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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (20281)6/12/2003 10:09:11 AM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
reese.king-online.com

It Is Important

President George Bush doesn't seem concerned that no weapons of
mass destruction have been found in Iraq. We found a couple of
trucks, he said recently, as if two abandoned trucks without a trace
of either chemical or biological weapons in them justified the war.

Whether he realizes it or not, it is a serious matter. If it turns out
that the United States and Great Britain went to war on the basis of
falsehoods or defective intelligence, there will and ought to be
some political fallout. Both the British Parliament and some
American legislators are demanding an investigation.

One serious aspect of this matter is that I would hate to think that
the president is so contemptuous of the American people that he
doesn't mind at all deceiving them. That would indicate that he
simply can't be trusted, a very serious situation for a president. It's
also oddly reminiscent of his father's refusal to apologize for
breaking his no-new-taxes promise, as if the Great Ones needn't
bother themselves with what the common folk think. The elder
Bush discovered that it did matter at the very next election.

If it's an intelligence failure, that, too, is very serious. The
president has enunciated a policy of pre-emptive strikes against
any country he thinks might have weapons of mass destruction and
might be a future threat to the United States.

Well, if he thinks a country has weapons of mass destruction, it will
be because of intelligence. He personally isn't going to go snooping
around foreign countries. Because war is so serious a business, if a
nation is going to war because its president thinks a country has
weapons of mass destruction, then by God and for certain sure, the
intelligence agencies had better (A.) know these weapons really do
exist and (B.) know where they are.

We have discovered, in the case of Iraq, that the CIA, the Defense
Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency and the little
cabal put together by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld obviously
did not know the correct answers to either A or B. They did not know
if such weapons existed, and they darn sure did not know where
they were. One American officer talking to a Newsweek reporter
described the list of probable weapons sites supplied by the CIA as
"garbage."

I personally don't think there are any weapons of mass destruction.
Several Iraqi officials who would know if they existed and where
they are have been in U.S. custody for weeks. They have no
incentive whatsoever to cover up; they all know neither they nor
Saddam Hussein will ever be in power again. They know their necks
are on the line. They are at the mercy of the United States, and
they could be facing death or long terms of imprisonment. They
have every incentive in the world to spill the beans. Unfortunately,
if there are no beans, you can't spill them, even if you want to.

And every one of these officials has said the same thing: There are
no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. There also are no al-Qaida
terrorists or any other active terrorists connected to Saddam
Hussein. In short, it appears that Iraq was in fact not an "imminent
danger" to the world and to the United States, as the president and
his men so adamantly insisted that it was.

Now the administration is starting on Iran, insisting that Iran is
pursuing nuclear weapons and harboring terrorists. But if it was
dead wrong about Iraq, why should we believe anything it says
about Iran? Why should intelligence so off the mark in Iraq be on
the mark in Iran? Which government has more credibility at this
point — ours or Iran's? It turns out that in the case of Iraq, the
Iraqis were telling the truth when they said they had no weapons,
and our government was either lying or grossly mistaken when it
insisted that Iraq did have such weapons.

War is too immoral, too homicidal and too expensive to be
undertaken on the basis of speculation derived from a faulty
intelligence.