You have suspicions, and they are unfounded at that- it's not hard to get a fake passport etc. You don't need state support to get them. Heck, I could go to a fake passport dealer a few blocks away and get one if I put my mind to it. Especially when you're helped along by the gross incompetence of immigration services of your target country to get in the first place.
Those two high-rankers stated in no uncertain terms that they did not cooperate with the Hussein government. I think that about covers the spectrum of assistance.
Yes. Al-Qaeda probably had many largely unaffiliated “associations” with other terrorist or “black” and underground networks worldwide. I’m saying that I think Iraqi intelligence was one of those.
I’m skeptical that it covers the spectrum. It’s my opinion that Iraqi intelligence and al-Qaeda operatives probably did “bump into” one another from time to time, sometimes in a mutually beneficial fashion. Unannounced and largely unofficial but still a dangerous combination. Those two senior leaders weren’t in a position to know every single movement by every single cell. Al-Qaeda has a great deal of splinters, as you are no doubt aware.
Bzzt! I'm sorry, that's completely incorrect. We went there first because Saddam was sponsoring al Qaeda and connected with the September 11th attacks. Then it was because he had weapons of mass destruction. Then it was to free the Iraqi people. At least, that's what he told the public. That's what he told the UN. That's what he told everyone in order to sell the war.
Who said that Saddam Hussein was involved in the attacks of September 11th? That’s a public misconception, not a lie by the administration in Washington.
We’re still not absolutely certain that the paths of Saddam’s security forces and al-Qaeda didn’t cross at one time or another. As Colin Powell so eloquently point out, there are some risks that a gambler simply does not take. It was probably a position adopted by the administration.
The search for weapons of mass destruction isn’t over. We did “free” the Iraqi people. What George Bush tells us and what’s really behind this war are two similar but ultimately different things. Understand that it’s not lying. It’s simple omission of the ultimate objectives. A smart move on their part, and one that’s repeated throughout history.
Yes, but in most other wars, the reasons given to the public have some semblance of validity.
I think the reasons have validity.
Not when Bush was connecting Saddam with the September 11th attacks.
Source?
What search? Is there any evidence that Saddam had or was looking to acquire weapons of mass destruction? Or was it just your speculation and paranoid conjecture?
Before 1998? Yes. You have access to the same sources I do, Durandal. It’s all about personal analysis at this point. We’ve been searching three months. Neither side should expect a “clean” analysis for another nine at least.
I never mentioned anything about precedent. So yes, it's a red herring.
Actually, you did. You asked if you’d be justified in shooting a man on the street because he might have done you harm.
"It was a surprise to me then — it remains a surprise to me now — that we have not uncovered weapons, as you say, in some of the forward dispersal sites. Believe me, it's not for lack of trying. We've been to virtually every ammunition supply point between the Kuwaiti border and Baghdad, but they're simply not there."
Lt. Gen. James Conway, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force
Press Interview
An interview with a man who says he’s surprised by a lack of immediate, large-scale results. He says absolutely nothing about anything more than vague “ammunition supply points.” Let’s try schools, hospitals, and sewers.
War isn't always pre-emptive. Look at WW2. Classic case of naked expansionism in the East and empire building on behalf of Nazi Germany.
Japan would beg to differ. So would much of the eastern Europe. Preventative war is an intelligence option.
These arepoliticians. They won't raise a stink if they think it looks like they're bashing the President who's currently popular. A Republican on the Intelligence Oversight Committee (can't remember the name, it was on a CNN article), said that he didn't think an investigation was necessary 'at this point in time' because they hadn't even gone through all the documents that the CIA had provided them with yet.
He said “all,” not “some.” There would be whistleblowers if things looked so out-of-whack.
Yes. These
are politicans. The Democrats have nothing to gain by not sticking it to Bush right before an election in which nine of their candidates will have no hope unless Bush is knocked down by a substantial blow.
All true. In terms of (2) especially- the politicians have a far greater incentive to go over to the attack. Though in terms of (3), the CIA has a lot to answer for with the aluminum tubes claim that the IAEA not only debunked- but the US Department of Energy experts as well. And not spotting the forged documents? It's farcical.
But my reasoning nevertheless explains why Blair was pasted and not Bush.
The CIA made a hypothetical statement. A guess. Those rods
could be used as nuclear components – even if they weren’t.
The argument is that there is no reason to assume they exist without evidence, not "the weapons definitely don't exist." They may. I just don't think they do- at the very worst, if they do, it definitely won't be what was claimed at the start. What annoys me is the predisposition some have to assuming their existence from the start rather than following the evidence.
What annoys me is that you believe an early failure to find these weapons is a final statement as to their non-existence. Yours is still a guess.
I'd take it it'd be the same information he had to make the claims of Iraq being hoodwinked in the first place. Iraqi orders could've dried up, for example
Drying up is not stopping completely.
He had public information about ruses. Big deal.