SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:13:02 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Liar. Saddam and Al Qaida were enemies. They may have had a few contacts but those were meaningless. We had tons of contacts with Saddam. doesn't mean we were on his side.

Bin Laden was very clear that he wanted every single secular Arab leader ousted. Saddam would never trust Al Qaida.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:16:16 PM
From: Land Shark  Respond to of 173976
 
Blix sceptical on Iraqi WMD claim
Hans Blix
Mr Blix hopes Saddam Hussein will tell the truth about WMD
Iraq probably destroyed its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in the early 1990s, the former United Nations chief weapons inspector Hans Blix has said.

Speaking to the BBC's World Service, Mr Blix said he was more certain than ever that there was no WMD in Iraq.

Mr Blix said the capture of ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein was important, as he may reveal at what stage he might have destroyed them.

The US and UK used concerns over WMD to justify the March invasion of Iraq.

Mr Blix and a team of UN weapons inspectors spent more than three months searching for WMD in Iraq in the build-up to the war without finding anything they deemed significant.

'No weapons'

Speaking to the BBC's Newshour programme, Mr Blix said he hoped Saddam Hussein would now reveal the truth about his chemical, biological and nuclear programmes.

"I doubt that he will reveal any WMD, because I think both we UN inspectors and the American inspectors have been looking around and come to the conclusion that there aren't any," Mr Blix said.

"He might be able to reveal when they were done away with. I am inclined to think it was early in 1991 or 1992."

Mr Blix was in the Swedish capital Stockholm on Tuesday to launch an independent international commission on WMD.


SOME COMMISSION MEMBERS
Former US Defence Secretary Richard Perry
Jordan's Prince El Hassan bin Talal
Chinese General Pan Zhenqiang
He came out of retirement to chair the commission at the request of his native Sweden, which established it following a UN request.

A team of 14 commissioners is due to submit proposals by 2005, aimed at reducing the dangers posed by WMD around the world.

He said the end of Saddam Hussein's regime did not mean the end of such threats - and listed North Korea, Iran and the tensions between India and Pakistan as areas of particular concern.

The commission was set up on the initiative of Sweden's late Foreign Minister, Anna Lindh. The Swedish Government will fund its work, but the body will be independent from any government.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:19:25 PM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 173976
 
Blix warns of WMD vicious circle

David Batty
Friday June 2, 2006
Guardian Unlimited

Hans Blix warned the "war on terror" is leading to another arns race. Photo: AP.

The US must abandon its "war on terror" to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, according to the former United Nations' chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix,.

The US foreign policy of pre-emptive strikes against any perceived weapons of mass destruction (WMD) threat, its development of new types of nuclear weapons and the "Star Wars" missile defence shield risked fuelling a new global arms race, said Dr Blix.

Dr Blix's warning came in a report, released yesterday, proposing ways to bring about global nuclear, biological and chemical disarmament.

Article continues
The report by the independent international Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission (WMDC) said the September 11 terrorist attacks and the subsequent war on terror have led to the stagnation and abandonment of international cooperation on WMD monitoring and disarmament.

In what will be seen as thinly veiled reference to the 2003 Iraq war, the report said unilateral military action had failed to stem the threat of WMD, with the cost of many lives.

Dr Blix, the commission's chairman, led the team of UN inspectors investigating Iraq's arms programmes prior to the US-led invasion. He said the American pre-emptive strike policy breached the UN's founding charter.

The two-year investigation by the commission also called on all existing nuclear powers to refrain from developing new types of nuclear weapons. The Pentagon wants to build a new generation of nuclear bunker-busters and "mini-nukes", although US Congress has blocked the plans.

The commission proposed holding a world summit on disarmament, non-proliferation and the threat of WMD terrorism, at the United Nations in New York, to reinvigorate international diplomacy to tackle these issues. It also recommended extending and toughening the UN's weapons inspection programmes.

Its report said the international community, including major military powers such as the USA, Russia and China, should develop new strategies to ensure international security without the use or possession of WMD.

The US should also stop testing nuclear weapons to encourage more countries, particularly India and Pakistan, to sign up and comply with the UN's test-ban treaty, the report added.

Dr Blix said: "Bringing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty into force would significantly impede the development of new nuclear weapons. The weapons that exist today are bad enough.

"Negotiating a global treaty to stop the production of fissile material for weapons would close the tap for new such material and help hinder possible arms races - notably in Asia.

"In both these areas the US has the decisive leverage. If it takes the lead the world is likely to follow. If it does not take the lead, there could be more nuclear tests and new nuclear arms races."

The commission noted that governments and world opinion were paying less attention to global treaties on arms control and disarmament partly because these agreements had failed to prevent terrorism such as the attacks on New York in 2001.

In addition, they did not prevent North Korea from developing nuclear bombs. But it said there was reason to believe international cooperation could increase, as the number of armed conflicts between countries was steadily declining.

Agreements to tighten the storage, disposal and transportation of nuclear, chemical and biological material could reduce the risk of terrorist groups or rogue states from acquiring WMD capability, noted the report.

The commission called on Iran to resume cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, to allow inspection of its nuclear programme. It also said Iran, Egypt and Israel, which already has nuclear weapons, should commit to the Middle East being a nuclear free zone.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:21:23 PM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Forged Intelligence Documents
Bill Moyers Journal

Airdate: Friday, May 4, 2007 at 9:00 p.m. EDT on PBS.
(Check local listings at pbs.org

Italy's foremost investigative reporter, Carlo Bonini, takes viewers on the trail of forged intelligence documents that the Bush administration used to help make a case for war.

As Congress investigates why the administration made false prewar claims, Italy's foremost investigative reporter, Carlo Bonini, takes viewers on the trail of the forged intelligence documents purporting that Iraq sought to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger. Also on the program: Bill Moyers interviews Jerry Miller, the 200th person exonerated by post-conviction DNA testing, about clearing his name; and British Renaissance Man, physician, author, and director of theater and opera Jonathan Miller about the hidden story of atheism.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:23:36 PM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
US Cites 91 Percent Rise in Terrorist Acts in Iraq
By Glenn Kessler
The Washington Post

Tuesday 01 May 2007

The number of terrorism incidents in Iraq - and resulting deaths, injuries and kidnappings - skyrocketed from 2005 to 2006, according to statistics released by U.S. counterterrorism officials yesterday.

Of the 14,338 reported terrorist attacks worldwide last year, 45 percent took place in Iraq, and 65 percent of the global fatalities stemming from terrorism occurred in Iraq. In 2005, Iraq accounted for 30 percent of the worldwide terrorist attacks.

The figures, compiled by the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) and released with the annual State Department Country Reports on Terrorism, showed that the number of incidents in Iraq rose 91 percent, from 3,468 in 2005 to 6,630 in 2006.

Almost all of those incidents involved the death, injury or kidnapping of at least one person. All told, the number of people killed, injured or kidnapped as a result of terrorism in Iraq jumped 87 percent, from 20,685 to 38,713.

The State Department's annual report - which included an assessment of the five years since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks - said the invasion of Iraq has brought "measurable benefits," including the removal of "an abusive totalitarian regime with a history of sponsoring and supporting regional terrorism."

Still, the report acknowledged, the invasion "has been used by terrorists as a rallying cry for radicalization and extremist activity that has contributed to instability in neighboring countries."

The report also said that since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in the fall of 2002, the country "remains threatened by Taliban insurgents and religious extremists," though "the majority of Afghans believe they are better off than under the Taliban." The number of terrorism incidents in Afghanistan rose 52 percent in 2006 compared with 2005, and the number of people killed, injured or kidnapped nearly doubled.

Asked if the invasion of Iraq has helped reduce terrorism, Frank C. Urbancic Jr., acting coordinator for the Office of Counterterrorism, told reporters at the State Department: "If the battle against terrorism isn't Iraq, it's going to be somewhere else. It started out in Afghanistan. The terrorists are looking for places where they can operate, and that's what they're doing. So we can fight them in Iraq, we can fight them somewhere else.... They're expanding their scope."

Urbancic added: "I mean, Iraq is at least a relatively friendly place. The people of Iraq are deserving people and they deserve better, and it's good for us to help them."

The State Department report noted that "although Iraq is a proven ally in the War on Terror, Iraq's developing security and armed forces will require further training and resources before they can effectively address the terrorist groups already operating within their borders."

The report acknowledged that tensions have risen between Turkey and the Iraqi government as "Turkish leaders expressed increasing frustration at what they viewed as Iraq's inaction against the PKK" - the abbreviation for the Kurdistan Workers Party, which launches attacks into Turkey from Kurdish areas of Iraq.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (97455)5/3/2007 11:25:57 PM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
U.S. Report Finds Iraqis Eliminated Illicit Arms in 90's
By Douglas Jehl
The New York Times

Thursday 07 October 2004

Washington - Iraq had destroyed its illicit weapons stockpiles within months after the Persian Gulf war of 1991, and its ability to produce such weapons had significantly eroded by the time of the American invasion in 2003, the top American inspector for Iraq said in a report made public Wednesday.

The report by the inspector, Charles A. Duelfer, intended to offer a near-final judgment about Iraq and its weapons, said Iraq, while under pressure from the United Nations, had "essentially destroyed" its illicit weapons ability by the end of 1991, with its last secret factory, a biological weapons plant, eliminated in 1996.

Mr. Duelfer said that even during those years, Saddam Hussein had aimed at "preserving the capability to reconstitute his weapons of mass destruction when sanctions were lifted." But he said he had found no evidence of any concerted effort by Iraq to restart the programs.

The findings uphold Iraq's prewar insistence that it did not possess chemical or biological weapons. They also show the enormous distance between the Bush administration's own prewar assertions, based on reports by American intelligence agencies, and what a 15-month inquiry by American investigators found since the war.

Mr. Duelfer said he had concluded that between 1991 and 2003, Mr. Hussein had in effect sacrificed Iraq's illicit weapons to the larger goal of winning an end to United Nations sanctions. But he also argued that Mr. Hussein had used the period to try to exploit avenues opened by the sanctions, especially the oil-for-food program, to lay the groundwork for a plan to resume weapons production if sanctions were lifted.

In addition, the report concluded that Mr. Hussein had deliberately sought to maintain ambiguity about whether it had illicit weapons, mainly as a deterrent to Iran, its rival.

The American inspector presented his conclusions to Congress on Wednesday, including highly charged public testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

With Iraq figuring prominently in the last dash toward the presidential election, Democrats argued that the report had undermined the administration's case for war, while the White House and its Republican allies called attention to elements in the report that highlighted potential dangers posed by Mr. Hussein's government.

"There is no doubt that Saddam was a threat to our nation, and there is no doubt that he had W.M.D. capability, and the Duelfer report is very clear on these points," said James Wilkinson, a White House deputy national security adviser, using the abbreviation for weapons of mass destruction.

The three-volume report, totaling 918 pages, represented the most authoritative attempt so far to unravel the mystery posed by Iraq between 1991 and 2003, beginning with the point after the Persian Gulf war when Iraq still possessed chemical and biological weapons and an active nuclear-weapons program. The conclusions suggest that the main war aim cited by the White House in March 2003 - to disarm Iraq, which American intelligence agencies said possessed chemical and biological weapons and was reconstituting its nuclear program - was based on an outdated view of Iraq's weapons stockpiles.

At the time of the American invasion, Mr. Duelfer said in the report, Iraq did not possess chemical and biological weapons, was not seeking to reconstitute its nuclear program, and was not making any active effort to gain those abilities. Even if Iraq had sought to restart its weapons programs in 2003, the report said, it could not have produced militarily significant quantities of chemical weapons for at least a year, and it would have required years to produce a nuclear weapon.

"Saddam Hussein ended the nuclear program in 1991 following the gulf war," Mr. Duelfer said in the report. It said American inspectors in Iraq had "found no evidence to suggest concerted efforts to restart the program."

After a closed briefing by Mr. Duelfer to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, the top Democrat on the committee, described the report as "a devastating account."

"The administration would like the American public to believe that Saddam's intention to build a weapons program, regardless of actual weapons or the capability to produce weapons, justified invading Iraq," Mr. Rockefeller said in a statement. "In fact, we invaded a country, thousands of people have died, and Iraq never posed a grave or growing danger."

In accounting for what happened beginning in 1991, Mr. Duelfer said Mr. Hussein made a fundamental decision after the Persian Gulf war to get rid of Iraq's illicit weapons and accept the destruction of its weapons-producing facilities as part of an effort to win an end to sanctions imposed by the United Nations to achieve those ends.

Although Mr. Duelfer concluded that Mr. Hussein had intended to restart his programs, the report acknowledged that that conclusion was based more on inference than solid evidence. "The regime had no formal written strategy or plan for the revival of W.M.D. after sanctions," it said.

The report notes that its conclusions were drawn in part from interrogation of Mr. Hussein in his prison cell outside Baghdad. Mr. Duelfer, a special adviser to the director of central intelligence, said he had concluded that Mr. Hussein had deliberately sought to maintain ambiguity about whether Iraq possessed illicit weapons, primarily as a deterrent to Iran, Iraq's adversary in an eight-year war in the 1980's.

It was not until a series of meetings in late 2002, just months before the American invasion, that Mr. Hussein finally acknowledged to senior officers and officials of his government that Iraq did not possess illicit weapons, Mr. Duelfer said.

The report said American investigators had found clandestine laboratories in the Baghdad area used by the Iraqi Intelligence Service between 1991 and 2003 to conduct research and to test various chemicals and poisons, including ricin. As previously reported, it said those efforts appeared to be intended primarily for use in assassinations, not to inflict mass casualties.

Mr. Duelfer said in his report that Mr. Hussein never acknowledged in the course of the interrogations what had become of Iraq's illicit weapons. He said that American investigators had appealed to the former Iraqi leader to be candid in order to shape his legacy, but that Mr. Hussein had not been forthcoming.

The report said interviews with other former top Iraqi leaders had made clear that Mr. Hussein had left many of his top deputies uncertain until the eve of war about whether Iraq possessed illicit weapons. It said he seemed to be most concerned about a possible new attack by Iran, whose incursions into Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88 were fended off by Baghdad partly with the use of chemical munitions.

Mr. Duelfer said Iraq had tried to maintain the knowledge base necessary to restart an illicit weapons program. He said Iraq had essentially put its biological program "on the shelf," after its last production facility, Al Hakam, was destroyed by United Nations inspectors in 1996, and could have begun to produce biological questions in as little as a month if it had restarted its weapons program in 2003.

But the report said there were "no indications" that Iraq was pursuing such a course, and it reported "a complete absence of discussion or even interest in biological weapons" at the level of Mr. Hussein and his aides after the mid-1990's.

The report will almost certainly be the last complete assessment by the team led by Mr. Duelfer, which is known as the Iraq Survey Group. But he said he and the 1,200-member team would continue their work in Iraq for the time being. He said the team had not completely ruled out the possibility that some Iraqi weapons might have been smuggled out of Iraq to a neighboring country, like Syria.

The report did revise several earlier judgments, including a report by the Central Intelligence Agency in May 2003 that said mysterious trailers found in Iraq after the American invasion in 2003 were intended for use in a biological warfare program. Mr. Duelfer said that the trailers could not have been used for that purpose, and that their manufacturers "almost certainly designed and built the equipment exclusively for the generation of hydrogen," upholding claims by Iraqi officials that linked the trailers to weather balloons used for artillery practice.