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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Sdgla who wrote (904033)12/1/2015 1:19:13 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (1) of 1573849
 
We supplied the old WMD to Iraq and Saddam. They were "landfilled". And you state that is the reason for invading iraq? To clean up their landfills?

LOL!

what a freaking tool you are. I thought Tejek was gone but he lives!….channeled by Sdgla…..what part about clandestinely procuring and producing more don't you understand?

Jan. 7, 2003: At a Pentagon briefing, Rumsfeld was asked if the U.S. had “current evidence that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction, or is it just a strong suspicion?” Rumsfeld responded, “There’s no doubt in my mind but that they currently have chemical and biological weapons.” Regarding nuclear weapons, he said, “We do not have evidence that they have nuclear weapons,” though the United States did have “evidence that they have had a nuclear program that was robust and that they were very skilled in denial and deception.”

Asked if there existed any current evidence behind these claims or if the claims were based on Iraq’s possession of some of these weapons in the past, Rumsfeld said he didn’t “think that if it were the latter the president would be saying what he’s saying or the director of Central Intelligence would be saying what he’s saying.”

salon.com

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To: Sdgla who wrote (903958)11/30/2015 7:29:05 PM
From: Broken_Clock of 904097
Your memory is selectively defective.

The fifth president of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, [1] was internationally condemned for his use of chemical weapons during the 1980s against Iranian and Kurdish civilians during and after the Iran–Iraq War. In the 1980s, Saddam pursued an extensive biological weapons programand a nuclear weapons program, though no nuclear bomb was built.

After the Persian Gulf War, the United Nations located and destroyed large quantities of Iraqi chemical weapons and related equipment and materials throughout the early 1990s, with varying degrees of Iraqi cooperation and obstruction. [2] In response to diminishing Iraqi cooperation with UNSCOM, the United States called for withdrawal of all UN and IAEA inspectors in 1998, resulting in Operation Desert Fox. The United States and the UK asserted that Saddam Hussein still possessed large hidden stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in 2003, and that he was clandestinely procuring and producing more.Inspections by the UN to resolve the status of unresolved disarmament questions restarted between November 2002 and March 2003, [3] under UN Security Council Resolution 1441, which demanded Saddam give "immediate, unconditional and active cooperation" with UN and IAEA inspections, shortly before his country was attacked. [4]
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