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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (465888)9/27/2003 1:46:21 PM
From: Dan B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Nothing at all, eh? It didn't harm Silicon Valley jobs? Its fall wasn't a pre-cursor to the fall on the Dow? It had no effect lingering beyond day one of Bush? Thanks for the information, oh great economist.

Dan B



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (465888)9/27/2003 2:04:09 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
The Failure to Find Iraqi Weapons
The New York Times | Editorial

Friday 26 September 2003

This page did not support the war in Iraq, but it never quarreled with one of its basic premises. Like
President Bush, we believed that Saddam Hussein was hiding potentially large quantities of chemical
and biological weapons and aggressively pursuing nuclear arms. Like the president, we thought those
weapons posed a grave danger to the United States and the rest of the world. Now it appears that
premise was wrong. We cannot in hindsight blame the administration for its original conclusions. They
were based on the best intelligence available, which had led the Clinton administration before it and the
governments of allied nations to reach the same conclusion. But even the best intelligence can turn out
to be mistaken, and the likelihood that this was the case in Iraq shows why pre-emptive war, the Bush
administration's strategy since 9/11, is so ill conceived as a foundation for security policy. If
intelligence and risk assessment are sketchy — and when are they not? — using them as the basis
for pre-emptive war poses enormous dangers.

A draft of an interim report by David Kay, the American leading the hunt for banned arms in Iraq, says
the team has not found any such weapons after nearly four months of intensively searching and
interviewing top Iraqi scientists. There is some evidence of chemicals and equipment that could have
been put to illicit use. But, to the chagrin of Mr. Bush's top lieutenants, there is nothing more.

It remains remotely possible, of course, that something will be found. But Mr. Kay's draft suggests
that the weapons are simply not there. Why Mr. Hussein did not prove that when the United Nations
demanded an explanation remains a puzzle. His failure to come clean strengthened the conviction that
he had a great deal to hide. His history as a vicious tyrant who had used chemical weapons in war and
against his own people lent credence to the fear that he could not be trusted with whatever he was
holding and would pose a significant threat.

Before the war, we objected not to the stated goal of disarming Iraq but to the fact that the United
States was waging war essentially alone, in defiance of many important allies. We favored using
international inspectors to keep Iraq's destructive programs in check while diplomats forged a United
Nations effort to force Mr. Hussein to yield his weapons.

The policy of pre-emption that Mr. Bush pursued instead junked an approach that had served this
country and the world well for half a century. That policy, simply stated, was that the United States
would respond quickly to aggression but would not be the first to attack.

The world changed on Sept. 11, 2001. Terrorist groups like Al Qaeda are dedicated to inflicting
maximum harm on this country. Since such groups rely on suicide bombers and are therefore immune
to threats of retaliation, the United States is right to attack a terrorist group first in some
circumstances. It was certainly justified in its war in Afghanistan, which had become little more than a
government-sponsored training camp for Al Qaeda. It is quite another thing, however, to launch a
pre-emptive military campaign against a nation that the United States suspects poses a threat.

Americans and others in the world are glad that Mr. Hussein has been removed from power. If Iraq
can be turned into a freer and happier country in coming years, it could become a focal point for the
evolution of a more peaceful and democratic Middle East. But it was the fear of weapons of mass
destruction placed in the hands of enemy terrorists that made doing something about Iraq seem
urgent. If it had seemed unlikely that Mr. Hussein had them, we doubt that Congress or the American
people would have endorsed the war.

This is clearly an uncomfortable question for the Bush administration. Yesterday, Secretary of State
Colin Powell met with Times editors. Asked whether Americans would have supported this war if
weapons of mass destruction had not been at issue, Mr. Powell said the question was too hypothetical
to answer. Asked if he, personally, would have supported it, he smiled, thrust his hand out and said, "It
was good to meet you."