fall short when they are held up against a
thorough examination of the information and facts that
were available to the administration when it began to
shape its Iraq policy in 2001 and 2002.

Iraq's Weapons Programs

The fact that no huge stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction have been found to date in Iraq has led many to justifiably question whether, given the existing intelligence, the administration exaggerated the state of Iraq's weapons programs. There is no doubt that the administration projected confidence that it would find extensive weapons stockpiles in Iraq.

Many Democrats, eager to use this to their political
advantage, are now claiming that the administration
intentionally misled the nation about the “imminent
threat” posed by Iraq.
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Of course, the Bush administration was not alone in worrying about the threat from Iraq. One of the most vocal and articulate proponents of regime change was <font size=4>Kenneth Pollack<font size=3>, who served as Director of Gulf Affairs on the National Security Council from 1990 to 2001 under both Clinton administrations. <font size=4>In his book the Threatening Storm, Pollack gave a detailed analysis of the history of containment -- and why it was failing. He explained in a March 2002 Foreign Affairs article that the only viable policy option left was regime change: “The last two years have witnessed a dramatic erosion of the constraints on the Iraqi regime. The Bush administration's initial solution to this problem, the smart sanctions plan, would be little more than a Band-Aid and even so could not find general acceptance. If no more serious action is taken, the United States and the world at large may soon confront a nuclear-armed Saddam.”

Furthermore, the fundamental case for war never rested on
what we knew about Saddam's weapons, but rather the
opposite: What we did not know, and what we feared we
would never know as long as Saddam persisted in defying
the United Nations, with increasing help from other
governments.

Of particular concern were the vast quantities of chemical
and biological agents (such as VX, Sarin and anthrax) that
Iraq had once admitted to having, and then claimed,
without any proof, to have destroyed. In his presentation
to the United Nations in February 2003, Hans Blix himself
stated: “This is perhaps the most important problem we are
facing."

Former President Clinton explicitly stated his support for
the war on precisely those terms in a Larry King interview
last July, saying there was "a substantial amount of
biological and chemical material unaccounted for " in
Iraq, “so I thought it was prudent for the president to go
to the U.N. and for the U.N. to say, 'You got to let these
inspectors in, and this time if you don't cooperate the
penalty could be regime change, not just continued
sanctions.'" Clinton understood the bigger picture that
the angry Left is ignoring: We didn't have the luxury of
waiting for certainty about Iraq's weapons programs before
we acted.

If anything, our history with Iraq had taught us that Western intelligence had consistently underestimated Iraq's weapons programs. Not only did we discover in 1991 after the Gulf War that Saddam's nuclear program was far more advanced than we thought but, throughout the 1990s, UN inspectors were regularly hoodwinked by Saddam's regime, and most of their major weapons discoveries were thanks to defectors, not inspections. Once inspectors left in 1998, we were in the dark about Saddam's activities.

And in 1998, the Clinton administration successfully
passed the Iraq Liberation Act, which made regime change
in Iraq the official policy of the US government.

After 9/11, it was only responsible to weigh the risks of continuing business as usual against the distinct possibility that Saddam was secretly reconstituting his weapons programs and to consider what tools were available in order to prevent such an outcome.

The same lack of perspective has led Bush's critics (and
much of the mainstream media as well), to misrepresent the
recent findings of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), presented
by David Kay to the US Congress in November 2003, as
suggesting that the ISG has found no evidence that Saddam
had any significant weapon programs at all.

Not so. With respect to nuclear weapons, the ISG found
hidden documents and equipment in scientists' homes that
could be used to resume uranium enrichment. Scientists
told the ISG team that Saddam had made it clear to them
that he expected them to be able to quickly reactivate the
nuclear program. Kay concluded that "the testimony we have
obtained from Iraqi scientists and senior government
officials should clear up any doubts about whether Saddam
still wanted to obtain nuclear weapons.”

The ISG's findings thus validate pre-war concerns that Iraq had kept its nuclear teams in place and in a position to reactivate secret nuclear research activities. It was on this basis that the International Institute for Strategic Studies, an independent, London-based research institute, determined in a July 2002 report that while Iraq would take several years and foreign assistance to build fissile material production facilities, “it could, however, assemble nuclear weapons within months if fissile material from foreign sources were obtained.”

The possibility that Iraq was seeking, or had already
obtained fissile material from Africa was therefore not to
be taken lightly. Although US intelligence was never able
to substantiate that Iraqis were attempting to purchase
uranium from Niger (the infamous “yellowcake” affair), the
British Secret Intelligence Service to which the claim was
credited continues to stand by its evidence. In September,
the UK parliamentary commission that was created to
investigate pre-war British intelligence claims concluded
that the basis for the uranium intelligence was "reasonable."

According to a Washington Post article in December 2003, it now appears that the CIA and the State Department “knew Hussein already had a stockpile of the same type of uranium that he was supposed to be seeking." It seems remarkable that this has not received more attention.

In connection to Iraq's biological and chemical weapons,
the ISG found a clandestine network of laboratories
maintained by Iraqi Intelligence with equipment for
ongoing chemical and biological research; new research on
BW-applicable agents, Brucella and Congo Crimean
Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF); continuing work on ricin and
aflatoxin; and leads into chemical research activities
that have yet to be investigated. Kay also pointed out the
magnitude of the task in trying to locate chemical
weapons: “ISG has had to contend with the almost
unbelievable scale of Iraq's conventional weapons armory,
which dwarfs by orders of magnitude the physical size of
any conceivable stock of chemical weapons.”

Finally, in connection to missiles and delivery systems, the ISG concluded that Iraq was engaged in undeclared activities to produce missiles with ranges of at least 1000km, well in excess of its permitted range of 150km. “These missile activities were supported by a serious clandestine procurement program about which we have much still to learn," Kay added.
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What all of this suggests about Iraq's weapons programs is
that Saddam was moving from the vast, centrally controlled
WMD manufacturing capability of the 1980s to a smaller and
more clandestine system that left fewer traces, and would
have allowed it to maintain the façade of obeying the UN
while retaining the ability to quickly activate the
production of WMD on a just-in-time basis. In other words,
it was a program specifically designed to elude inspectors
as he continued to pursue his goal of acquiring weapons of
mass destruction – a goal there is no reason to believe he
ever gave up. This constituted the “grave and growing”
danger the administration spoke of (which, conceptually
and strategically, is different from an “imminent” threat –
a description the administration did not employ). In
other words, it was not necessarily the presence of actual
weapons -- or the imminence of attack -- but the ongoing
intention and the ease with which Saddam could covertly
create a capability to act on those intentions that
constituted a challenge that we could not ignore and had
to address decisively.
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Connection between Saddam and Al Qaeda.

Critics of the President claim that he created the idea of a link between Saddam's regime and al-Qaeda out of thin air. The Center for American Progress stated: “No evidence exists to substantiate the claim that Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda had any connections. In fact, most evidence points to the contrary.” This is echoed by Fairness and Accuracy, the leftwing media watch group, which similarly claimed in a July 18 press release that the administration "has produced no evidence to demonstrate that this link exists." These groups have either failed to do their homework, or are deliberately misleading their audiences.

The CIA has intelligence pointing to contacts between al-
Qaeda and Iraq starting in the early 1990s. George Tenet –
who has served as CIA director under both President
Clinton and President Bush -- referred to this
intelligence in a October 2002 letter to Senate
Intelligence Committee: “We have solid reporting of senior-
level contacts between Iraq and al Qaeda going back a
decade. ... We have credible reporting that al Qaeda
leaders sought contacts in Iraq who could help them
acquire WMD capabilities." Secretary of State Colin
Powell also mentioned this history of contacts in his
testimony to the UN: “We know members of both
organizations met repeatedly and have met at least eight
times at very senior levels since the early 1990s.” Powell
went on to state that Guantanamo detainees from
Afghanistan have revealed that an al-Qaeda militant known
as Abdallah al-Iraqi was sent to Iraq between 1997 and
2000 to obtain help in acquiring poisons and gasses.

CIA officials also told the New Yorker's Jeffrey Goldberg
about al-Iraqi and that members of the Iraqi secret police
were sent to Afghanistan to train al-Qaeda on terrorist
tactics and weapons. Vanity Fair's David Rose learned that
there were over 100 CIA reports of Iraq/al-Qaeda contacts
which were all given the CIA's highest credibility rating,
and the Weekly Standard's Stephen Hayes recently published
a leaked classified Pentagon memo documenting 50
intelligence items on contacts between Iraq and al-Qaeda
since 1990, including a meeting between bin Laden and the
chief of the Iraqi Intelligence Service.

The Clinton administration was concerned about a possible
collaboration between Iraq and al-Qaeda as early as 1996,
when the CIA observed that Iraqi experts were working with
the al Shifa pharmaceutical plant in Sudan (where bin
Laden was based at the time, and the target for US
bombings in 1998). These suspicions were strengthened in
1998 when the CIA found traces of the acid known as EMPTA,
a key ingredient for the deadly nerve agent VX. Only Iraq
was known to produce VX agent using EMPTA.

In its 1998 indictment of bin Laden for the East African
embassy bombings, the Clinton administration claimed: “Al-
Qaeda reached an understanding with the Government of Iraq
that al Qaeda would not work against that government and
that on particular projects, specifically including
weapons development, al Qaeda would work cooperatively
with the Government of Iraq.”

Even David Benjamin, a former National Security Council advisor on terrorism during the Clinton administration who rejects the idea that al-Qaeda and Iraq have any formal cooperation, acknowledged in a USA Today article that “there are bound to be some (al-Qaeda) contacts with Iraqi agents, even some who are known as such.”

There is no question that Saddam's Iraq was supporting other radical Islamic terrorist groups such as Hamas whose members also are known to have contacts with al-Qaeda. Captured members of the Kurdish Islamic terrorism group, Ansar al-Islam, which is affiliated with al-Qaeda, have also disclosed that they received assistance from Iraqi intelligence.

It is not difficult to imagine how weapons expertise and stocks might be funneled from one group to another, with or without Saddam's expressed approval.

Meanwhile, new evidence continues to trickle out of Iraq. In December 2003, the Iraqi Governing Council uncovered a document from July 2001 in which the former head of the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS), Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, describes arranging for 9/11 plotter Mohamad Atta to obtain three days of training in Baghdad by the Palestinian terrorist Abu Nidal, under the “direct supervision” of the IIS.

Whether all this evidence is authentic and compelling, and how much is conclusively revealed about the working relationship between al-Qaeda and Iraq are fair questions. But to deny this evidence altogether is dishonest – unless one is alleging that the Clinton administration, George Tenet and Colin Powell, among others, were lying.

At issue here is not whether the Bush administration should come under scrutiny for how it presented the case for war. It should, and our democracy is only strengthened by such critical inquiry. But as Bush's critics shine the light narrowly on the administration's pre-war statements, seeking to expose contradictions, exaggerations and falsehoods, they should not obscure the issues that were at stake.
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As Aesop warned, “Beware lest you lose the substance by
grasping at the shadow.”
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The premise that the case for war relied on convincing
evidence of an imminent and urgent threat posed by Iraqi
WMD is simply wrong. It also is naïve to promote the myth
the secular Ba'ath regime and al-Qaeda would never have
worked together due to their ideological differences –
despite ample evidence that the Ba'ath regime worked with
other Islamist terrorist groups.

In the post-9/11 world, as we face the growing and
converging threats of radical Islamist terrorism and
weapons proliferation in the hands of dictators with
records of aggression, genocide and other human rights
abuses, the burden should be on those who opposed taking
decisive action to disprove that claim that Saddam
represented a grave and growing threat, and to disprove
that the liberation of Iraq did not represent a net
benefit for Americans, Iraqis, the Middle East and the
world.
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Eleana Gordon is Vice-President of Communications and Democracy Programs at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

frontpagemagazine.com

defenddemocracy.org
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