The Saddam was bluffing theory

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Axis Kast
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Post by Axis Kast »

And of course you have no link.

Then again, issuing contradictory orders just means he's not got organized reports to slow him down when he runs.
Don’t tell me you missed this one: http://www.latimes.com/news/printeditio ... 0416.story.

This quotation really speaks volumes as to the credibility of Hussein’s analysis of the world around him:

Hussein, convinced that Republican Guard units posted south of Baghdad would repel American tanks, had decided not to mine highways or blow up bridges leading into the capital, commanders said. The infrastructure was left intact so that it could be used by Iraqi forces mounting counterattacks. But entire Republican Guard divisions were ravaged, first by coalition warplanes and then by tanks approaching the capital.”

Emphasis mine. Now it’s one thing to argue that Hussein wanted fragments of Iraq still standing for his day of complete victory (:roll:) – then again, it doesn’t explain why Iraq’s supreme leader should have any faith in units that routinely performed so badly during the First Gulf War, were deserting on a grand scale (he should have had some indications flowing back to him), and had been sitting without spare parts, maintenance, or adequate training for over a decade. Again, this takes us back to his delusions of strength and ability. These are not the kinds of presumptions we necessarily want dictators – especially those potentially possessed of WMD – to take to heart.
And he nearly did, on a large scale. You did notice we didn't continue into Iraq, right?
He very nearly defeated American forces? Perhaps you weren’t aware. Saddam Hussein didn’t go into Kuwait just so he could be kicked back into his own country. :roll:

We never entered Iraq? Is that why the February 27th Battle of Medina Ridge never occurred – on Iraqi territory, no less? :roll:
Chemical deterrants are very effective(North Korea's chem artillery pointed at Seoul), and even with his missiles he could be assured the gas would go somewhere.
So Hussein was going to effectively blackmail and compel the return of Coalition ground forces that would have, at the time, already been inside Iraqi territory – and possibly relatively close to Baghdad? He was absolutely certain that Israel – despite having been reigned in previously despite SCUD bombardment – would offer the proscribed retaliation? That he was going to be able to escape if the situation resulted in nuclear or massive conventional exchange?
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Post by SirNitram »

We never conquered Iraq, Axis. For what he did, he got off scot free. Or does a fight in the middle of a trackless desert count?

And, of course, you are taking his public statements to be perfectly in agreement with his thoughts. You don't actually understand what Propaganda is, do you Axis?
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Post by Axis Kast »

If it was accepted, why was an envoy dispatched to Niger, Feb 2002?
Source? Dates? By which government?
Wrong. The uproar began more then a year before the SOTU address.
And yet the British still stood behind their intelligence.
Doesn't matter. The Americans knew all along that the info was rubbish. Who gives a toss what the British thought. And I doubt very much that after the US "corrected" the British Intel for them that the British STILL felt they had a winner.
It was still Tony Blair’s position. Bush would have taken some kind of confidence in his closest ally’s faith in original reports.
Wrong buddy boy. You were sitting on the truth for close to a year.
Britain confirmed that they had placed their eggs in an unsound basket before this year’s SOTU?
he problem for you is the sixteen words in the SOTU address was not an ANALYSIS of something, but a FACT.
I’m pointing out that one can analyze fact on different grounds.
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Post by Axis Kast »

We never conquered Iraq, Axis. For what he did, he got off scot free. Or does a fight in the middle of a trackless desert count?

And, of course, you are taking his public statements to be perfectly in agreement with his thoughts. You don't actually understand what Propaganda is, do you Axis?
The "doomsday" plan was never put forth as a pronouncement. It was never relevant in relation to our decision to halt in '91.

Again, I'm discussin the fact that Hussein expected his troops to be able to defeat the 82nd in open combat - and then still retain Kuwait.

His public statements? I'm taking information collected after the wars. I'm taking the words of recipients of orders.
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Post by SirNitram »

Axis Kast wrote:
We never conquered Iraq, Axis. For what he did, he got off scot free. Or does a fight in the middle of a trackless desert count?

And, of course, you are taking his public statements to be perfectly in agreement with his thoughts. You don't actually understand what Propaganda is, do you Axis?
The "doomsday" plan was never put forth as a pronouncement. It was never relevant in relation to our decision to halt in '91.

Again, I'm discussin the fact that Hussein expected his troops to be able to defeat the 82nd in open combat - and then still retain Kuwait.

His public statements? I'm taking information collected after the wars. I'm taking the words of recipients of orders.
You do know the Troops are the ones who get the most propaganda, right?
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Post by BoredShirtless »

Axis Kast wrote:
If it was accepted, why was an envoy dispatched to Niger, Feb 2002?
Source? Dates? By which government?
Glad you asked:
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16155
Axis Kast wrote:
Wrong. The uproar began more then a year before the SOTU address.
And yet the British still stood behind their intelligence.
:banghead:
Axis Kast wrote:
Doesn't matter. The Americans knew all along that the info was rubbish. Who gives a toss what the British thought. And I doubt very much that after the US "corrected" the British Intel for them that the British STILL felt they had a winner.
It was still Tony Blair’s position. Bush would have taken some kind of confidence in his closest ally’s faith in original reports.
Maybe a little confidence. But that got blown to shit when the CIA said it was crap and that an envoy should be dispatched to confirm.
Axis Kast wrote:
Wrong buddy boy. You were sitting on the truth for close to a year.
Britain confirmed that they had placed their eggs in an unsound basket before this year’s SOTU?
No Axis, YOU confirmed it.
Axis Kast wrote:
The problem for you is the sixteen words in the SOTU address was not an ANALYSIS of something, but a FACT.
I’m pointing out that one can analyze fact on different grounds.
So?
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Post by Axis Kast »

You do know the Troops are the ones who get the most propaganda, right?
And this has to do with the strategies and tactics employed by Iraq’s supreme military commander in what way, again…? Are you attempting to tell me that Saddam Hussein was so much a believer in his own Cult of Personality that his gargantuan military failures are somehow justified?
Glad you asked.
What Rice seems to be saying is that this information never fully percolated upward to the Office of the President of the United States of America.

Now what I also want to know is whether or not the British intelligence community was as concerned that the Nigerian documents were “garbage”. Tony Blair held steadfast his views on the matter until only recently; that means George W. Bush would have been confronted with a belief in a particular piece of evidence by his key ally. Is it really so dastardly for one to begin to consider whether or not Blair’s confidence in Britain’s agencies didn’t “rub off” on Bush? Or that, somewhere along the line, a mistake was made that led Bush to put his faith in the original reports – perhaps because contradictory evidence never made it onto his desk?

Anyway, regardless of the above, I accept your evidence. The Department of State was indeed aware that the so-called “Nigerian reports” were forged. They were “garbage.” Now, let’s assume that they also worked their way up into the Oval Office – and that Bush put forth the statement knowing that his own intelligence community was in opposition. We are now confronted with new questions.

Could Bush have maintained faith in the documents as a result of his close relationship with Tony Blair? Could 10 Downing Street’s position – representative of that of their own intelligence agencies, one must assume – have been adopted as the President’s own, despite the ominous voices at home? In this case, Bush made an error in judgement rather than an actual attempt to mislead the public.

If you’re going to say Bush lied to sell the war, we need to delve into the territory of conspiracy theories. Why would Bush lie? I have trouble seeing an actual, working plan to draw the United States into a War in Iraq for arbitrary purposes such as securing the next election. I don’t subscribe to the theory that a Neoconservative junta sits in Washington, nor to the suggestion that the Republican Party needed another national security issue on which to keep the public looking outward. We already had Afghanistan and the War on Terror; the Republicans were Kings of Security from September 11, 2001 on.

I also doubt Bush deceived us in order to win a war of his father’s. Iraq wasn’t necessarily an outstanding issue. We hadn’t sacrificed anything to Saddam Hussein. The war was widely considered one of the least bloody and most successful in American – or any other – history. If you want to suggest that Bush should have been outraged that Saddam ordered his father’s assassination, I ask you why other Presidents haven’t engaged in such vindictive geopolitical behavior?

The only conclusion to which I can come if we’re asking whether Bush lied to sell a war is that he needed to kick it off in the first place once the whole issue of disarmament had been put on the table. Embarrassed by the UN’s failure, he pressed for entry regardless – on a number of fronts. But this is equally questionable. Why would he start banging the war drums in the first place without evidence? There needs to have been an impetus for war in the first place. Personal agendas just don’t cut it here.
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Post by SirNitram »

Axis Kast wrote:
You do know the Troops are the ones who get the most propaganda, right?
And this has to do with the strategies and tactics employed by Iraq’s supreme military commander in what way, again…? Are you attempting to tell me that Saddam Hussein was so much a believer in his own Cult of Personality that his gargantuan military failures are somehow justified?
No, I'm saying he was human slime who told people what they wanted to hear. And for the military, what they wanted to hear was that they would smash the Americans like bugs. You're the one claiming he was delusional... Do you even know it when you construct strawman, you pathetic little worm?
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Post by Axis Kast »

No, I'm saying he was human slime who told people what they wanted to hear. And for the military, what they wanted to hear was that they would smash the Americans like bugs. You're the one claiming he was delusional... Do you even know it when you construct strawman, you pathetic little worm?
"Pathetic little worm?" Wow. You sure take Internet message board debates to the extreme.

In any case, your argument still isn't there. It was Tariq Aziz who confirmed that Hussein was actually confident of his military's ability to repulse the Americans in '91. The "doomsday plan" was discovered only after the war, so that isn't a matter of propaganda. His ridiculous strings of orders don't make sense, either. What does ordering troops to avoid laying mines or strengthening defenses have to do with improving morale and spreading propagandic messages? Your argument begs the question: "WTF?!"
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Post by BoredShirtless »

Axis Kast wrote:
Glad you asked.
What Rice seems to be saying is that this information never fully percolated upward to the Office of the President of the United States of America.
Course she would say that. To say otherwise would open the doors for Impeachment to come in and drag Bush kicking and screaming into the light.
Axis Kast wrote: Now what I also want to know is whether or not the British intelligence community was as concerned that the Nigerian documents were “garbage”. Tony Blair held steadfast his views on the matter until only recently; that means George W. Bush would have been confronted with a belief in a particular piece of evidence by his key ally. Is it really so dastardly for one to begin to consider whether or not Blair’s confidence in Britain’s agencies didn’t “rub off” on Bush?
You're repeating yourself. Confidence in the British may have been there at the start. But it was clearly gone when the CIA recommened that envoy.
Axis Kast wrote: Or that, somewhere along the line, a mistake was made that led Bush to put his faith in the original reports – perhaps because contradictory evidence never made it onto his desk?
:roll:
Axis Kast wrote: Anyway, regardless of the above, I accept your evidence. The Department of State was indeed aware that the so-called “Nigerian reports” were forged. They were “garbage.” Now, let’s assume that they also worked their way up into the Oval Office – and that Bush put forth the statement knowing that his own intelligence community was in opposition. We are now confronted with new questions.

Could Bush have maintained faith in the documents as a result of his close relationship with Tony Blair?
No. Relationships cannot change the truth value of facts.
Axis Kast wrote: Could 10 Downing Street’s position – representative of that of their own intelligence agencies, one must assume – have been adopted as the President’s own, despite the ominous voices at home?
Maybe if the President thought the US intel was iffy. But it was based on information gathered by the envoy, which had uncovered quite a number of irreputable facts. [Amongst them, one letter dated October 2000 was reportedly signed by Niger's Foreign Minister Allele Habibou. But Habibou had left the government in 1989.]

There is absolutely no way the President could have questioned or doubted these facts. To suggest otherwise is to imply Bush:
  • Is insane.
  • Thinks Habibou is STILL the Foreign Minister and this is all a big conspiracy.
Axis Kast wrote: If you’re going to say Bush lied to sell the war, we need to delve into the territory of conspiracy theories. Why would Bush lie?
To convice the people that they should go to war against Iraq?
Axis Kast wrote: I have trouble seeing an actual, working plan to draw the United States into a War in Iraq for arbitrary purposes such as securing the next election. I don’t subscribe to the theory that a Neoconservative junta sits in Washington, nor to the suggestion that the Republican Party needed another national security issue on which to keep the public looking outward. We already had Afghanistan and the War on Terror; the Republicans were Kings of Security from September 11, 2001 on.

I also doubt Bush deceived us in order to win a war of his father’s. Iraq wasn’t necessarily an outstanding issue. We hadn’t sacrificed anything to Saddam Hussein. The war was widely considered one of the least bloody and most successful in American – or any other – history. If you want to suggest that Bush should have been outraged that Saddam ordered his father’s assassination, I ask you why other Presidents haven’t engaged in such vindictive geopolitical behavior?
Blah blah more smoke and mirrors.
Axis Kast wrote: The only conclusion to which I can come if we’re asking whether Bush lied to sell a war is that he needed to kick it off in the first place once the whole issue of disarmament had been put on the table. Embarrassed by the UN’s failure, he pressed for entry regardless – on a number of fronts. But this is equally questionable. Why would he start banging the war drums in the first place without evidence? There needs to have been an impetus for war in the first place. Personal agendas just don’t cut it here.
Ah the "why did we invade Iraq" question. I can already feel my time getting sucked into a vortex of an endless debate. Bye!
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Post by Axis Kast »

Course she would say that. To say otherwise would open the doors for Impeachment to come in and drag Bush kicking and screaming into the light.
As the result of a series of events still not clear (and not confirmed to have been completely under his own control)? I agree that Rice would provide “cover” for Bush either way; I don’t see her having had to do so because of impending impeachment however.
You're repeating yourself. Confidence in the British may have been there at the start. But it was clearly gone when the CIA recommend that envoy.
Was it? By which parties? American intelligence agencies? Again, it’s unclear how much the President knew; we have confirmation that the State Department was handling the situation, not that it reached the Oval Office and was for some malign purpose tossed into a waste bin and thereafter treated as fact.
No. Relationships cannot change the truth value of facts.
They can however change the value of analysis and engender the kind of trust necessary to question one’s own intelligence services.
Maybe if the President thought the US intel was iffy. But it was based on information gathered by the envoy, which had uncovered quite a number of irreputable facts. [Amongst them, one letter dated October 2000 was reportedly signed by Niger's Foreign Minister Allele Habibou. But Habibou had left the government in 1989.]

There is absolutely no way the President could have questioned or doubted these facts. To suggest otherwise is to imply Bush:
 Is insane.
 Thinks Habibou is STILL the Foreign Minister and this is all a big conspiracy.
You don’t even know whether or not the report came to his desk in time for the SOTU address.
To convice the people that they should go to war against Iraq?
For what purpose? To what end? Here’s the kicker. If you’re going to say that he lied, fine. It might have been an error. If you want me to believe that he’s purposefully misleading the American public, then I need a motive. And something more detailed and to the point than, “He wanted us to go to war.” Why did he want us to go to war? What was so important that it demanded knowing falsification? If you’re not going to answer those questions, your accusation of malign intent holds no water.
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote: If my argument is so full of holes that it’s ridiculously funny, why wasn’t Deegan able to refute almost half of it? :roll:
So says the loony tune.
Would you care to explain how, “You’re insane!” is any kind of refutation whatsoever? He wasn’t even aware of the original issues when he stepped into the ring. Hell, he was firing away at snippets of responses without having actually read them in their entirety in the first place.
He was well aware. Just pointing out your continuous question begging was icing on the cake.

The fact that Iraq was able to circumvent United Nations arms embargoes on such a scale – and in collusion with virtually every member of the United Nations Security Council – is indicative of negligence on a vast scale. To deny this is to close one’s eyes to all reality.
Empty rhetoric. You have NO fucking response to what I said, and so you just shove your fingers in your ears and ignore the fucking point and repeat your inane babble.
When we’re the guarantors of peace and isolation in that specific region? Perhaps you’ve never heard of them, Vympel. They’re called: “No-Fly Zones.”
Guarantors of peace and isolation? I'm sorry, bombing Iraqi air defense systems is a guarantor of peace? :roll:
And if the Iraqis can engage the Chinese to expand their air-defense system, I don’t see why we shouldn’t be concerned that they might have been similarly able to import other prohibited materials.
Because not all materials are the same, you dullard. There is WORLD of difference between fibre optic fucking cable and hundreds of gas centrifuges.
It’s not the status of their conventional military forces that concerns me. It’s the fact that the embargoes were so clearly circumvented on multiple occasions and by multiple parties. Reconstitution wouldn’t necessarily be noticed if these items were still in hiding, Vympel.
You couldn't hide them and use them at the same time. Fact.
The fact that you’re sitting here asserting your belief that we have no reason to concern ourselves with whether or not Iraq was able to smuggle more than simply replacement equipment past the United Nations is evidence of an extremely narrow point-of-view – not to mention a dangerous naïveté that puts out of sight and out of mind anything contradictory to your own bright, fully trusting point-of-view.
Fully trusting? Hardly. As usual, you completely ignore what I said and just repeat your bullshit empty rhetoric, without even an attempt to rebut the facts.
Missiles carry warheads. Warheads are explosive. Explosions are – and can cause other – fires.
And of course all these warheads are going to land directly in the oil well and set it ablaze are they, you stupid idiot?

Do you have proof that our barracks wasn’t the original target?
Burden of proof fallacy: "prove that it wasn't!".
Then again, considering the size of the oil fields that would have been involved, this is really irrelevant.
Yes, especially considering that 60 missiles landing on them would do precisely jack and shit.
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Post by Axis Kast »

So says the loony tune.
I’m not the one who scattered my hair-brained arguments with a series of ad-hominem remarks, and then failed to read any of the last three pages on top of it.
He was well aware. Just pointing out your continuous question begging was icing on the cake.
“Question beginning?” Since when is citing a series of catastrophically poor orders, horrific over-estimations, and outright ignorance of the truth on the part of Saddam Hussein a form of “continuous question begging?” Give it up, Vympel. You’ve lost the argument.
Empty rhetoric. You have NO fucking response to what I said, and so you just shove your fingers in your ears and ignore the fucking point and repeat your inane babble.
I know what you said, Vympel. And it’s a dangerous assumption. I ask you again: do you honestly feel it absolutely impossible for prohibited equipment related to arms research to enter the country in a similar fashion to other items we know that Iraq purchased and then acquired via illegal means? That is, do you acknowledge that there could be any crossover (now or in the future)? How much time would we have had, Vympel, before the rest of the world was no longer ready to maintain comprehensive sanctions to the best of its ability? How much time until we should begin worrying over whether Hussein might have taken the long road to gradual reconstitution of specific stockpiles or research items?
Guarantors of peace and isolation? I'm sorry, bombing Iraqi air defense systems is a guarantor of peace?
You’re attempting to brush off what Iraq has managed to smuggle as irrelevant – all which disregarding the fact that they shouldn’t have been able to engage the Chinese at all if the United Nations inspections had been working as ratified.
Because not all materials are the same, you dullard. There is WORLD of difference between fibre optic fucking cable and hundreds of gas centrifuges.
Who says it needs to be “a hundred gas centrifuges?” You are, of course, aware that not every shipment need be a massive, one-time ordeal? :roll:
You couldn't hide them and use them at the same time. Fact.
Reconstitution includes the formation of stockpiles and the inception of even so much as feasibility study.
Fully trusting? Hardly. As usual, you completely ignore what I said and just repeat your bullshit empty rhetoric, without even an attempt to rebut the facts.
Are you or are you not unconcerned with the fact that Iraq has violated sanctions so frequently and successfully in the past? Do you or do you not admit the possibility that components valuable to an unconventional weapons program might have passed by us without detection? Are you or are you not confident that Iraq committed itself to total self-disarmament despite the lack of documentation?
And of course all these warheads are going to land directly in the oil well and set it ablaze are they, you stupid idiot?
If the barrage were sufficient in size? Most likely.
Burden of proof fallacy: "prove that it wasn't!".
You are refuting that the barracks was the original target. Why don’t you offer proof?
Yes, especially considering that 60 missiles landing on them would do precisely jack and shit.
And you have the military commanders right there to tell you that, hm? :roll:
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Post by Vympel »

“Question beginning?” Since when is citing a series of catastrophically poor orders
Which has nothing to do with what Iraq was going to do when not provoked in a time of peace.
horrific over-estimations
Assuming of course that these generals aren't covering up their own incompetence.
and outright ignorance of the truth on the part of Saddam Hussein
Would that be the 'truth' where some dumbass on the internet thinks a handful of laughably inaccurate missiles would have a chance in hell of setting fire to even ONE oil field? Idiot.
a form of “continuous question begging?” Give it up, Vympel. You’ve lost the argument.
Question begging as in assuming the existence of WMD. As for losing the argument, I think we're all quite amused by your gymnastics in that regard- what with your redefiniton of the word lie, your concession that Iraq didnt have the capability to threaten anyone, your concession that Iraq did not, and was not prepared to, attack anyone in 1991 unprovoked, and your continued false analogies between NBC components and spare parts.
I know what you said, Vympel. And it’s a dangerous assumption. I ask you again: do you honestly feel it absolutely impossible for prohibited equipment related to arms research to enter the country in a similar fashion to other items we know that Iraq purchased and then acquired via illegal means?
Unnoticed, yes, it is impossible.
That is, do you acknowledge that there could be any crossover (now or in the future)? How much time would we have had, Vympel, before the rest of the world was no longer ready to maintain comprehensive sanctions to the best of its ability? How much time until we should begin worrying over whether Hussein might have taken the long road to gradual reconstitution of specific stockpiles or research items?
Any resumed activity would be noticed. Iraq's facilities were destroyed. That is undeniable fact. It would have to rebuild them.
You’re attempting to brush off what Iraq has managed to smuggle as irrelevant – all which disregarding the fact that they shouldn’t have been able to engage the Chinese at all if the United Nations inspections had been working as ratified.
Answer the question: how the fuck is bombing Iraqi AIR DEFENSE a guarantor of peace and security?

Who says it needs to be “a hundred gas centrifuges?” You are, of course, aware that not every shipment need be a massive, one-time ordeal? :roll:
And you are aware, of course, that a gas centrifuge is a highly lucrative item, part of a small, tightly controlled industry, and that for it to be of any use to Iraq not only would it have to have hundreds, but it would have to put them in a massive, highly visible enrichment facility? Ignoramus.

Reconstitution includes the formation of stockpiles and the inception of even so much as feasibility study.
Feasability studies are not prohibited. You cannot form stockpiles without activity that would be noticed.
Are you or are you not unconcerned with the fact that Iraq has violated sanctions so frequently and successfully in the past?
Not concerned. The outcome of the war and what is known about what Iraq managed to get proves that it was of no concern to anyone.
Do you or do you not admit the possibility that components valuable to an unconventional weapons program might have passed by us without detection?
Do not admit. It's an assumption without any supporting evidence borne of ignorance of the difference between spare parts and NBC items.
Are you or are you not confident that Iraq committed itself to total self-disarmament despite the lack of documentation?
Confident. The lack of documentation was for a reason. The events of the war bear out directly what Iraq had, and your construction of hypothetical question begging does not change that.

If the barrage were sufficient in size? Most likely.
Outright ignorance on display again I see. I see CEP and what the facts of these atrocious missiles are means nothing to you.

You are refuting that the barracks was the original target. Why don’t you offer proof?
Because it's not up to me to prove a negative. The facts of the missiles and their use are clear- that you think that these missiles are capable of such accuracy is just your revelling in ignorance.
And you have the military commanders right there to tell you that, hm? :roll:
No, I have common sense, rather than your glorious ignorance of all things that might actually help you in such a debate.
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Post by Axis Kast »

Which has nothing to do with what Iraq was going to do when not provoked in a time of peace.
But everything to do with whether or not Saddam Hussein was delusional, which is, of course, the focus of the argument. Nice try.
Assuming of course that these generals aren't covering up their own incompetence.
“Generals covering up their own incompetence?” I have trouble seeing where so many in the Iraqi leadership somehow happened to be so incompetent regarding the same defensive preparations – or how their supposed failures absolve Hussein himself from making terrific over-assessments of the power of his forces.
Would that be the 'truth' where some dumbass on the internet thinks a handful of laughably inaccurate missiles would have a chance in hell of setting fire to even ONE oil field? Idiot.
Concession accepted. If you can’t even address the issues at hand, why try anymore? Just admit it and move on.
Question begging as in assuming the existence of WMD. As for losing the argument, I think we're all quite amused by your gymnastics in that regard- what with your redefiniton of the word lie, your concession that Iraq didnt have the capability to threaten anyone, your concession that Iraq did not, and was not prepared to, attack anyone in 1991 unprovoked, and your continued false analogies between NBC components and spare parts.
Or in your assuming their non-existence despite incomplete investigation? You can hide behind the false wall of your little fallacies only so long, Vympel. You don’t have conclusive evidence, either. The question won’t be answered until the inspections have run their course.

My “redefinition”? No. My careful attention to what was said and how.

My concession that Iraq didn’t have the ability to threaten anyone? Here we go again; you’re confusing the conventional capability of the Iraqi state with unconventional capability.

Whether or not Iraq planned to attack anyone unprovoked in 1991 – which is, of course, ludicrous considering the history of a little country called Kuwait -, the contingency plans in place were horrendously flawed. That is, of course, the point of concern.

False analogies, or simply highlights of a sanctions regime riddled with more holes than you’d care to acknowledge?
Unnoticed, yes, it is impossible.
Just like everything else we didn’t know he had before inspectors unveiled the truth?
Any resumed activity would be noticed. Iraq's facilities were destroyed. That is undeniable fact. It would have to rebuild them.
It would have to rebuild facilities to conduct feasibility research on paper? Or to begin stockpiles of dual-purpose equipment?
Answer the question: how the fuck is bombing Iraqi AIR DEFENSE a guarantor of peace and security?
When I said “guarantors of peace and security,” I was referring to the United States and the United Kingdom, Vympel.
And you are aware, of course, that a gas centrifuge is a highly lucrative item, part of a small, tightly controlled industry, and that for it to be of any use to Iraq not only would it have to have hundreds, but it would have to put them in a massive, highly visible enrichment facility? Ignoramus.
When did we even open the discussion on gas centrifuges at all? You’re the one who seems to enjoy making the case that it’s the only thing they’d import.
Feasability studies are not prohibited. You cannot form stockpiles without activity that would be noticed.
And yet, of course, they are the precursor to the weaponization programs he can’t have. The ones we don’t want him to have. :roll:
Not concerned. The outcome of the war and what is known about what Iraq managed to get proves that it was of no concern to anyone.
As blatant an opinion as any other, Vympel.
Do not admit. It's an assumption without any supporting evidence borne of ignorance of the difference between spare parts and NBC items.
Ah, so now you’re in the habit of excluding the possibility for Iraqi circumvention on the basis of personal expectation and blind faith, hm? Great analysis.
Confident. The lack of documentation was for a reason. The events of the war bear out directly what Iraq had, and your construction of hypothetical question begging does not change that.
Of course, the lack of documentation also means you’re taking the Iraqi word for it. :roll: As I’ve pointed out time and again, Iraq did not necessarily have to deploy WMD in this latest war. We don’t even know if it could have had it wanted to.
Because it's not up to me to prove a negative. The facts of the missiles and their use are clear- that you think that these missiles are capable of such accuracy is just your revelling in ignorance.
Of course it is. It is your assertion that the barracks were not the original target. Prove that.
No, I have common sense, rather than your glorious ignorance of all things that might actually help you in such a debate.
Oil fields are large. Even with a 50% chance of falling into a target zone, a substantial barrage would probably find its mark.
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote: But everything to do with whether or not Saddam Hussein was delusional, which is, of course, the focus of the argument. Nice try.
No, that's what *you* think the focus of the argument is. I've already said that Iraq was not a threat, irrespective of whatever plans Iraq did or did not have (and which you have not provided any evidence for, I might add).
“Generals covering up their own incompetence?” I have trouble seeing where so many in the Iraqi leadership somehow happened to be so incompetent regarding the same defensive preparations – or how their supposed failures absolve Hussein himself from making terrific over-assessments of the power of his forces.
I have trouble seeing why Saddam Hussein would bother ordering the defensive preparations of his units- that's a job for generals and colonels, not the head of state. Not that his skill as at small-unit tactics during an invasion is at all relevant as to the threat Iraq poses to America and/or Israel.

Concession accepted. If you can’t even address the issues at hand, why try anymore? Just admit it and move on.
You really are a delusional little clown, aren't you?
Or in your assuming their non-existence despite incomplete investigation?
And unanimous testimony, and what happened during the war.
You can hide behind the false wall of your little fallacies only so long, Vympel.
More contempt for logic on display I see. I guess that's the only thing you have left when your argument quite simply cannot be valid.
You don’t have conclusive evidence, either. The question won’t be answered until the inspections have run their course.
The weight of the evidence is firmly on my side, which is obvious to all.
My “redefinition”? No. My careful attention to what was said and how.
The definition of the word lie has been posted. Everyone knows what a lie is. You have no argument. Bush lied by any standard. You lose.
My concession that Iraq didn’t have the ability to threaten anyone? Here we go again; you’re confusing the conventional capability of the Iraqi state with unconventional capability.
Prove it's unconventional capability then. No? That's a concession.
Whether or not Iraq planned to attack anyone unprovoked in 1991 –which is, of course, ludicrous considering the history of a little country called Kuwait -
Strawman. It's so amusing how you continue to jump from 'conventional' to 'unconventional' at will, when you know perfectly fucking well I was talking about unprovoked WMD attacks, you dipshit.
the contingency plans in place were horrendously flawed. That is, of course, the point of concern.
Horrendously flawed from the standards of a moron who continues to rail against common sense and technical facts. :roll:
False analogies, or simply highlights of a sanctions regime riddled with more holes than you’d care to acknowledge?
No, false analogies.
Just like everything else we didn’t know he had before inspectors unveiled the truth?
Excuse me? What did inspectors unveil? Iraq's WMD capabilities pre-1991 were objectively demonstrable.
It would have to rebuild facilities to conduct feasibility research on paper? Or to begin stockpiles of dual-purpose equipment?
Neither of which qualify. The first isn't even illicit, and stockpiling dual purpose equipment doesn't even enter into it. You can't dual purpose your way to weapons grade uranium, dumbass, and you can't produce anything, not chemical or biological without it being noticed.

When I said “guarantors of peace and security,” I was referring to the United States and the United Kingdom, Vympel.
Which is not an answer.

When did we even open the discussion on gas centrifuges at all? You’re the one who seems to enjoy making the case that it’s the only thing they’d import.
It's an *example*. The Bush administration referred to WMD. Nuclear weapons are WMD. Get it? If you like, I can substitue botulin toxin, it's the same thing.

And yet, of course, they are the precursor to the weaponization programs he can’t have. The ones we don’t want him to have. :roll:
Any attempt to act on any dual use ability they may or may not have had would be noticed, and stopped.

As blatant an opinion as any other, Vympel.
Amply supported by the facts, unlike your utterly bereft of evidence position.
Ah, so now you’re in the habit of excluding the possibility for Iraqi circumvention on the basis of personal expectation and blind faith, hm? Great analysis.
No, just that you don't have a shred of supporting evidene and can't understnad the difference between spare parts and NBC components, like I said. Dumbass.
Of course, the lack of documentation also means you’re taking the Iraqi word for it. :roll:
No, the inspectors. Idiot.
As I’ve pointed out time and again, Iraq did not necessarily have to deploy WMD in this latest war. We don’t even know if it could have had it wanted to.
Ah, I see we're back to your laughable "iraq's capability to carry out totalyl unsupported by evidence unprovoked attacks on Israel" is irrelevant to the strength of your .... "posiiton".

Of course it is.
More contempt for logic. I love this.
It is your assertion that the barracks were not the original target. Prove that.
No, it is your assertion that the barracks were the original target in the middle of a city by missiles with incredibly bad accuracy. Go ahead, prove it.
Oil fields are large.
How large.
Even with a 50% chance of falling into a target zone
A target zone that's a circular area of up to 3km wide. There's a reason they put explosive charges directly on the oil wells, you dumbass. You seem to think if there's an explosion lands anywhere near a well the whole thing will set ablaze. You're just ignorant.
a substantial barrage would probably find its mark.
Ignorance and hand waving. The Al-Husseins were used as they were supposed to be used- terror weapons. In fact, for Iraq to waste it's missiles on empty sand in the ridiculous hope that it might hit an oil field eventually and that this is somehow a superior target to guaranteed damage against cities is what would really be delusional.
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Post by Axis Kast »

No, that's what *you* think the focus of the argument is. I've already said that Iraq was not a threat, irrespective of whatever plans Iraq did or did not have (and which you have not provided any evidence for, I might add).
This specific part of the argument was over whether or not Hussein was delusional. The threat posed by Iraq after that fact is irrelevant at this point in time.
I have trouble seeing why Saddam Hussein would bother ordering the defensive preparations of his units- that's a job for generals and colonels, not the head of state. Not that his skill as at small-unit tactics during an invasion is at all relevant as to the threat Iraq poses to America and/or Israel.
The article was very clear: he ordered specific prohibitions in order to prevent what he deemed unnecessary damages to the city of Baghdad. And again, his expectation that the Republican Guard would be able to hold the city without extensive defensive preparations is absolutely absurd given their pre-war status.
You really are a delusional little clown, aren't you?
Why? Because I drag al-Samoud missiles and ad-hominem arguments out of the closet when we’re actually talking about Saddam Hussein?
And unanimous testimony, and what happened during the war.
Without, of course, confirmation by weapons inspectors other than to say that, “Yes, something did in fact go on here – but we’re not sure to what extent.” You can’t prove that Iraq committed itself to total unilateral disarmament. Hell, why didn’t the Western allies catch them in the act?
The weight of the evidence is firmly on my side, which is obvious to all.
Your “evidence” is based on incomplete assessments and the word of Iraqi leaders who still cannot provide actual documentation themselves.
The definition of the word lie has been posted. Everyone knows what a lie is. You have no argument. Bush lied by any standard. You lose.
Bush only lied if he did not in fact adopt the position of Tony Blair. If he did lie, you’ve yet to provide so much as even a shred of reasoning as to the motives behind it. “To bring us to war,” is an end. You need a starting point – to explain why Bush put us in this position in the first place, if you believe his reasons were less than kosher.
Prove it's unconventional capability then. No? That's a concession.
The investigations are still underway, Vympel. The question here is whether your harping on their lack of conventional power projection eliminates the threat altogether. The answer is clearly no.
Strawman. It's so amusing how you continue to jump from 'conventional' to 'unconventional' at will, when you know perfectly fucking well I was talking about unprovoked WMD attacks, you dipshit.
Were you? You’ve switched back and forth to conventional often enough. Your only argument is precedent. “Iraq didn’t launch or threaten anyone with WMD before now; why would they do so in the future?” Did it ever occur to you that they’d remain a danger even assuming sanctions were lifted down the line? Hussein’s ambitions – and those of his sons – were quite evident. Or are you now going to argue that we should forget about North Korea, too, because they’ve never launched a missile at anyone before either?
Horrendously flawed from the standards of a moron who continues to rail against common sense and technical facts.
Horrendously flawed from the point of view that there was only a small percentage for absolute success – but plenty for failure ranging from light (where Israel offers no response) to complete (where Hussein himself is caught in a nuclear counter-strike).
No, false analogies.
That’s still up for debate. I’m not the one who thinks leaving the roads to Baghdad unguarded is a fantastic tactical and strategic move. :roll:
Excuse me? What did inspectors unveil? Iraq's WMD capabilities pre-1991 were objectively demonstrable.
Conventional items. How else do you think we learned of violations such as those instigated by the Yugoslaves?
Neither of which qualify. The first isn't even illicit, and stockpiling dual purpose equipment doesn't even enter into it. You can't dual purpose your way to weapons grade uranium, dumbass, and you can't produce anything, not chemical or biological without it being noticed.
Feasibility studies at this point in time are dangerously premature. They also represent the stepping stones to the kind of proliferation that we haven’t wanted him to pursue since 1991. They are a clear danger, Vympel, to the countries most directly responsible for his containment.

Ah, so now the only tools required for nuclear development are aluminum centrifuges and weapons-grade uranium? :roll:

Wait. Don’t tell me you’re jumping from, “Can’t import!” to, “Can’t produce!” What part of, “We don’t want them improving their capabilities in the first place!” don’t you understand?
Which is not an answer.
You misread the actual quotation in the first place.

You want an answer to your question? Fine. Improved defensive systems were a threat to the pilots who kept the No-Fly Zones clear. Why is that important? Because the No-Fly Zones were a method of containment to Iraqi ambitions, as evidenced immediately after the Gulf War.
It's an *example*. The Bush administration referred to WMD. Nuclear weapons are WMD. Get it? If you like, I can substitue botulin toxin, it's the same thing.
There is plenty of other machinery he might import – i.e. metal-working lathes – for nuclear weapons fabrication. Your examples are the most stupendous – and unlikely.
Any attempt to act on any dual use ability they may or may not have had would be noticed, and stopped.
… but it’s all right that he stockpiles them now, while under embargo? :roll:
Amply supported by the facts, unlike your utterly bereft of evidence position.
No, not amply supported by the facts. Your position is that since the war-ravaged country of Iraq didn’t respond with WMD, it is no threat to anyone. But did you ever consider that perhaps they couldn’t respond with WMD despite the desire to do so?
No, just that you don't have a shred of supporting evidene and can't understnad the difference between spare parts and NBC components, like I said. Dumbass.
We’re talking about possibilites here, Vympel. I am asking you to acknowledge potential.
No, the inspectors. Idiot.
… had no idea to what extent self-disarmament had occurred.
Ah, I see we're back to your laughable "iraq's capability to carry out totalyl unsupported by evidence unprovoked attacks on Israel" is irrelevant to the strength of your .... "posiiton".
We know they had the precedent of intention. Again, the investigation for WMD is still underway.
No, it is your assertion that the barracks were the original target in the middle of a city by missiles with incredibly bad accuracy. Go ahead, prove it.
I can find no evidence other than that the hit was “a lucky strike” – which does not, of course, rule out that it was still aimed at the barracks themselves. We are back at square one. Your position is equally as speculative.

Let’s side-track for just a moment …

From www.cdi.org/terrorism/iraqmissile.cfm:

“Scuds carrying chemical weapons can be expected to kill dozens of people per warhead depending on variables such as weather conditions, type of agent used, civil defense preparations, and degree of advanced warning.” Now, considering that Israel would indeed have been well-prepared to suffer a barrage, this further reduces the argument that a chemical attack – especially considering the high probably for failure already cited by yourself – would have the desired effect at all.
How large.
They certainly seem large to me…

http://www.stanford.edu/class/history187b/oilfield.htm
A target zone that's a circular area of up to 3km wide. There's a reason they put explosive charges directly on the oil wells, you dumbass. You seem to think if there's an explosion lands anywhere near a well the whole thing will set ablaze. You're just ignorant.
Wells are generally packed fairly close together. A single missile hitting the right target would go a long way toward accomplishing the goal.
Ignorance and hand waving. The Al-Husseins were used as they were supposed to be used- terror weapons. In fact, for Iraq to waste it's missiles on empty sand in the ridiculous hope that it might hit an oil field eventually and that this is somehow a superior target to guaranteed damage against cities is what would really be delusional.
As compared to firing off a smaller handful at Israel on the long hope that they’ll evoke a massive retaliatory strike (perhaps even one resulting in nuclear destruction of Baghdad)?
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote: This specific part of the argument was over whether or not Hussein was delusional. The threat posed by Iraq after that fact is irrelevant at this point in time.
The threat posed by Iraq is never irrelevant to this debate.
The article was very clear: he ordered specific prohibitions in order to prevent what he deemed unnecessary damages to the city of Baghdad. And again, his expectation that the Republican Guard would be able to hold the city without extensive defensive preparations is absolutely absurd given their pre-war status.
Back to your old habits of bullshitting, huh?
And tactics that could have slowed U.S. forces, such as the mining of roads leading into Baghdad, were not employed because Hussein was confident his forces would repel the Americans.
So says the LA times. Funny though, this is what the General said:

"We should have mined the roads and bridges. We should have planned a guerrilla war," said retired Gen. Ahmed Rahal, 51. "We were crippled by a lack of imagination."

"We". Interesting. Not "Saddam".

"Iraqi forces, who did not anticipate Americans would use tanks in urban combat inside the capital city, were largely unprepared for the ensuing armored onslaught."

This is actually an incident of commanders using somewhat conventional wisdom to their detriment- hence 'we were crippled by a lack of imagination'.

Of course, the same article has denials of chemical weapons as well- but I guess on that point you won't believe them, but are perfectly willing to concoct your own version of what they were actually saying.

And note that he says no guerilla war was planned. That's funny, that's what the US has been asserting. Who's right?

Why? Because I drag al-Samoud missiles and ad-hominem arguments out of the closet when we’re actually talking about Saddam Hussein?
Actually, you ARE the one who dragged missiles into an argument about Hussein, you dumbass.
Without, of course, confirmation by weapons inspectors other than to say that, “Yes, something did in fact go on here – but we’re not sure to what extent.” You can’t prove that Iraq committed itself to total unilateral disarmament. Hell, why didn’t the Western allies catch them in the act?
Perhaps because they had failed to occupy and invade Iraq :roll:

Your “evidence” is based on incomplete assessments and the word of Iraqi leaders who still cannot provide actual documentation themselves.
And your 'evidence' is based on what? Oh that's right, you don't have ANY.
Bush only lied if he did not in fact adopt the position of Tony Blair. If he did lie, you’ve yet to provide so much as even a shred of reasoning as to the motives behind it. “To bring us to war,” is an end. You need a starting point – to explain why Bush put us in this position in the first place, if you believe his reasons were less than kosher.
His motives are irrelevant. No matter what his aim was, he bullshitted to achieve it.
The investigations are still underway, Vympel. The question here is whether your harping on their lack of conventional power projection eliminates the threat altogether. The answer is clearly no.
The answer is actually clearly yes. Explain what Iraq was going to do with unconventional weapons without the ability to back it up with a conventional military?
Were you? You’ve switched back and forth to conventional often enough. Your only argument is precedent. “Iraq didn’t launch or threaten anyone with WMD before now; why would they do so in the future?” Did it ever occur to you that they’d remain a danger even assuming sanctions were lifted down the line? Hussein’s ambitions – and those of his sons – were quite evident. Or are you now going to argue that we should forget about North Korea, too, because they’ve never launched a missile at anyone before either?
Actually yes, I'd argue for containment. As usual, the rabid pro-war idiot presents a false dilemma of "forget about Iraq" as the counterpoint to "we must invade Iraq."

I have precedent. What do you have? "Oh, we can't be sure that it won't try something later!" That's a really powerful argument for war right there :roll:
Horrendously flawed from the point of view that there was only a small percentage for absolute success – but plenty for failure ranging from light (where Israel offers no response) to complete (where Hussein himself is caught in a nuclear counter-strike).
And you present the alternate option of firing inaccurate missiles at open oil fields in the vague hope that *something* might happen. :roll:

That’s still up for debate. I’m not the one who thinks leaving the roads to Baghdad unguarded is a fantastic tactical and strategic move. :roll:
Strawman, dipshit.

Conventional items. How else do you think we learned of violations such as those instigated by the Yugoslaves?
Oh, you mean those uber-scary spare parts! :lol:

Feasibility studies at this point in time are dangerously premature.
Irrelevant. There's nothing wrong with a feasability study. A university grad student could do one.
They also represent the stepping stones to the kind of proliferation that we haven’t wanted him to pursue since 1991. They are a clear danger, Vympel, to the countries most directly responsible for his containment.
Slippery slope fallacy.
Ah, so now the only tools required for nuclear development are aluminum centrifuges and weapons-grade uranium? :roll:
Explain how to make a nuclear weapon without weapons grade material, you dumbass.
Wait. Don’t tell me you’re jumping from, “Can’t import!” to, “Can’t produce!” What part of, “We don’t want them improving their capabilities in the first place!” don’t you understand?
You haven't fucking SHOWN their capabilities to improve, you stupid moron, and whether their capabilities can improve short of the point of being able to build a nuclear weapon is IRRELEVANT. You CANNOT produce nuclear arms without MASSIVE investments in infrastructure which Iraq DID NOT HAVE and COULD NOT HIDE. Fucking dumbass.

You misread the actual quotation in the first place.

You want an answer to your question? Fine. Improved defensive systems were a threat to the pilots who kept the No-Fly Zones clear. Why is that important? Because the No-Fly Zones were a method of containment to Iraqi ambitions, as evidenced immediately after the Gulf War.
Iraqi ambitions? I'm sorry, did the US/UK bomb another Iraqi invasion force or something? :roll:

There is plenty of other machinery he might import – i.e. metal-working lathes – for nuclear weapons fabrication. Your examples are the most stupendous – and unlikely.
And what's it going to do with these lathes, you ignoramus?
… but it’s all right that he stockpiles them now, while under embargo? :roll:
Assuming of course Iraq can stockpile them, which you have not, at any stage, shown :roll:
No, not amply supported by the facts. Your position is that since the war-ravaged country of Iraq didn’t respond with WMD, it is no threat to anyone. But did you ever consider that perhaps they couldn’t respond with WMD despite the desire to do so?
And your position is supported by what? The fevered imaginings of your diseased mind? On one side there is the demonstrable uncontroversial facts, and on your side is rationalization after rationalization, without a shred of supporting evidence.

We’re talking about possibilites here, Vympel. I am asking you to acknowledge potential.
And I do not acknowledge it. At all.

… had no idea to what extent self-disarmament had occurred.
And yet were on the ground and were ensuring the destruction of Iraq's infrastructure (undisputed fact) and preventing any further NBC activities.
We know they had the precedent of intention. Again, the investigation for WMD is still underway.
NO, they didn't have the precedent of intention for unprovoked attack. In case you didn't notice, Iraq was supposedly only going to use it's weapons if Baghdad was under siege.
Let’s side-track for just a moment …

From www.cdi.org/terrorism/iraqmissile.cfm:

“Scuds carrying chemical weapons can be expected to kill dozens of people per warhead depending on variables such as weather conditions, type of agent used, civil defense preparations, and degree of advanced warning.” Now, considering that Israel would indeed have been well-prepared to suffer a barrage, this further reduces the argument that a chemical attack – especially considering the high probably for failure already cited by yourself – would have the desired effect at all.
I agree. If you check one of the sources Pollack quotes, the Israelis were actually concerned about biological weapon attack rather than chemical, apparently.

They certainly seem large to me…

http://www.stanford.edu/class/history187b/oilfield.htm
And do you think every area marked on that map will spontaneously combust if hit by a warhead? Those green patches mark oil *fields*- simply dropping a bomb on them won't set them on fire.

Wells are generally packed fairly close together. A single missile hitting the right target would go a long way toward accomplishing the goal.
And you'd suggest that firing off your entire arsenal in the hope that a a few missiles might find their mark dead centre is an appropriate use of resources? Oil wells are blown by saboteurs with explosive charges on site- either that, or precision guided air/ground launched munitions may be effective. Anything else is a waste.
As compared to firing off a smaller handful at Israel on the long hope that they’ll evoke a massive retaliatory strike (perhaps even one resulting in nuclear destruction of Baghdad)?
I doubt Israel would use nuclear weapons because of 300kg HE falling on Israeli cities. As it is, Israel had to be restrained by the US for retaliation. Hussein *did* come close to his goal.
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Post by Axis Kast »

The threat posed by Iraq is never irrelevant to this debate.
Reread the entire thread thus far, Vympel. The statements to which you are referring had one purpose, and one purpose alone: to prove the delusional nature of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
Back to your old habits of bullshitting, huh?
This is the article’s quotation, not mine:

“Hussein, convinced that Republican Guard units posted south of Baghdad would repel American tanks, had decided not to mine highways or blow up bridges leading into the capital, commanders said. The infrastructure was left intact so that it could be used by Iraqi forces mounting counterattacks. But entire Republican Guard divisions were ravaged, first by coalition warplanes and then by tanks approaching the capital.”

As for the notion that field commanders would be unhesitatingly given the locations of weapons stockpiles, I find that as ludicrous as the claim that it was the field commanders who unanimously chose not to prepare the city of Baghdad.
Why? Because I drag al-Samoud missiles and ad-hominem arguments out of the closet when we’re actually talking about Saddam Hussein?
Not in relation to the above argument, we’re not.
nd note that he says no guerilla war was planned. That's funny, that's what the US has been asserting. Who's right?
There’s a difference between a guerilla war orchestrated by regular combat troops and irregular civilian forces.
Perhaps because they had failed to occupy and invade Iraq.
You’ve just spoken the same justifications for war as George W. Bush. Or was this some kind of sarcasm?
And your 'evidence' is based on what? Oh that's right, you don't have ANY.
At least I’m not taking the Iraqi leadership’s word for it, Vympel.
His motives are irrelevant. No matter what his aim was, he bullshitted to achieve it.
If in fact he chose to adopt Blair’s position, he made an error in judgement, not a malignant lie.
The answer is actually clearly yes. Explain what Iraq was going to do with unconventional weapons without the ability to back it up with a conventional military?
Gain the same kind of consideration as North Korea; it’d be very difficult to actually “move in on” the country assuming they possess credible deterrents. Then again, we don’t want Iraq having the arms in general – we know Hussein’s delusional already. Any kind of stockpile must be denied him. At this point in time, it’s prudent to err to the side of certainty.
Actually yes, I'd argue for containment. As usual, the rabid pro-war idiot presents a false dilemma of "forget about Iraq" as the counterpoint to "we must invade Iraq."
Containment was not a certain means of forcing disarmament. The sanctions suffered numerous breaches; Bush was correct in reminding the world that there could be no final reckoning without a more comprehensive presence on the ground – not to mention the absence of a régime such as Hussein’s, known for its deception); containment left our troops scattered across the Middle East for indefinite periods of time, obliging us to fly sortie after sortie and maintain large concentrations of men and material every time we sought to increase the pressure. Point blank, it was a poor option.
I have precedent. What do you have? "Oh, we can't be sure that it won't try something later!" That's a really powerful argument for war right there.
It’s a powerful argument when you recall that Iraq has attacked two of its neighbors outright over the past two decades – each in contravention of good sense.
And you present the alternate option of firing inaccurate missiles at open oil fields in the vague hope that *something* might happen.
A large enough barrage would raise the likelihood of success considerably. You might also ask whether or not it would have been impossible for agents of the Iraqi régime to start such fires on their own.
Oh, you mean those uber-scary spare parts!
Answer the question. There were periods when we had absolutely no knowledge that Hussein had successfully violated sanctions.
Irrelevant. There's nothing wrong with a feasability study. A university grad student could do one.
If it’s commissioned by the régime, it represents intent to one day reconstitute a capability already denied him: a threat according to those responsible for upholding the status quo.
Slippery slope fallacy.
Not at all. In this case, the precondition and the potential match up entirely. If Iraq goes down the path to reconstitution more fully, he places the United States in the unwelcome position of having to act on his timetable – it’s something you keep forgetting.
Explain how to make a nuclear weapon without weapons grade material, you dumbass.
Now you’re running off on tangents. Explain to me why weapons-grade material is the only thing he might import on the sly.
You haven't fucking SHOWN their capabilities to improve, you stupid moron, and whether their capabilities can improve short of the point of being able to build a nuclear weapon is IRRELEVANT. You CANNOT produce nuclear arms without MASSIVE investments in infrastructure which Iraq DID NOT HAVE and COULD NOT HIDE. Fucking dumbass.
If they rebuild their stockpiles of equipment, it’s improvement from their current condition, Vympel.

Wait just a moment. It’s acceptable for Iraq to rebuild its programs to the point of nuclear fission – just so long as they don’t cross that line on our watch? Fantastic. Now I see exactly where you’re coming from. And you expect the United States to find this reasoning solid as well, right? :roll:

Nobody’s speaking strictly about nuclear arms, Vympel. North Korea was able to reconstitute without our knowledge despite constant attention. You’re fully confident Hussein wouldn’t have had the same chance several years down the road once Blix let up and the international community began to focus its energies elsewhere?
And what's it going to do with these lathes, you ignoramus?
Machine other components part of the actual warhead or containment equipment, perhaps? :roll:
Assuming of course Iraq can stockpile them, which you have not, at any stage, shown.
Still under investigation – or are you saying it would be impossible for Iraq to keep certain quantities of equipment hidden in the first place?
And your position is supported by what? The fevered imaginings of your diseased mind? On one side there is the demonstrable uncontroversial facts, and on your side is rationalization after rationalization, without a shred of supporting evidence.
Your “evidence” is an investigation not yet complete. That wouldn’t hold up anywhere either, Vympel. Do not make the dangerous assumption that only a successful launch proves our accusations.
And I do not acknowledge it. At all.
So it would be, in your opinion, impossible – absolutely impossible – for Iraq to violate the UNSC sanctions unless the item in question were conventional in nature only?

Now who’s bending reality as it suits them? :roll:
And yet were on the ground and were ensuring the destruction of Iraq's infrastructure (undisputed fact) and preventing any further NBC activities.
Again, they managed to walk away with nothing more than the conclusion that something happened. They weren’t sure to what extent however.
NO, they didn't have the precedent of intention for unprovoked attack. In case you didn't notice, Iraq was supposedly only going to use it's weapons if Baghdad was under siege.
Baghdad was going to be endangered anyway if they ever stood up and began shaking their fist. How many times must I remind you: we don’t want another North Korea?
I agree. If you check one of the sources Pollack quotes, the Israelis were actually concerned about biological weapon attack rather than chemical, apparently.
Another blow against the contingency plan.
And do you think every area marked on that map will spontaneously combust if hit by a warhead? Those green patches mark oil *fields*- simply dropping a bomb on them won't set them on fire.
Hitting the proper equipment with a single – or a handful – of warheads would start major fires. So would, come to think of it, actual men on the ground. It was within Saddam’s purview to order such assaults – and for far less risk than a strike on Israel.
And you’d suggest that firing off your entire arsenal in the hope that a a few missiles might find their mark dead centre is an appropriate use of resources? Oil wells are blown by saboteurs with explosive charges on site- either that, or precision guided air/ground launched munitions may be effective. Anything else is a waste.
Come to think of it, the ultimate question is whether the Israeli contingency plan was acceptable from a strategic point of view. The answer is no even if we exclude the SCUD potential; Iraq had special forces prepared to assault oil fields since the 1980s; setting them against the Saudis would have carried far less risk were Baghdad under attack than launching chemical warheads at Israel.

We’re talking a medium- to high-level barrage. It was the same thing prepared for Israel.
I doubt Israel would use nuclear weapons because of 300kg HE falling on Israeli cities. As it is, Israel had to be restrained by the US for retaliation. Hussein *did* come close to his goal.
“Close” doesn’t count save with horseshoes and hand grenades in this particular situation. The Israelis ultimately held back. A few dozen deaths probably wouldn’t have put them in mind to strike Baghdad, either – remember that they’d be wary of inflicting unintended casualties on forward-ranging Coalition units in the first place.
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote:
Reread the entire thread thus far, Vympel. The statements to which you are referring had one purpose, and one purpose alone: to prove the delusional nature of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
And you've done a bang up job :roll:
This is the article’s quotation, not mine:

“Hussein, convinced that Republican Guard units posted south of Baghdad would repel American tanks, had decided not to mine highways or blow up bridges leading into the capital, commanders said. The infrastructure was left intact so that it could be used by Iraqi forces mounting counterattacks. But entire Republican Guard divisions were ravaged, first by coalition warplanes and then by tanks approaching the capital.”

As for the notion that field commanders would be unhesitatingly given the locations of weapons stockpiles, I find that as ludicrous as the claim that it was the field commanders who unanimously chose not to prepare the city of Baghdad.
Complete self-contradictin in source. One named, quoted general says they didn't expect tanks to enter the city (lack of imagination), and then "commanders" say Hussein was convinced they would repel American tanks and decided not to mine highways or blow up bridges leading into the capital? Did they expect tanks or NOT?

Not in relation to the above argument, we’re not.
Bullshit. You tried to argue that because Iraq didn't launch conventional SCUDs at oil fields, that shows Saddam was delusional. And of course, that he was a stupid man has nothing to do with whether Iraq was prepared to launch WMD attacks on Israel out of the blue, which we know Iraq was not.
There’s a difference between a guerilla war orchestrated by regular combat troops and irregular civilian forces.
Guerilla war orchestrated by regular combat troops? Oxymoron, moron. Regular troops change into civilian clothes, and become guerillas. Explain the Fedayeen Saddam, btw. That's guerilla warfare.
You’ve just spoken the same justifications for war as George W. Bush. Or was this some kind of sarcasm?
[sarcasm]Didn't see that one coming[/sarcasm] You asked why coalition forces didn't 'catch' them and I responded they weren't there to 'catch' them.

At least I’m not taking the Iraqi leadership’s word for it, Vympel.
Translation= "I'm too stupid to take Iraqi scientists, commanders, soldiers, and executed-by-Saddam defectors word for it, instead, I will just construct hypothetical scenarios without evidence and engage in numerous fallacies to try and shore up my utterly collapsed argument".

If in fact he chose to adopt Blair’s position, he made an error in judgement, not a malignant lie.
No. He knew it was false. That makes it a lie.
Gain the same kind of consideration as North Korea; it’d be very difficult to actually “move in on” the country assuming they possess credible deterrents.
"We must attack Iraq to prevent Saddam stopping us from attacking Iraq". Idiot.
Then again, we don’t want Iraq having the arms in general – we know Hussein’s delusional already. Any kind of stockpile must be denied him. At this point in time, it’s prudent to err to the side of certainty.
His stockpile was being denied him. Fact.
Containment was not a certain means of forcing disarmament. The sanctions suffered numerous breaches;
Spare parts. Oooh, scary.
Bush was correct in reminding the world that there could be no final reckoning without a more comprehensive presence on the ground – not to mention the absence of a régime such as Hussein’s, known for its deception); containment left our troops scattered across the Middle East for indefinite periods of time, obliging us to fly sortie after sortie and maintain large concentrations of men and material every time we sought to increase the pressure. Point blank, it was a poor option.
Oh, and occupying a hostile nation indefinitely trying to make it 'malleable' when everyone there clearly hates your guts, merely swapping from one shithole (SA) to another is clearly the superior option- adding of course the daily casualties.
It’s a powerful argument when you recall that Iraq has attacked two of its neighbors outright over the past two decades – each in contravention of good sense.
When it was much stronger than it is now.

A large enough barrage would raise the likelihood of success considerably.
Here's a hint genius: with accuracy like that 60 missiles is not a large enough barrage, and you have yet to define what exactly 'success' is supposed to be.
You might also ask whether or not it would have been impossible for agents of the Iraqi régime to start such fires on their own.
I seriously doubt Iraqi special forces would have the capability or the inclination in the middle of a wider war to venture into Saudi Arabia to blow up oil fields.
Answer the question. There were periods when we had absolutely no knowledge that Hussein had successfully violated sanctions.
Because the violations were too mundane and unimportant to warrant investigation.
If it’s commissioned by the régime, it represents intent to one day reconstitute a capability already denied him: a threat according to those responsible for upholding the status quo.
Intent is irrelevant. We know what Iraq intended. Capability to carry out your intent is the issue. Iraq had none.
Not at all. In this case, the precondition and the potential match up entirely. If Iraq goes down the path to reconstitution more fully, he places the United States in the unwelcome position of having to act on his timetable – it’s something you keep forgetting.
No, it's a slippery slope. You take mundane spare parts and pretend they're equivalent. They aren't. At all.


Now you’re running off on tangents. Explain to me why weapons-grade material is the only thing he might import on the sly.
Explain how importing anything on the sly will be useful to him without the weapons grade material/ cultures/ raw components and the consturction facilities to build them. Oh that's right, you can't, because you don't know what you're talking about.
If they rebuild their stockpiles of equipment, it’s improvement from their current condition, Vympel.
And this means what? Nothing.
Wait just a moment. It’s acceptable for Iraq to rebuild its programs to the point of nuclear fission – just so long as they don’t cross that line on our watch? Fantastic. Now I see exactly where you’re coming from. And you expect the United States to find this reasoning solid as well, right? :roll:
Provided of course Iraq was rebuilding its programs. To which there is no evidence for, and testimony from a multitude of sources to the contrary. Iraq did not have the ability to do anything threatening under sanctions. It would be noticed. Unless they're going to load your lathes into catapults and hurl them at Israel :roll:
Nobody’s speaking strictly about nuclear arms, Vympel. North Korea was able to reconstitute without our knowledge despite constant attention.
More bullshit. The IAEA never had a full mandate to prevent North Korea from building nuclear arms, it had a mandate to inspect fuel rods and make sure they stayed sealed. I've said that multiple times. As usual, you try and slip past bullshit and hope I don't notice.
You’re fully confident Hussein wouldn’t have had the same chance several years down the road once Blix let up and the international community began to focus its energies elsewhere?
Considering Iraq didn't have any weapons grade material and any construction facilities of any kind, unlike North Korea, yes.

Machine other components part of the actual warhead or containment equipment, perhaps? :roll:
And put what in the warhead, you idiot? Anyone can machine components. Should we ban everyone's lathes too? How fucking desperate you are.

Still under investigation – or are you saying it would be impossible for Iraq to keep certain quantities of equipment hidden in the first place?
Burden of proof fallacy. It's not up to me to disprove every one of your flights of fancy.
Your “evidence” is an investigation not yet complete. That wouldn’t hold up anywhere either, Vympel. Do not make the dangerous assumption that only a successful launch proves our accusations
Actually, finding something along the lines of what was accused would prove your accusations.

So it would be, in your opinion, impossible – absolutely impossible – for Iraq to violate the UNSC sanctions unless the item in question were conventional in nature only?
More bullshit. If it's not 100% impossible, despite having no fucking proof, that's a war justification is it? Do you have any idea how insane that is?

Again, they managed to walk away with nothing more than the conclusion that something happened. They weren’t sure to what extent however.
And destroyed all the infrastructure.
Baghdad was going to be endangered anyway if they ever stood up and began shaking their fist. How many times must I remind you: we don’t want another North Korea?
"We must invade Iraq or else they'll get WMD (unsupported bullshit) and we won't be able to invade Iraq"

Great reasoning.
Another blow against the contingency plan.
Excuse me?
Hitting the proper equipment with a single – or a handful – of warheads would start major fires. So would, come to think of it, actual men on the ground. It was within Saddam’s purview to order such assaults – and for far less risk than a strike on Israel.
Unsupported claim.
Come to think of it, the ultimate question is whether the Israeli contingency plan was acceptable from a strategic point of view. The answer is no even if we exclude the SCUD potential; Iraq had special forces prepared to assault oil fields since the 1980s; setting them against the Saudis would have carried far less risk were Baghdad under attack than launching chemical warheads at Israel.
And would achieve WHAT, exactly?
We’re talking a medium- to high-level barrage. It was the same thing prepared for Israel.
Iraq used 60 missiles in the war.
I
“Close” doesn’t count save with horseshoes and hand grenades in this particular situation. The Israelis ultimately held back. A few dozen deaths probably wouldn’t have put them in mind to strike Baghdad, either – remember that they’d be wary of inflicting unintended casualties on forward-ranging Coalition units in the first place.
Last I heard, Coalition units weren't anywhere near Baghdad.
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Post by Crown »

Okay, I have pretty much kept my head down for this enitre thread, but I just had to respond to this;
Axis Kast wrote:Your “evidence” is an investigation not yet complete. That wouldn’t hold up anywhere either, Vympel. Do not make the dangerous assumption that only a successful launch proves our accusations
:wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: :wtf:

Are you seriously saying that the evidence Vympel is presenting, which is a lack of evidence of WMD is premature since the investigation is on-going? Are you seriously saying that?

Let me give you the 411 on the DL, this is like executing someone before a trial, and then trying to build the case afterwards. If the USA didn't have complete and strong evidence for justifying its invasion of Iraq on the grounds of the threat it poses because it has WMD, and launched an invasion, then it did so on false grounds.

Given the givens, this is starting to sound like a weird alternate universe, when the arguements that were used by those who were supporting an extension of UN weapons inspectors, are now being taken up by those who were advocating military intervention. Namely 'give us more time'.

I am sorry, but the US has not managed to statisfactory support its initial accusations, let alone actually find WMD. Vympel's point stands Axis.
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Post by Vympel »

It's easy to forget when running through Comical Axi's numerous adventures into ever more ridiculous war justifications and circular reasoning/ prove a negative fallacies that it's precisely correct that the US obviously had jack shit real evidence when it went to war, and just took it on faith that they'd find something to justify their claims post-war. None of their pre-war claims about Iraqi weapons have panned out, and now they have David Kay on the prowl, hoping to God that he finds ... something ... ANYTHING, so he can release a report and pray that the issue just goes away.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

My, how the bullshit's piled up in just one day.

Wading through Comical Axi's sophistries point-by-point could become a full-time job. It might be more efficent, instead, to provide some inconvenient facts to settle the matter conclusively.

It is necessary at this point to address the most tortured tautalogy which has been indulged thus far: the "Bush didn't lie because he stands by Tony Blair's word and Blair stands by his own word" argument. Leaving aside for the moment the truly bizarre attempt by Kast to redefine the word "lie" to make it mean something else entirely, even the developmentally-challenged must be able to pierce this childish bit of "reasoning" —that the truth of a thing cannot be grounded merely on somebody else's say-so (hence the logical fallacy known as the Appeal To Authority). Even if we were to make the assumption that both men believed genuinely the face value veracity of the data they based their case for war on, the fact remains that a)the alledged IAEA report stating existence of an active Iraqi nuclear weapons programme simply did not exist —except in the form of a forged document— and that its utter lack of credibility was well known; and b)the Niger Yellowcake story was known to be baseless by the CIA and the State Department even as Bush et al. continued to state falsehoods regarding the Iraqi nuclear threat. The only conceivable defence is that both Bush and Blair are either complete idiots or so negligent that they cannot be bothered to verify the factual bases for the statements they make in public and in governmental forums in making a case for war.

Unfortunately, the credibility of the Blair government simply does not bear close examination; not only in the wake of what is being revealed in the inquires into the suicide of Dr. David Kelly, but also in regards to the passage to American authorities of the notorious "intelligence dossier" which turned out to be a plagerised school term-paper and one twelve years out of date, but other statements of both Blair and his Foreign Minister, Jack Straw, which don't jibe with fact, as provided here:


http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0, ... 14,00.html

excerpt:

The inquiry has already established beyond doubt that, despite government briefing that Dr Kelly was a medium-level official of little significance, he was in fact one of the world's leading experts on WMD in Iraq. It is also clear that Dr Kelly chose to brief three BBC journalists - and presumably others - to the effect that the 45-minute warning of the possible use of WMD was an exaggeration. He said to the Newsnight reporter Susan Watts, as well as to Gilligan that Campbell and the Downing Street press operation were responsible for exerting pressure to hype up the danger. The inquiry is exploring the reality of that claim. But it is already clear that Dr Kelly made it, to Gilligan and Watts.

The BBC would have been grossly irresponsible if it had failed to bring such a report - from such an eminent source - to public attention. It is a delicious irony that Alastair Campbell castigates the BBC for relying on one very eminent source for this report ... and yet the 45-minute claim itself came from only one source.

As a result of the Hutton inquiry, we now know that two defence intelligence officials wrote to their boss to put on record their disquiet at the exaggeration in the dossier. Moreover, one official asked his boss for advice as to whether he should approach the foreign affairs select committee after the foreign secretary had said that he was not aware of any unhappiness among intelligence officials about the claims made in the dossier.

We know through emails revealed by Hutton that Tony Blair's chief of staff made clear that the dossier was likely to convince those who were prepared to be convinced, but that the document "does nothing to demonstrate he [Saddam Hussein] has the motive to attack his neighbours, let alone the west. We will need to be clear in launching the document that we do not claim that we have evidence that he is an imminent threat. The case we are making is that he has continued to develop WMD since 1998, and is in breach of UN resolutions. The international community has to enforce those resolutions if the UN is to be taken seriously."


http://middleeastreference.org.uk/quote ... tions.html

Misleading references to the findings of inspections

(a) Tony Blair, 30 May 2003: "There is no doubt about the chemical programme, the biological programme, indeed the nuclear weapons programme. All that is well documented by the United Nations."

http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page3786.asp

IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei, statement to the Security Council, 7 March 2003: "After three months of intrusive inspections, we have to date found no evidence or plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear weapons programme in Iraq."

http://www.iaea.org/worldatom/Press/Sta ... n006.shtml

UNMOVIC Executive-Chairman Hans Blix, interview with the Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel, 23 May 2003: "I am obviously very interested in the question of whether or not there were weapons of mass destruction and I am beginning to suspect there possibly were not."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0, ... 05,00.html
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Tony Blair, interview with Abu Dhabi television, 4 April 2003: "the reason why the inspectors couldn't do their job in the end was that Saddam wouldn't co-operate."

http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page3434.asp

Hans Blix, statement to the Security Council, 7 March 2003: "the numerous initiatives, which are now taken by the Iraqi side with a view to resolving some long-standing open disarmament issues, can be seen as 'active', or even 'proactive'".

http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocusnews ... =414&sID=6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Tony Blair, Address to the Nation, 20 March 2003: "UN weapons inspectors say vast amounts of chemical and biological poisons, such as anthrax, VX nerve agent, and mustard gas remain unaccounted for in Iraq."

http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page3327.asp

Hans Blix, Briefing to the Security Council, 15 February 2003: "To take an example, a document, which Iraq provided, suggested to us that some 1,000 tonnes of chemical agent were "unaccounted for". One must not jump to the conclusion that they exist."

http://www.un.org/Depts/unmovic/blix14Febasdel.htm
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Tony Blair, Statement to the House of Commons, 25 February 2003: "Is it not reasonable that Saddam provides evidence of destruction of the biological and chemical agents and weapons the UN proved he had in 1999? So far he has provided none."

and Jack Straw, 17 March 2003, House of Commons (introducing the motion for the following day's debate):
"We know that this man has got weapons of mass destruction. That sounds like a slightly abstract phrase, but what we are talking about is chemical weapons, biological weapons, viruses, bacilli and anthrax—10,000 litres of anthrax—that he has. We know that he has it, Dr. Blix points that out and he has failed to account for that."


http://www.publications.parliament.uk/p ... 7-26_head0

Hans Blix, statement of 10 September 2002: "this is not the same as saying there are weapons of mass destruction. If I had solid evidence that Iraq retained weapons of mass destruction or were constructing such weapons I would take it to the Security Council."
------------------------------------------------------------------------

(e) Tony Blair in the Independent on Sunday, 2 March 2003:

"[..] the UN has tried unsuccessfully for 12 years to get Saddam to disarm peacefully. And if he doesn't co-operate then no number of inspectors and no amount of time is going to ensure it happens in a country almost twice as big as the UK. The UN inspectors found no trace at all of Saddam's offensive biological weapons programme – which he claimed didn't exist – until his lies were revealed by his son-in-law. Only then did the inspectors find over 8,000 litres of concentrated anthrax and other biological weapons, and a factory to make more."

("My Christian conscience is clear over war", 2 March 2003)

Factual inaccuracies:

i) Blair: "The UN inspectors found no trace at all of Saddam's offensive biological weapons programme – which he claimed didn't exist – until his lies were revealed by his son-in-law." Jack Straw repeated the same falsehood in an interview on 1 June 2003: "[...] they denied that they had a nuclear or biological weapon programme - and carried on denying it [...] and only finally did the truth about this weapons programme come out when an individual defected."

Really: Saddam Hussein's son-in-law, Hussein Kamel, defected on the night of 7th August 1995. Inspectors had already reported six weeks earlier (on 20 June) that:

"the only conclusion that can be drawn is that there is a high risk that Iraq purchased [items and materials required to produce biological warfare agents] and used them at least in part for proscribed purposes - the production of agents for biological weapons".

Report of 20 June 1995, para.17, at:

http://www.un.org/Depts/unscom/Semiannu ... 95-494.htm

This report prompted the Iraqi government to acknowledge its offensive biological weapons programme. UNSCOM later reported:

"Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz said that his Government ... would now address the issue of its biological weapons programme. The following day, on 1 July 1995, Iraq made a brief oral presentation in the course of which it acknowledged an offensive biological weapons programme, including the production of a number of biological agents" ... "Because of the acknowledgement that Iraq's programme was offensive in nature, it was considered a breakthrough in the stalemate that had existed between the Commission and Iraq."

Report of 11 October 1995, para.11 and 27, at:

http://www.un.org/Depts/unscom/sres95-864.htm

ii) Blair: Only then did the inspectors find over 8,000 litres of concentrated anthrax and other biological weapons, and a factory to make more."

Really: inspectors never found any anthrax stocks, which Iraq declared were destroyed in 1991. The factory at which the anthrax was made, al-Hakam, had been under investigation since 1991:

"The first UNSCOM biological team arrived in Iraq, in early August 1991, and inspected the facility at Al Salman that had been destroyed by bombing in the Gulf War. Inspections of Al Hakam, Al Fudhaliyah, Al Daura and other sites followed in September and October 1991. By the time of its first inspection, Al Hakam had been stripped of any obvious signs of its former role, and had been converted into a civilian facility."

UNMOVIC working document, "Unresolved Disarmament Issues" (6 March 2003), p.160, at:

http://www.un.org/Depts/unmovic/documents/cluster.htm



Hanging any defence of Bush's credibility on Blair's credibility stands on a very rickety platform.
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Comical Axi's BULLSHIT pt.2

Post by Patrick Degan »

Next, we must examine the issue of the effectiveness of the UNSCOM and UNMOVIC inspections in uncovering and deterring Iraqi efforts to conceal or reconstitute WMD programmes. While having to act in the face of Iraqi intrangescence and obsfucation, considerable progress was indeed achieved in revealing and effecting the destruction of materiel stockpiles, facilities, technical equipment, and documentation related to Iraq's WMD capabilities which survived the extensive destruction wreaked during the 1991 Gulf War, as well as revealing on an ongoing basis the degredation of the supporting infrastructure necessary to sustain any WMD research and development —the full extent of which is now revealed beyond dispute by the swift conquest and occupation of the country.

A few items for perusal:


http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/iraq/iaea.htm

excerpt:

The verification activities have revealed no indications that Iraq had achieved its program objective of producing nuclear weapons or that Iraq had produced more than a few grams of weapon-usable nuclear material or had clandestinely acquired such material. Furthermore, there are no indications that there remains in Iraq any physical capability for the production of weapon-usable nuclear material of any practical significance. In February 1994, IAEA completed the removal from Iraq of all weapon-usable nuclear material - essentially research reactor fuel - under IAEA safeguards. The IAEA noted that there were no indications of significant discrepancies between the technically coherent picture that had evolved of Iraq's clandestine nuclear weapons program and the information contained in Iraq's "Full, Final and Complete Declaration". Some elements of uncertainty in the completeness of that picture remain because of the inevitable limitations of any countrywide verification process. The limitations in the verification process were not helped by Iraq's lack of full transparency in the provision of certain information and the absence of certain documentation. [S/1998/927]


http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/libra ... 96-848.htm

excerpt:

X. CONCLUSIONS

131. Throughout the present report, the Special Commission has sought to provide a factual overview of developments since the initiation of the implementation of section C of resolution 687 (1991). The Commission believes that when the Security Council is to take stock of the remaining problems, it may wish to do so in the context of the accomplishments regarding the accounting for and disposal of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and proscribed missiles.

132. Since the outset in April 1991, many proscribed weapons and weapons capabilities have been identified and destroyed. In the present report, the Commission has outlined progress achieved in accounting for chemical and biological weapons and missiles with a range greater than 150 kilometres, as well as related proscribed components, equipment and facilities. The destruction of large chemical weapons stocks and of the sprawling biological weapons facility at Al Hakam, the neutralization of wide-ranging and diverse missile capabilities as well as the creation of a unique and effective monitoring and verification system are tangible examples of accomplishments over five and a half years. For a large part of this period, however, as described in the report, policies and actions of concealment practised by the Iraqi authorities have put obstacles in the way of rapid completion of the implementation tasks.

133. The Commission has therefore yet not reached the stage where it can state with confidence that everything that is proscribed to Iraq has been identified and disposed of. It continues to believe that limited, but highly significant quantities may remain, as Iraq has not been able to account for a number of proscribed missiles and certain high-quality chemical and biological warfare agents and related capabilities which it had acquired. The Commission's information indicates that Iraq has still not told the full story of its weapons programmes and handed over all its proscribed weapons materials and capabilities for final disposal.

134. During the period under review, the Commission has made special efforts to expedite the process of clarifying the remaining problems and bringing to an end the concealment of proscribed items. The road thus travelled by the Commission has been a rocky one, as the members of the Security Council cannot have failed to observe. The Council has on repeated occasions acted in firm support of the Commission and its inspection teams. This has had a noticeable effect and may also have served the long-term interests of Iraq as the Council's unanimous support for progress with the implementation has led to some important headway.

135. The most positive and promising development during the period has been the dialogue and agreements at the political level between the Commission and the Government of Iraq leading to mutual undertakings on such crucial issues as access to sites for inspection and interviews as well as to the establishment of a joint programme of action, containing an outline of priority tasks to be accomplished, as originally proposed in the Commission's April 1996 report to the Security Council. This programme sets a realistic agenda for the future and establishes a well-defined framework for a constructive dialogue which has already shown its usefulness. It still remains for the spirit of that political-level dialogue to penetrate to the operational and working level in Iraq, so that instances of blockages, denials and concealment may be brought to an end. This report gives ample evidence of such obstacles to progress.

136. A very positive development during the last six months has been the initiation of the full export/import notification procedures. Almost the entire structure and system called for by the relevant Security Council resolutions for the discharge of the mandates given to the Commission and IAEA are now finally in place. Only one important element remains: the enactment by Iraq of the national implementation measures required under the monitoring plans approved by the Council in resolution 715 (1991). While frequently promised, Iraq has not yet introduced these measures, a failure which Iraq can easily remedy if it is to avoid an impediment in the full implementation of section C of resolution 687 (1991).

137. In the period under review, Iraq has finally presented the Commission with declarations which it states to contain its full, final and complete disclosures of all aspects of its programmes to develop weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles with a range greater than 150 kilometres and of all holdings of such weapons, their components and production facilities and locations. The Commission's initial assessments indicate that further work is required. The joint programme of action provides the means for speedy verification of these declarations if Iraq cooperates fully at all levels to that end.

138. Thus, at this time, there exists the necessary framework and machinery and the Government of Iraq has officially made the necessary political undertakings to permit an early resolution of the problems which remain in connection with its proscribed programmes. What is primarily required is a dedicated and honest commitment by Iraq, implemented on all levels, to a course of full cooperation and transparency if the stage is to be reached in the near future where the Commission would be able to report that, in its view, Iraq has carried out the actions required of it under section C of resolution 687 (1991). The Commission has developed detailed operational plans to this end and stands ready to bring all its resources to bear to achieve such an outcome. However, Iraq will have to demonstrate that it has decided to commit itself to a wholehearted and sincere determination to comply with all the provisions of section C of resolution 687 (1991).


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/middle_e ... _2-14.html

excerpt:

MOHAMED ELBARADEI: We have, to date, found no evidence of ongoing prohibited nuclear or nuclear-related activities in Iraq. However, as I have just indicated, a number of issues are still under investigation, and we are not yet in a position to reach a conclusion about them, although we are moving forward with regard to some of them. To that end we intend to make full use of the authority granted to us under all relevant Security Council resolutions to build as much capacity into the inspection process as necessary. In that context, I would underline the importance of information that state may be able to provide to help us in assessing the accuracy and completeness of the information provided by Iraq. The IAEA experience in the nuclear verification shows that it is possible, particularly with an intrusive verification system, to assess the presence or absence of a nuclear weapon program in a state, even without the full cooperation of the inspected states. However, prompt, full, and active cooperation by Iraq, as required under Resolution 1441, will speed up the process, and more importantly, it will enable us to reach the high degree of assurance required by the Security Council in the case of Iraq, in view of its past clandestine WMD programs and past pattern of cooperation. It is my hope that the commitment made recently in Baghdad will continue to translate into concrete and sustained actions.


http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSA ... ft%203.htm

excerpt:

Intelligence information has been useful for UNMOVIC.  In one case, it led us to a private home where documents mainly relating to laser enrichment of uranium were found.  In other cases, intelligence has led to sites where no proscribed items were found.  Even in such cases, however, inspection of these sites were useful in proving the absence of such items and in some cases the presence of other items – conventional munitions.  It showed that conventional arms are being moved around the country and that movements are not necessarily related to weapons of mass destruction.
 
The presentation of intelligence information by the US Secretary of State suggested that Iraq had prepared for inspections by cleaning up sites and removing evidence of proscribed weapons programmes.  I would like to comment only on one case, which we are familiar with, namely, the trucks identified by analysts as being for chemical decontamination at a munitions depot.  This was a declared site, and it was certainly one of the sites Iraq would have expected us to inspect.   We have noted that the two satellite images of the site were taken several weeks apart.  The reported movement of munitions at the site could just as easily have been a routine activity as a movement of proscribed munitions in anticipation of imminent inspection.  Our reservation on this point does not detract from our appreciation of the briefing.
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Edi
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Post by Edi »

Patrick Degan wrote:My, how the bullshit's piled up in just one day.

Wading through Comical Axi's sophistries point-by-point could become a full-time job.
Not could, Patrick. Would is a more appropriate word. He is, for all intents and purposes, the Darkstar of the N&P forum, and he has demonstrated amply to everyone just how far and how low he will go in pursuit of his preordained conclusions. He got his title exactly by pursuing one such discussion well past the point of no return and then some. Those exploits can be viewed in the Hall of Shame.

Edi
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Why is it so goddamned hard to get little assholes like you to admit it when you fuck up? Is it pride? What gives you the right to have any pride?
–Darth Wong to vivftp

GOP message? Why don't they just come out of the closet: FASCISTS R' US –Patrick Degan

The GOP has a problem with anyone coming out of the closet. –18-till-I-die
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