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To: RealMuLan who wrote (32094)11/24/1998 1:26:00 PM
From: jbe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 
It comes from ZNet, Yiwu Zhang -- a US media outlet.

jbe



To: RealMuLan who wrote (32094)11/24/1998 1:48:00 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Respond to of 95453
 
Everything I have said about the Iraq issue is supported by right wing Republican supply sider Jude Wanniski -- an adviser to several Presidents. So those who assert that this is merely Iraq propoganda had better think again. Here is what Wanniski said recently about the weapons issue.

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Related Links:

Latest on Iraq -- Yahoo!
Full Coverage.

Shouldn't Congress Be
Consulted First?

There Is No More VX
Gas!
November 16, 1998

Proving a Negative in Iraq

Memo To: Sen Arlen Specter [R-PA]
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Setting a Bad Precedent

Over the many years I've known you, we've disagreed on a great many issues and been
on the same side on many others. I've always appreciated your consistency in applying the
law according to well-defined principles. Your support of the Supreme Court nomination
of Clarence Thomas almost cost you re-election when the feminists decided to make you
pay for your scruples. It was not surprising, then, to see you break ranks with your
Senate Republican colleagues in arguing that Congress should at least be consulted before
the President began dropping bombs on Iraq. Yes, you said you would probably agree to
take military action after discussing the options, but at least you indicated you wanted to
hear the options. As long as I have been involved in national politics, I'm still genuinely
shocked to see how so many senior members of Congress are prepared to disregard the
Constitution and bomb without debate.

That's why I suggest you push ahead and make this issue your own. I mean, take it on as
advocate for the defense. So far, all we've had is prosecution. Doesn't Iraq deserve a
defense? For seven and a half years, after its humiliating defeat by our armed forces, the
Baghdad government has done everything we asked it to do a dozen times over.
Unhappily, it was never the U.S. intent to lift the economic embargo on Iraq, so Saddam
Hussein eventually realized he had no recourse but to irritate the superpower in order to
find a reasonable solution. We are now at the point where the UNSCOM inspectors are
back at work in full, unfettered fashion, a hundred or so men and women wondering
where to look in a country bigger than the state of California.

In other words, Arlen, if we are going to get the rest of the world to have a respect for the
rule of law, you are the perfect fellow to nail down the principles involved. I'm not asking
you to nail down all the principles, only one: The Global Superpower should never
demand that a minor nation prove that it didn't misbehave in order to avoid our wrath. We
should never ask a major nation to prove a negative either, but it is especially important
when it comes to the little powers. In this case, Iraq. As a man who began his career in
public service as district attorney of Philadelphia, you are more familiar than most with the
difficulty of asking a defendant to prove they did not do something he or she has been
charged by the government with having done. The way our system of justice works, the
government must prove a positive, beyond reasonable doubt. In other words, if the
government were to demand that I prove I did not commit perjury in order to avoid severe
punishment what could I do?

And yet, this is what we have come to with Baghdad. We have searched and searched for
seven years and have found nothing. No weapons of mass destruction. No materials that
can easily be converted into mass destruction. No nuclear, no chemical, no biological
weapons. Every blasted weapon destroyed since the Gulf War had been destroyed since
November 1991, and the UN inspectors had been led to all of the sites by the Iraqi
government. Now you know that, don't you? All we have found since are pieces of paper
suggesting there might be an extra few canisters of mustard gas that may or may not have
been destroyed. And the inspectors found traces of VX gas that Iraq had acknowledged
had been produced, but not weaponized, back during its long war with Iran.

Now we ask Iraq to prove to us that it does not have any more weapons of mass
destruction. If I were to accuse you of having committed robbery, but having no evidence,
demanded that you prove you did not commit robbery, what kind of law would that be:?
What kind of respect would the law get from you and from all others whose lives were put
in jeopardy because the state demanded they prove themselves innocent? This is no small
thing, Senator. If we are to be the Global Sovereign, we had best set a good example, and
not simply rely upon our B-52s and cruise missiles and overwhelming military power.
There is no way the United States can have 100% security by the sheer force of its own
security forces. As mighty as our Goliath becomes, there will be a David with a slingshot
to bring us down if we give it no other choice.

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