To interrupt the utter pasting you're getting:
Axis Kast wrote:
You have no way of knowing what you missed. Appeal to the Unknowable.
Don't even ATTEMPT to presume to try and use logical fallacies- we already know you have no idea what they are. What you just did was commit a blatant appeal to ignorance (aka burden of proof, prove a negative) fallacy. It's not for us to prove that somethinng was missed. That's for you.
You clearly have no idea what it takes to build a nuclear bomb, and have spent the last page trying to re define what a nuclear threat is by ignoring the fissile material, which is the ONLY part of a nuclear weapon by which they can realistically be controlled. Anyone has the capability to machine parts for bombs, and for you to use this practical tautology as evidence of anything is truly hilarious.
UNSCOM/UNMOVIC could place, what, approximately two hundred or four hundred persons on the ground at any of a dozen or two dozen locations at once? That’s hardly complete coverage in a country larger than Texas.
I doubt your figures regarding UNSCOM and UNMOVIC are correct- in the latter case, they weren't even up to full capability when they left because of the war. Regardless of how many there were, they were moving around constantly with free run of the country by air and land. That you continue to think that you can hide NBC infrastructure from inspectors is quite lame.
The real argument is that they’re an added, intrusive capability when combined with electronic surveillance – but we know that the later has failed to detect certain hidden cachés before
In the absence of intrusive capability or any sanctions regime to prevent North Korea from getting anything. Try again.
and that UNMOVIC could only go so far when presented with Iraq’s own lack of documentary evidence on the current status of more than 10,000 litres of anthrax poison.
Any anthrax that may have been hidden is no longer viable. Fact.
What it all boils down to is that given certain precedents – the planes buried at al-Taqqadum
Irrelevant.
the length of North Korea’s own evasion of detection by satellite
Nothing to detect by satellite, and furthermore, nothing like Iraq.
and Hussein’s long history of non-compliance –, considering Iraq a danger despite containment is quite legitimate.
Only if you're entirely ignorant of the nuances of each situation, as well as having incredible ignorance of nuclear weapons.
And yet they’d begun a uranium enrichment program, no? That implies the presence of a facility in which uranium was in fact enriched
"What we have said publicly and in consultations is not that the North Koreans necessarily have nuclear weapons produced through the uranium enrichment program. What we've said is that they are seeking a production scope capability to produce weapons-grade uranium and that that effort is a violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty…"
(Press Conference with John Bolton, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, October 22, 2002)
No, it does not. There is no confirmation that NK has a uranium enrichment plant, and furthermore, the construction activity detected by the CIA that led America to confront North Korea indicates that they were just starting out on a plant last year.
Such facilities are known as “uranium enrichment planes” – even those not constructed in a smiley-face pattern just under the center focus of satellite photographs
Indulging in more fantasies of hiding fully operational plants requiring massive amounts of power and infrastrcuture can be hidden, I see
It doesn’t mean they might have missed something
You're learning!!!
That does not however mean that, like North Korea, Iraq couldn’t try something far less conventional
North Korea ordered significant amounts of suspicious construction materials (including, amusingly, high strength aluminum tubes- the CIA must've tried to go for two out of two with Iraq) and was confronted with the information and owned up to it. QED. Hardly 'far less conventional'.
You mean like the paper-trail program Iraq could as easily have developed?
You mean like university undergrad papers? Oh shock horror, call in the 3rd Division!
In 1991, there was strong evidence that Iraq had complete the outer shell of a nuclear weapon – the fissile material was the exception. Assuming they planned to smuggle fissile material, why mightn’t Iraq produce another such frame? It’s a tautology that one begs the question of the other’s use – not that one requires the other to be immediately on-hand.
Any reasonably industrialized country can complete the outer shell of a weapon. It is NOT HARD. Without fissile material it is little more than a conventional bomb. Fissile material is what nuclear nonproliferation is all about, not the mundane industrial capabilities required to build a mere casing.
Why is it untrue that Iraq could have built additional missile components? The al-Samouds were in fact tested at facilities capable of dealing with engines imparting four times the thrust. Iraq certainly had people who could’ve obliged in that regard.
No, the Al Samouds were not tested at al-Rafah / Shahiyat. The claim the CIA made was:
"The Al-Rafah-North Liquid Propellant Engine Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation (RDT&E) Facility is Iraq's principal site for the static testing of liquid propellant missile engines. Baghdad has been building a new test stand there that is larger than the test stand associated with al-Samoud engine testing and the defunct Scud engine test stand. The only plausible explanation for this test facility is that Iraq intends to test engines for longer-range missiles prohibited under UNSCR 687."
Blix, 14 Feb 2003: "The experts also studied the data on the missile engine test stand that is nearing completion [...]. So far, the test stand has not been associated with a proscribed activity."
And I really hope I don't have to explain this to you- but you can't even hope to produce missiles with significantly long range without being noticed. They must be test flown. They can be monitored for proscribed activity.
Deterred by what? American threats or the failure of the United States and its Coalition allies to meet certain requirements in order that the contingency enters effect?
Unlike you, I actually read one of the sources Pollack cited. If you did so, you'd see that at one point it is agreed that Iraq was clearly deterred from launching an unprovoked WMD attack. It then moves on to discuss the contingency, which is a SEPERATE issue.
It wasn’t under investigation at all until six months before!
Bullshit. Consistent threat assessments and intelligence work on Iraq was being done non-stop over the years. Not that this you actually rebutted what I said, which I'll repeat: they knew jack shit, and just went in hoping they'd be vindicated, despite all their statements of absolute confidence.