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Axis Kast
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Post by Axis Kast »

Because you've asserted that Iraq's capability to carry out any attacks is irrelevant, which is absurd. That you hold up circular reasoning as valid is evidence of what your position is- a tautology. The validity of attacking Iraq is assumed from the start in your position, and is the reason for all your hypothetical rationalizations for why the administration's doomsday pronouncements were not all bullshit. The point doesn't stand alone, and it doesn't stand with anything else either. It's fallacious.
Iraq’s ability to carry out any attacks in the here and now is irrelevant – assuming, of course, that the stockpile is there in the first place. It’s the future with which we must be concerned.
Reconstitue? Last I checked, it's capability was never dismantled. Unlike Iraq. Dumbass.
North Korea’s nuclear research was ostensibly put on hold. Reconstitution was not therefore the correct word. You have me there. I will make it more clear: progression. If we would have been so supremely able to detect Iraqi activities, why did we fail so spectacularly in putting our fingers on North Korea’s? And none of this, “They were under a less-intense microscope!” garbage – you and I both know that UNMOVIC could never have been everywhere at once.
What?! North Korea's facilities escape detection by satellite? Perhaps you'd care to explain where the fuel rods (you know, that they were afraid were going to be weapon enriched) the IAEA was monitoring were kept if the facilities escaped detection. Idiot.
Their activities. Again, my error. Earlier, you insisted that the byproducts of Iraqi work on prohibited weapons would clearly not escape detection. Why was this the case with North Korea, then?
Stockpiles since 1998 were so large? Excuse me? Where did anyone make that claim? And also, you do know that unilateral destruction DID NOT escape detection. The inspectors know it happened.
The stockpiles in question exceeded 10,000 litres of Anthrax, as acknowledged by Hans Blix. As for unilateral destruction, it escaped detection at the time. The UN was only able to verify at a later date that something had occurred, but never on what scale.
The IAEA observers job was watching over a stash of spent fuel-rods at North Korea's single working nuclear reactor at Yongbyon. Only after it kicked out the IAEA observers did it restart the mothballed reactors, removed the seals on the stored fuel rods, and is either about to start or about to finish (depending on which translation of its recent statement on the subject you choose to believe) extracting their bomb-useable plutonium, sufficient for another five or six bombs.
Inspectors were not present in Iraq between 1998 and 2002. If we had information that North Korea was reinagurating research some time ago, why did we not act then?
No, retard. I never advocated isolationism.. I pointed out a man who goes from extreme isolationism to launching attacks, unprovoked, on other nations is a lying sack of shit, much like yourself. What you may not realize, Axis, is that Osama has been ignored while your boys have been playing in Iraq. As much as I hate trivializing the hard work of the Royal and American armed forces, they've been dicking around in a place no politician with a grudge and an agenda should have sent them.

Now, shiteater, why did 9/11 demand us to go into Iraq? Especially when the jackass running the show was pushing for isolationism. A logical thinker would think if he wasn't lying, he'd be keeping with isolationism once the immediate threat was dealt with; that's what American Isolationism means, after all.
Who said that you advocated isolationism? Now you’re simply attempting to create new reasons to defame me. In any case, I seriously doubt virtual isolationism – which is really what Bill Clinton practiced in relation to the terrorist attacks between 1993 and 2000 – as regards the Middle East was considered a very credible – or even intelligent – response by George W. Bush. Or are you part of the group of critics that decry the invasion of Afghanistan as well?

Bush lied only from the point of view that he couldn’t keep promises made in an utterly divergent context between 1999 and 2001. To imply that he is a liar because he didn’t stick to isolationism after September 11th is at the height of delusion.

Isolationism as a practice might have been shattered for Bush after 2001; did you ever stop to consider that a President could indeed have second thoughts?

The whole context of an issue such as September 11th brought rogue nations more into focus than ever before. Iraq was caught up, at the time, with a handful of other nations suspected of being state sponsors of terrorism or accused of complicity in threatening the national security interests of the United States of America.
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Post by SirNitram »

That's a very nice bit of handwaving, Axis, but are you ever going to answer the question why Iraq became such an important target? Especially since the only thing we had to fear was, by your own claims, them stopping us from invading.
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote:
Iraq’s ability to carry out any attacks in the here and now is irrelevant –
Ridiculous. Iraq's ability to carry out any attacks is DIRECTLY relevant to the justification for war, which was always based on the threat America was supposedly under.
assuming, of course, that the stockpile is there in the first place. It’s the future with which we must be concerned.
So you can justify a war in the present (while lying to the public of course to say otherwise) based on what might happen in the future? Would you like some lebensraum to go with that?
North Korea’s nuclear research was ostensibly put on hold. Reconstitution was not therefore the correct word. You have me there. I will make it more clear: progression. If we would have been so supremely able to detect Iraqi activities, why did we fail so spectacularly in putting our fingers on North Korea’s?
North Korea was caught red-handed. As I said.
And none of this, “They were under a less-intense microscope!” garbage – you and I both know that UNMOVIC could never have been everywhere at once.
North Korea was caught. North Korea owned up to it. And the IAEA never even had a full mandate. North Korea had the facilities, the working reactor, the raw materials to enrich, etc. Totally unlike Iraq.
Their activities. Again, my error. Earlier, you insisted that the byproducts of Iraqi work on prohibited weapons would clearly not escape detection. Why was this the case with North Korea, then?
See above. North Korea was caught.
The stockpiles in question exceeded 10,000 litres of Anthrax, as acknowledged by Hans Blix.
Blix never acknowledged the existence of 10,000 litres of anthrax. Where did you get that from?
As for unilateral destruction, it escaped detection at the time. The UN was only able to verify at a later date that something had occurred, but never on what scale.
And yet inspectors remained on the ground for a further seven or so years (depending on exact dates). No one's talking about taking Iraq's word for it. No one's arguing the inspectors shouldn't have been there.
Inspectors were not present in Iraq between 1998 and 2002. If we had information that North Korea was reinagurating research some time ago, why did we not act then?
That's a question for the Clinton/Bush administrations, not I- I'm just repeating the background/history- NK was known to have material (in some form) for two nukes since 1994 (something Iraq has never been acknowledged to have).
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Axis Kast
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Post by Axis Kast »

That's a very nice bit of handwaving, Axis, but are you ever going to answer the question why Iraq became such an important target? Especially since the only thing we had to fear was, by your own claims, them stopping us from invading.
I've answered that numerous times, Nitram, and on numerous ocassions.

Iraq's leadership - starting with Saddam Hussein - was quite delusional - and therefore potentially unpredictable in a crisis. Considering that the United States was the party most responsible for Iraq's containment and incapacitation, Hussein's capacity to entertain idiotic notions was rather unwelcome.

The country has a history of going up against its neighbors despite the caution of better judgement - which, of course, doesn't bode well assuming they put their hands on what they believe is a credible deterrent.

We know that sanctions put in place by the United Nations were full of holes - and violated at numerous times by numerous parties. It is not too much to ask whether merely "mundane" items or spare parts were inadvertantly allowed through.

Iraq cannot account with proper documentation for over 10,000 litres of anthrax poison. That's clear contravention of the rules set out for them by the United Nations - which, assuming you leave it to them, had nothing to offer but continual slaps on the wrist - or silence - until prodded by the United States, at which point they sent inspectors under the threat of US guns, at the expense of US cash.

Iraq is an important target because removal of Hussein allows us to begin to put in place a passingly democratic government, station troops in territory more malleable tot he United States, complete the strategic encirclement of Iraq, and place ourselves in a supreme position to ensure that oil embargos by such organizations as OPEC - or, more likely, oil shortages - do not, down the road, hamstring us as the have in the past. We also get rid of the "extra ground" and No Man's Land in which organizations such as Ansar al-Islam were rumored to work, and destroy a régime that made more complex dealing with just about every nation in the Middle East - especially Israel (which, yes, is a cause for concern, since we never want them to have to decide whether or not to defend themselves from agression).
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Post by Patrick Degan »

Axis Kast wrote:
And yet, Saddam Hussein wasn't delusional to the point where he decided to stick around to share the fate of his troops.
Self-preservation on its own does not a fully rational individual make. Interesting that you refuse to address the actual situation at hand, too.
Um no, that's your problem, Comical Axi, not mine. And according to the actual situation, Hussein showed rationality in not undertaking action which would result in the immediate destruction of his regime for twelve years and knowing when to get out of Dodge. And for somebody arguing that we can't trust Saddam's word at face-value, I find it most amusing that you trust Saddam's word at face-value to support your argument that he was delusional.
Were the British also aware of the charge’s “bogus” nature before the SOTU address? Were Tony Blair still impressed with its supposed authenticity, mightn’t Bush have chose to believe the word of British intelligence over American organizations?
Gee, I dunno. Maybe this can give us a hint:

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/24/inter ... 4BLAI.html

excerpt:

But the exercise has gone beyond Dr. Kelly and turned into an examination of the government's dependence on manipulating and controlling information. That skill that was once credited with helping the Blair inner circle maintain political discipline over a party that has a history of losing its way once in power. But these days, the practice is cited as the reason why Mr. Blair has lost so much credibility with the public.

The trail of evidence has reached Mr. Blair himself. His chief of staff and close aide, Jonathan Powell, disclosed that he had warned on Sept. 17 (2002) that it would be wrong for Mr. Blair to claim that Iraq posed an "imminent threat" to the world. When Mr. Blair presented the case to Parliament a week later, however, he said that Iraq's program of weapons of mass destruction was "up and running," and the dossier spoke of a "current and serious threat." The prime minister is scheduled to testify this Thursday.

Mr. Campbell, in his testimony, appeared to have been successful in turning aside the inflammatory charge at the center of the disputed BBC report — that he personally intervened to "sex up" the dossier by inserting, over the objection of security chiefs, the claim that Iraq had biological and chemical weapons that could be launched in 45 minutes.

But he was portrayed as intensely involved in shaping the final document, even succeeding in having the phrase "may be" replaced with the word "are" in the crucial sentence about the Iraqis being able to deploy such weapons so rapidly.

Mr. Campbell was revealed this week to have written a diary entry about the effect of the BBC report on Mr. Blair and himself. It read, "Grim for me and grim for TB, and there is huge stuff about trust."


You SURE you want to keep hanging your hat upon the alledged credibility of Tony Blair?
Only for the intellectually dishonest, since it doesn't speak to the threat Iraq posed as of 2003, which was nil.
He’s speaking as to the history – the precedents – behind the current situation. Not intellectually dishonest at all. The problem here is that everyone hears what he or she wants to hear. Some find a clear warning in the context of the past, others a series of what they honestly believe can be nothing but lies.
See above news item. You make yourself more ridiculous with each post.
—as was the ongoing discovery and destruction of prohibited materials through that same period. I'm afraid Mr. Blair's disingenuousness is no defence.
I deal with this above.
And thanks to Lord Hutton, you've just fallen flat on your face.
Regardless of whether or not you believe Saddam’s initial stalling was a bad indicator, Bush and Blair are firmly within their rights to harbor suspicions. That they transmitted these to the public is no crime.
Ask Mr. Blair about that one when he loses the no-confidence vote in parliament —which now is not a question of "if" but "when".
Blix confirmed no such thing, or do you not understand the meaning of the phrase "One must not jump to the conclusion that they exist"?
He just confirmed it: they were “unaccounted for.” Blair isn’t jumping to the conclusion that they exist – simply reminding the world that Iraq has yet to credibly account for their disappearance.
Was that before or after Blair lied to the Commons and the people about the vast Iraqi WMD arsenal ready to launch on 45-minute notice?
From the point of view of the British and American governments, inspections wouldn’t have worked because Blix could never be sure of anything even approaching complete, simultaneous coverage of the entire nation of Iraq. Deterrence was also considered flawed since one could never fully confirm whether or not it was actually effective in the first place without full, intrusive inspections (which themselves couldn’t be acknowledged as fully comprehensive unless there wasn’t a régime potentially capable of ongoing deception in the first place). Many “if then” requirements, but fully rational nonetheless.
Was this before Blair decided to deliberately lie?
Did I not acknowledge that Straw had stood and run with his own interpretation of events? I believe I did. This is however at least somewhat forgivable; Iraq does indeed have yet to provide satisfactory data regarding its unilateral disarmament process.
Which did not present anything like an "imminent threat" justifying war.
It’s now “bullshit obfuscation” to assert that Hussein needs to provide some kind of evidence regarding self-disarmament if the claim is to be taken as truth?
No, it's bullshit obsfucation that you dance completely around the fact of the progressive destruction of proscribed materiel and gathering of fact both by human intel and aerial/satellite surveillance, as well as the testimony of defectors. Nobody is arguing for the veracity of Saddam Hussein.
Word of mouth from a man whose overhead view of the program ended in 1995. Even the United Nations was unable to do anything more than confirm that something had taken place – not to what extent. Kamel is no be-all, end-all. One can form opinions as a result of his statements, not write factual histories without further investigation.
Nice strawman, there.
Um, their mission charter was to look for "high risk items", Mr. Clueless.
Reread the quotation. Only you have said anything regarding anthrax stocks. You did add the “really,” did you not? If you didn’t, who did? The quotation itself doesn’t bear that part out.
No, I did not say anything about the anthrax stocks. That was a quote regarding the fact of the anthrax stocks' status as contradicting the now-increasingly dubious word of Blair and Straw.
As for chemical degradation, nobody can be certain of the absolute extent of unaccounted stockpiles, if they remain. That means that any estimation of chemical lifespans – and that’s all they’d have, estimations – aren’t necessary on-target.
The laws of physics are different in Iraq as opposed to the west?! You're insane if you think that the actions and duration of known chemical agents cannot be calculated according to known physical parametres. They're industry-standard materials Their formulae and composition are well-known.
Then there’s also the issue that if Saddam retained any of his stockpiles – even after their usefulness was extinguished -, he was committing the kind of contravention initially accused.
An issue rendered moot the day the materials exceed their use-by date and become inert.
If the planes were buried before the war, why were those at al-Taqqadum simply discarded rather than placed in hardened bunkers such as aircraft found by the Australian SAS early on, in April?
Fifty one old Mig 21s, three Foxbats, and ammunition in the one protected bunker in the entire country, left there for an indeterminate period of time, and this adds up to vast hidden WMD arsenals how, exactly?
Ah, so the nebulous “vast qualitative improvements in our scouting and surveillance technologies” scatter all potential error, camouflage, or successful evasion to the wind, do they? It’s why the planes outside al-Taqqadum showed up, right?
Another of your pathetic strawmen, Kast? That is not what I argued and you damn well know it. Or do I have to connect all the fucking dots for you? The point was that with the intensified preinvasion scouting, movement of anything would have been observed.
We don’t know if Iraq’s chemical stockpiles required missile launchers at this point in time. Artillery shells were a possibility. If they began their mission but never finished it, launchers might not have been an issue whatsoever. Not to mention that all the SCUDs escaped detection during the first Gulf War.
Handwaiving does not advance your case. Nor does pretending that the surveillance failures of 1991 applied in 2003. Furthermore, we encountered very little artillery in the late war and what pieces were deployed fell into our hands. No Iraqi units were equipped with chemical weapons in this fight.
As for the mass abandonment of equipment, I’d love a source that can verify that it was and would have been utterly universal rather than merely common.
It HAPPENED!!! Or did you miss that in all the war news?!
And yet the damage wreaked was haphazard and minimal. Nor did Hussein even think of employing chemicals against Israel in fear of American nuclear retaliation.
The first statement speaks to likelihood; it wasn’t impossible that missiles fired at Saudi Arabia would prove effective however.
Except that they didn't. i'm sorry if the reality of the situation is inconvenient for you.
The second statement is a lie. We know that Hussein produced a contingency plan for the launch of a chemical warhead at Israel – and that its precursor, a Coalition march on Baghdad, was never met.
Not quite, Comical Axi. The UN documents presented stated that the precusor was a offensive nuke attack on Baghdad This does not address Hussein's evident restraint in not provoking an American nuclear retaliation.
That's because we'rer talking about what actually occurred and not your bullshit "What-if" scenarios which you think take the place of fact.
The plans were there. The troops were ordered to make preparations. That much is plain fact. To ignore the fact that other strikes might have taken place – in fact, were readied to take place – is the height of willful ignorance.
No, to ignore what really unfolded in Gulf War I is the height of willful ignorance. There was never any substantive indication that Hussein's plans made it off paper. Stick to actualities, please.
If Hussein was going to carry out an assault on Israel in the hope of provoking a response, it would have been a long shot. Thus the plan doesn’t hold any water at all.
And this helps your argument how, exactly?
The only coffin being nailed shut is your own. Saddam's political strategy failed utterly, and he didn't take any action which opened the door to American nuclear retaliation —or Israeli. The remainder is your cherished "What-if"=Fact formulation and has no relevance.
He didn’t take action because certain precursors weren’t met. We know the preparations were made.
No, we know plans were drafted. Period.
Entirely relevant, as it speaks to the non-threat of Iraq 2003
In a conventional sense only.
Which tells us how capable Iraq was to carry out an aggression —which is not at all. Thus one of the primary criteria for the war fails.
The late war has demonstrated that Iraq's military capabilities deteriorated, not increased, in the intervening seven years; a fact which was clearly observable in that time as well.
We’re speaking about items acquired illegally, not about the actual improvements made to Iraq’s fighting potential – or lack thereof.
Ah, because spare parts = WMD capability. You really can't see how foolish you make yourself, can you?
We know they acquired items from China and Yugoslavia, among others. I’m not questioning the validity of Jane’s reports – simply the definition of their term.
Because it doesn't jibe with your bullshit redefinitions? Sorry, but that's not how the game works.
A non-issue, as far as I'm concerned, since the thrust of my argument is of capability or lack thereof.
And I’m bringing up the issue as relevant to the man’s dangerous intellectual failings.
Which remains meaningless in terms of capability to do anything.
It is not worthless since it underscores the fact that Iraq was a non-threat, with a toothless and declawed military machine incapable of mounting any sort of aggression against anyone.
But not that Hussein wasn’t delusional.
Irrelevant.
Again, the lack of adequate command-and-control isn’t proof that Iraq had no stockpiles or could not have conspired to utilize them at some point. Effectiveness and intent are two different creatures entirely.
The issue is capability to present a credible threat. When exactly does that sink in?
Entirely relevant, since Iraq was in no position to threaten anything and certainly not the national security of the United States.
This editorial – and that’s what it is, somebody else’s gift-wrapped opinion – doesn’t take into account that we have and will continue to make foreign policy – and engage in war – for the benefit of national security interests beyond our own borders. That makes it incomplete and presumptive on an even greater level than it was already, being somebody’s glorified opinion in the first place.
Unfortunately, the "gift-wrapped opinion" (Attacking The Messenger) is based upon the evidence of Iraq's incapacity to threaten the region or seize control of geopolitical objectives. It is you who is being presumptive, constantly invoking phantom WMD arsenals, what-if scenarios as fact, and simply ignoring the realities on the ground.
Vympel's been arguing the mental stability of Saddam more than I have. But I'll make this observation: arguments that Saddam was delusional aren't served by his having the apparent good sense to bugger out of the capitol and not share the fate of the army he was leaving behind.
Serial killers run, too, Deegan. Does that mean they aren’t in fact mentally infirm? :roll: Self-preservation isn’t a total vindication of mental health.
My, what breathtaking oversimplification on your part —particularly considering that the only bona-fides of Saddam's alledged delusional state is Saddam's word, which you insist elsewhere can't be taken at face-value.
I'm not responsible for your fantasies.
All of the factors you listed aid in explaining why if Saddam had something, we didn’t see it.
As you wish...
Unconventional weapons and reconstitution represent a threat or a threat-in-the-making. By your terms, Afghanistan was no threat to us, either.
No equation between the two situations, particularly since the Taliban/al-Qaeda alliance was known and active, and the terms of the resulting war different.
There’s a difference between being unable to mount aggression against a neighbor and then being unable to mount aggression against a neighbor without suffering consequences.
Which Iraq was incapable of.
It’s important for us to take Saddam’s history and state-of-mind into account in that regard.
No, that's beside the point in terms of capability.
We had total air superiority in 1991; Saddam still launched missiles at his neighbors.
Missiles which failed, from launchers which were subsequently struck.
The UNMOVIC inspections régime was not sufficient intrusive according to its critics – all of whom are as entitled to their opinions as you to yours.
No, the opinions of UNMOVIC's critics are irrelevant —the extant progress of UNMOVIC in its mission, judged by objective criteria, is all that counts. I'm sorry if you can't tell the difference between "opinion" and "fact".
It is your opinion that Iraq was no imminent threat to the national security interests of the United States of America – although Vympel’s admission of Saddam’s long-term goals speak clearly to that issue. Once more, the investigation is not yet complete. It is too early to draw anything more than a cursory conclusion without having the entire picture open before us.
Wrong. The dilapidated state of the Iraqi war machine already gives us the picture of Iraq's ability to threaten anybody prior to Gulf War II. Exaggerated prewar statements which increasingly go unsupported by hard evidence does not change this, no matter how much you wish it could. Especially as its looking more and more that those prewar statements were lies.
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Axis Kast
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Post by Axis Kast »

Um no, that's your problem, Comical Axi, not mine. And according to the actual situation, Hussein showed rationality in not undertaking action which would result in the immediate destruction of his regime for twelve years and knowing when to get out of Dodge. And for somebody arguing that we can't trust Saddam's word at face-value, I find it most amusing that you trust Saddam's word at face-value to support your argument that he was delusional.
How many times must this be made patently clear to you? Acts of elf-preservation do not a rational individual make. Somebody can display good – or rather, obvious – judgement in one specific situation, but fail to do so – to the point of delusions – in the next.

Accepting Saddam’s word at face value? No, merely drawing conclusions from an article published in the Los Angeles Times.
You SURE you want to keep hanging your hat upon the alledged credibility of Tony Blair?
He ignored the advice of one aide. It’s a warning sign, but by no means the final nail in anyone’s coffin. You’re also speaking to his claim that Iraq could deploy weapons in forty-five minutes (but, of what?) rather than the actual issue at hand, which is the SOTU address.
See above news item. You make yourself more ridiculous with each post.
The above news item has nothing to do with the context of the original statement.
Ask Mr. Blair about that one when he loses the no-confidence vote in parliament —which now is not a question of "if" but "when".
Speculation.
Was that before or after Blair lied to the Commons and the people about the vast Iraqi WMD arsenal ready to launch on 45-minute notice?
Blair’s 45-minute claim (a subjective affair from the start) is again not the focus. His credibility has absolutely nothing to do with the context of the anthrax statement. Point to me the quotation in which he points to their actual existence rather than wherein you infer his demand that they be accounted for equals affirmation of their existence in his book.
Was this before Blair decided to deliberately lie?
Irrelevant. This is, I believe, a textbook example of Red Herring behavior. Tony Blair’s analysis as regards the threat posed Iraq is not contingent on the value of his 45-minute claim alone.
Which did not present anything like an "imminent threat" justifying war.
That depends; as you have been reminded time in and time out, the lack of evidence regarding those stockpiles – whether or not they were actually sitting in a vault somewhere – represented a very great dilemma for investigators. That Iraq refused to come out and offer physical evidence was an extremely suspicious move. Bush and Blair – along with Straw, clearly – are staking their claim to the danger posed by Iraq on the fact that certain items remains missing without explanation. It makes a full accounting of Iraq’s weapons programs impossible unless one takes in good faith the claims made by Saddam Hussein, Tariq Azziz, and others.
No, it's bullshit obsfucation that you dance completely around the fact of the progressive destruction of proscribed materiel and gathering of fact both by human intel and aerial/satellite surveillance, as well as the testimony of defectors. Nobody is arguing for the veracity of Saddam Hussein.
Iraqi defectors did not bring physical proof. Kemal’s word was vindicated only from the point of view that inspectors discovered some kind of disarmament – but not to any specific extent. Progressive destruction and observation by Blix and Ritter never uncovered the fate of those 10,000 liters of missing anthrax - and more. You have no solid evidence of their fate.
Nice strawman, there.
So, Kemal is, in your opinion, a credible analyst of events even after his having left Iraq?
No, I did not say anything about the anthrax stocks. That was a quote regarding the fact of the anthrax stocks' status as contradicting the now-increasingly dubious word of Blair and Straw.
There was a quotation regarding the anthrax factory, not the anthrax stockpiles – and an addition that began with the word, “Really.” You either made a clear mistake in culling your example or are an outright liar.
The laws of physics are different in Iraq as opposed to the west?! You're insane if you think that the actions and duration of known chemical agents cannot be calculated according to known physical parametres. They're industry-standard materials Their formulae and composition are well-known.
Provide for me a list of exactly what chemicals escaped our detection.
An issue rendered moot the day the materials exceed their use-by date and become inert.
And yet still proof of long-standing obfuscation and successful contravention by Saddam Hussein’s régime.
Fifty one old Mig 21s, three Foxbats, and ammunition in the one protected bunker in the entire country, left there for an indeterminate period of time, and this adds up to vast hidden WMD arsenals how, exactly?
This has absolutely nothing to do with WMD. It’s got more to do with the value of Hussein’s own orders.
Another of your pathetic strawmen, Kast? That is not what I argued and you damn well know it. Or do I have to connect all the fucking dots for you? The point was that with the intensified preinvasion scouting, movement of anything would have been observed.
Speculation based on faith – regarding technology already proven fallible.
Handwaiving does not advance your case. Nor does pretending that the surveillance failures of 1991 applied in 2003. Furthermore, we encountered very little artillery in the late war and what pieces were deployed fell into our hands. No Iraqi units were equipped with chemical weapons in this fight.
What about surveillance failures of 2003 that apply in 2003?

Again, Hussein’s lack of tube artillery might explain why Iraq didn’t launch. It doesn’t vindicate the argument that he was not in possession of WMD at all.
It HAPPENED!!! Or did you miss that in all the war news?!
So every single vehicle and every last piece of equipment were left on the battlefield by every single unit?
Except that they didn't. i'm sorry if the reality of the situation is inconvenient for you.
Because preconditions of a specific contingency plan were unmet. It doesn’t absolute Hussein of having made the plan in the first place.
Not quite, Comical Axi. The UN documents presented stated that the precusor was a offensive nuke attack on Baghdad This does not address Hussein's evident restraint in not provoking an American nuclear retaliation.
No, the precursors was a march on Baghdad. You should have read the entire debate before jumping in near the end.

We cannot address Hussein’s restraint in not provoking an American nuclear retaliation (which I challenge would have struck only military targets, not a major city – likely acceptable to Hussein) because the actual preconditions of the original plan were never met in the first place.
No, to ignore what really unfolded in Gulf War I is the height of willful ignorance. There was never any substantive indication that Hussein's plans made it off paper. Stick to actualities, please.
Because the contingencies never played out. The fact that this was drawn up is damning in the first place however.

Never made it off paper? Your point? War Plans Crimson and Orange never “made it off paper.” Are you now going to tell me that they weren’t contingencies developed by the United States prior to the Second World War?
And this helps your argument how, exactly?
It proves the utter worthlessness of his original plan, which can thus be explained as a thing or personal glory rather than apt strategy.
No, we know plans were drafted. Period.
And Hussein thus bears responsibility for.
Which tells us how capable Iraq was to carry out an aggression —which is not at all. Thus one of the primary criteria for the war fails.
Not unconventionally. See, Afghanistan.
Ah, because spare parts = WMD capability. You really can't see how foolish you make yourself, can you?
Because the smuggling of certain specific items leaves open the possibility that others were smuggled as well. It is a potential we must never discount.
Because it doesn't jibe with your bullshit redefinitions? Sorry, but that's not how the game works.
Because it’s nebulous. Hell, the Chinese assisted Iraq as late as 2000. Now kindly answer the question.
Which remains meaningless in terms of capability to do anything.
But very important in determining the danger posed in the first place. Just because he does not have a realistic chance for success doesn’t mean he wouldn’t take a gamble.
Irrelevant.
Absolutely irrelevant. Your belief that Iraq posed no threat to any one is erroded by the fact that Hussein was not fully rational. He was not making the same basic analysis about cost and benefit that are generally the hallmark of most leaders.
The issue is capability to present a credible threat. When exactly does that sink in?
The lack of real-time communication impedes his ability to act. It does not however indicate complete inability to do anything whatsoever.
Unfortunately, the "gift-wrapped opinion" (Attacking The Messenger) is based upon the evidence of Iraq's incapacity to threaten the region or seize control of geopolitical objectives. It is you who is being presumptive, constantly invoking phantom WMD arsenals, what-if scenarios as fact, and simply ignoring the realities on the ground.
In this case, the “messenger” is worthy of the assault. His opinion is not fact.

Iraq was incapable of fulfilling the objective of holding Kuwait in 1991 – something that should have been evident when he first intended to go up against the 82nd Airborne. That didn’t stop him.

This is whole situation stems from a series of very important, “What if?” scenarios. It’s how we determine policy.
My, what breathtaking oversimplification on your part —particularly considering that the only bona-fides of Saddam's alledged delusional state is Saddam's word, which you insist elsewhere can't be taken at face-value.
… or that of his war plans, that of his commanders – in rank and file -, and that of the Los Angeles Times article. :roll:
No equation between the two situations, particularly since the Taliban/al-Qaeda alliance was known and active, and the terms of the resulting war different.
Absolutely relevant from the point of view that Afghanistan’s conventional threat was less than Iraq’s. The search for WMD is still underway in Iraq, mind you.
Which Iraq was incapable of.
Conventionally? Temporarily. Unconventionally? The jury is still out.
No, that's beside the point in terms of capability.
Again, if he is not rational, the lack of capability won’t restrain him as it otherwise might.
Missiles which failed, from launchers which were subsequently struck.
Not a single SCUD was ever captured – or destroyed - during the war. Fact.
No, the opinions of UNMOVIC's critics are irrelevant —the extant progress of UNMOVIC in its mission, judged by objective criteria, is all that counts. I'm sorry if you can't tell the difference between "opinion" and "fact".
Opinion.
Wrong. The dilapidated state of the Iraqi war machine already gives us the picture of Iraq's ability to threaten anybody prior to Gulf War II. Exaggerated prewar statements which increasingly go unsupported by hard evidence does not change this, no matter how much you wish it could. Especially as its looking more and more that those prewar statements were lies.
The dilapidated state of the conventional Iraqi war machine is a world apart from their unconventional arsenal, which is still the subject of investigation.
Ridiculous. Iraq's ability to carry out any attacks is DIRECTLY relevant to the justification for war, which was always based on the threat America was supposedly under.
I fail to see how it is at all acceptable that Iraq possess unconventional weapons but escape consequences simply because it lacked the launchers to deploy them at this particular point in time. So long as Iraq has stockpiles – assuming it does, of course -, it is in contravention of the United Nations and a potential danger to neighboring countries.
So you can justify a war in the present (while lying to the public of course to say otherwise) based on what might happen in the future? Would you like some lebensraum to go with that?
We’ve done that successively throughout history, Vympel. See, Vietnam. If the future threat is sufficiently justified, it is quite acceptable.
North Korea was caught red-handed. As I said.
With a many year gap in between, of course. :roll:
North Korea was caught. North Korea owned up to it. And the IAEA never even had a full mandate. North Korea had the facilities, the working reactor, the raw materials to enrich, etc. Totally unlike Iraq.
AND YET IT ESCAPED DETECTION BETWEEN 1994 AND 2002. :roll:
Blix never acknowledged the existence of 10,000 litres of anthrax. Where did you get that from?
Blix acknowledged that they were unaccounted for, hence the words “stockpiles in question.” They were undeniably part of Iraq’s stockpiles at one point in time.
And yet inspectors remained on the ground for a further seven or so years (depending on exact dates). No one's talking about taking Iraq's word for it. No one's arguing the inspectors shouldn't have been there.
Irrelevant to (A) the UN’s inability to put precise data with the limited physical evidence, and (B) the fact that North Korea escaped detection so long, or that Iraq went virtually four years without inspectors on-site.
That's a question for the Clinton/Bush administrations, not I- I'm just repeating the background/history- NK was known to have material (in some form) for two nukes since 1994 (something Iraq has never been acknowledged to have).
… but for more since 2002. :roll:
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Post by Vympel »

You are such an ignoramus it's not funny.
Axis Kast wrote:
With a many year gap in between, of course. :roll:
Displaying your ignorance for all to see yet again?

AND YET IT ESCAPED DETECTION BETWEEN 1994 AND 2002. :roll:
No it didn't you stupid asshat. Do yourself a favor and go look up the ACTUAL HISTORY before you come here and embarass yourself with your glorious ignorance of historical fact.

NORTH KOREA CUT THE SEALS ON THE RODS IN QUESTION ON THE 22ND OF DECEMBER 2002. NORTH KOREA MADE THE ADMISSION THAT IT HAD A PROGRAM TO ENRICH URANIUM IN OCTOBER. THAT'S ALL, YOU DUMBASS.
Blix acknowledged that they were unaccounted for, hence the words “stockpiles in question.” They were undeniably part of Iraq’s stockpiles at one point in time.
Which is not an acknowledgement of their existence.
Irrelevant to (A) the UN’s inability to put precise data with the limited physical evidence, and (B) the fact that North Korea escaped detection so long, or that Iraq went virtually four years without inspectors on-site.
North Korea didn't escape detection for 8 years, you ignorant moron. Do you know ANYTHING about what you're talking about? Did you even BOTHER to read what the fuck I write, or heaven fucking forbid, look up the facts YOURSELF?
… but for more since 2002. :roll:
Because it unsealed the rods it was known to possess, you moron.

And concession accepted on Iraq not having anything that North Korea was known to have. You make this so easy.
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Post by Axis Kast »

No it didn't you stupid asshat. Do yourself a favor and go look up the ACTUAL HISTORY before you come here and embarass yourself with your glorious ignorance of historical fact.

NORTH KOREA CUT THE SEALS ON THE RODS IN QUESTION ON THE 22ND OF DECEMBER 2002. NORTH KOREA MADE THE ADMISSION THAT IT HAD A PROGRAM TO ENRICH URANIUM IN OCTOBER. THAT'S ALL, YOU DUMBASS.
They had built more weapons without our knowledge, Vympel.
Which is not an acknowledgement of their existence.
Reread the argument. I was simply pointing out that Blix acknowledged that some things were unaccounted for.
And concession accepted on Iraq not having anything that North Korea was known to have. You make this so easy.
North Korea’s capabilities have dramatically improved between 1994 and 2002, Vympel. Why?
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote:
They had built more weapons without our knowledge, Vympel.
NO, they hadn't. North Korea admitted to having an *enrichment program*. Two months later, it sought to act on this program by disabling the IAEA surveillance equipment, cutting open the seals on the rods, and, have either begun or have finished (depending on translation) enrichment of those rods, sufficient for more weapons- this is circa May 2003.

North Korea’s capabilities have dramatically improved between 1994 and 2002, Vympel. Why?
No, they didn't, they remained exactly constant. North Korea built no new reactors, did not have access to additional nuclear material, and is, for the last time, nothing like Iraq- not in inspections regime, not in capability, nada.
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Post by Axis Kast »

According to the timeline at MSNBC.com ...

Oct. 16 - U.S. officials say they have discovered evidence of a nuclear weapons program in North Korea.

Dec. 13 - North Korea asks the U.N. nuclear watchdog to remove moinitoring seals and cameras from its nuclear facilities.

Dec. 21 - North Korea removes monitoring seals and cameras from its nuclear facilities.

Hence a program was ongoing before removal of the seals, as per U.S. accusations.
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NO, they hadn't. North Korea admitted to having an *enrichment program*. Two months later, it sought to act on this program by disabling the IAEA surveillance equipment, cutting open the seals on the rods, and, have either begun or have finished (depending on translation) enrichment of those rods, sufficient for more weapons- this is circa May 2003.
For how long was this "enrichment program" in the works? Was it noticed immediately?
No, they didn't, they remained exactly constant. North Korea built no new reactors, did not have access to additional nuclear material, and is, for the last time, nothing like Iraq- not in inspections regime, not in capability, nada.
And yet an enrichment capability could go unnoticed?

Oh, and the URL for the earlier MSNBC (which turned out to be a CNN) timeline: http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/asiapcf/e ... e.nuclear/
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Axis Kast wrote:According to the timeline at MSNBC.com ...

Oct. 16 - U.S. officials say they have discovered evidence of a nuclear weapons program in North Korea.

Dec. 13 - North Korea asks the U.N. nuclear watchdog to remove moinitoring seals and cameras from its nuclear facilities.

Dec. 21 - North Korea removes monitoring seals and cameras from its nuclear facilities.

Hence a program was ongoing before removal of the seals, as per U.S. accusations.
One can always do better than mainstream media when it comes to these things

I refer specifically to the IAEA Fact Sheet on DRPK Nuclear Safeguards:

"October 2002 Disclosures. A new phase started on 16 October 2002 with the announcement by the US that the DPRK side had acknowledged, in talks with Assistant Secretary Kelly in early October that it had a "programme to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons".

"December 2002: Exchanges of Letters. In his reply to the IAEA Director General (dated 2 December, received 4 December) the DPRK Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun expressed his disappointment about the Agency's unilateral and unfair approach. The DPRK Government could not accept the resolution, he said. On 12 December the Director General received a further letter, from Mr. Ri Je Son, Director General of the General Department of Atomic Energy in the DPRK, conveying the DPRK decision on that day to lift the freeze on its nuclear facilities as of 13 December in light of the US suspension of the heavy fuel oil supply pursuant to the Agreed Framework. The Director General replied the same day urging the DPRK not to take unilateral steps related to seals or cameras and to agree to an urgent meeting of technical experts to discuss practical arrangements involved in moving from the freeze to normal safeguards operations. However, on 22 December the DPRK started to cut seals and disable surveillance cameras. On 27 December it ordered the IAEA inspectors to leave the country."
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Post by Sir Sirius »

I'm I the only one who thinks that Axis's behaviour in this thread resembles that of a racquetball? The harder Vympel and Degan hit him, the faster he comes back to get hit again *WHACK!* and again *WHACK!* and again *WHACK!* and again *WHACK!*...

I therefor submit that we no longer consider this an Axis Kast Vs. Vympel and Patrick Degan debate, but rather a game of racquetball between Vympel and Degan using Axis as the ball. After all no one considers the ball in a racquetball game a player. :P
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Axis Kast wrote: For how long was this "enrichment program" in the works? Was it noticed immediately?
In around November 2002 the CIA reported that North Korea was trying to construct a uranium enrichment plant- how true this is I don't know, but it's telling that they cut the seals on the rods in question the following month. Whether that plant has been constructed is unknown (the same as whether NK actually has any nukes- they say they do IIRC but not everyone believes them).

Again, if there was an UNSCOM/ UNMOVIC style team on the ground, there wouldn't be this problem. North Korea is nothing like Iraq- not in inspections regime, known capabilities, or possession of fissile materials.

To quote the Arms Control Association: "There are various U.S. government sources that provide clues as to when North Korea began its uranium-enrichment program, but disagreement among the sources makes it difficult to determine the exact start of the program. Most information, however, indicates it began between 1997 and 1999."

and "An April 2003 CIA report states that the United States “has remained suspicious that North Korea has been working on uranium enrichment for several years,” adding that North Korea “began seeking centrifuge-related materials in large quantities” in 2001 and “obtained equipment suitable for use in uranium feed and withdrawal systems.”

And yet an enrichment capability could go unnoticed?
Not in the situation that Iraq was in, no. North Korea, of course, did get away with continuing a program, but even it's activities were monitored and this information was strong enough to go straight to North Korea.
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Post by Axis Kast »

To quote the Arms Control Association: "There are various U.S. government sources that provide clues as to when North Korea began its uranium-enrichment program, but disagreement among the sources makes it difficult to determine the exact start of the program. Most information, however, indicates it began between 1997 and 1999."

and "An April 2003 CIA report states that the United States “has remained suspicious that North Korea has been working on uranium enrichment for several years,” adding that North Korea “began seeking centrifuge-related materials in large quantities” in 2001 and “obtained equipment suitable for use in uranium feed and withdrawal systems.”
... and yet no action was taken. You've done yourself in, Vympel. If the North began enrichment in 1997 but was not the subject of intense scrutiny until 2001, how can you stand there with a staight face and profess confidence in our ability to catch each contravention every single time?
Not in the situation that Iraq was in, no. North Korea, of course, did get away with continuing a program, but even it's activities were monitored and this information was strong enough to go straight to North Korea.
If North Korea got away with continuing a program, I don't see how you can aruge the infalibility of our national technical means to always reveal similar activity elsewhere. There's always a danger that Iraq might have had hidden - and active, for that's the quallifier - facilities. Unlikely, but within the realm of possibility.

In essence, what this whole thing boiled down to is a dispute over whether anybody at times lied intentionally, at times lied at all, Iraq posed a threat, Iraq should be suspect for deficiencies in documentation, and Saddam Hussein was delusional. It's all becoming circular. We should finish our discussion on North Korea and then agree to disagree for the millionth time.
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Axis Kast wrote: ... and yet no action was taken. You've done yourself in, Vympel.
Only if you completely ignore the differences between North Korea and Iraq.
If the North began enrichment in 1997 but was not the subject of intense scrutiny until 2001, how can you stand there with a staight face and profess confidence in our ability to catch each contravention every single time?
Because North Korea is not Iraq.
If North Korea got away with continuing a program, I don't see how you can aruge the infalibility of our national technical means to always reveal similar activity elsewhere.
Except it didn't get away with it. It was caught. Furthermore, you're constructing the quite obvious strawman of making this about 'national technical means' rather than the inspections reigme, which you have continually derided.
There's always a danger that Iraq might have had hidden - and active, for that's the quallifier - facilities. Unlikely, but within the realm of possibility.
It's not within the realm of possibility. Facilities for this sort of thing require certain materials in huge amounts- this is what did North Korea in last year, in fact. You cannot hide an active facility. Production facilities are large, visible, and create emissions.
In essence, what this whole thing boiled down to is a dispute over whether anybody at times lied intentionally at times lied at all
Yes, there were lies.
Iraq posed a threat
As has been established, Iraq did not pose a threat.
Iraq should be suspect for deficiencies in documentation
Absolutely. The question was what to do about it.
and Saddam Hussein was delusional.
As I said many pages ago, you could argue he was delusional but not to the extent of launching unprovoked attacks on Israel, and furthermore his capability to carry out such an unlikely delusion was obviously nil.
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Post by Vympel »

On what construction facilities require:

El-Baradei:

"Saddam's team of nuclear scientists still lack the fissile material to complete the bomb, and there have been no indications from satellite imagery of any attempt to build a facility capable of enriching uranium to bomb-grade quality. For that complex process the Iraqis would need substantial infrastructure and a power supply that could be spotted by American spy satellites." The Times, August 2002
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Only if you completely ignore the differences between North Korea and Iraq.
Completely ignore? No. Notice similarities in failures of electronic surveillance to give the entire picture? Absolutely.
Because North Korea is not Iraq.
That’s no answer to the question. If our surveillance failed to give proper early warning in North Korea, why would it succeed in Iraq? UNSCOM can only be in certain locations at certain times; we’d still need to rely on satellites even if Blix was perennially in town.
Except it didn't get away with it. It was caught. Furthermore, you're constructing the quite obvious strawman of making this about 'national technical means' rather than the inspections reigme, which you have continually derided.
Caught after a period of years – years that Iraq has also enjoyed without the presence of men on the ground.
It's not within the realm of possibility. Facilities for this sort of thing require certain materials in huge amounts- this is what did North Korea in last year, in fact. You cannot hide an active facility. Production facilities are large, visible, and create emissions.
North Korea developed uranium-enrichment facilities; you’re saying Iraq couldn’t focus on other levels in the hierarchy of illegal missile or warhead construction? You need to acknowledge what it all comes down to, Vympel: these are as much your determinations as the threat of Iraq is George Bush or Tony Blair’s.
Yes, there were lies.
But to what end? In good faith, yet over poor intelligence? Hell, even the 45-minute issue is falling back onto the radar screen as something knocked up to Blair by national security officials.
As has been established, Iraq did not pose a threat.
Blatant opinion.
Absolutely. The question was what to do about it.
And the answers differ wildly from person to person. We’ve proven that much, for sure.
As I said many pages ago, you could argue he was delusional but not to the extent of launching unprovoked attacks on Israel, and furthermore his capability to carry out such an unlikely delusion was obviously nil.
Delusional is delusional is delusional. You where challenged on that basic issue long ago, Vympel.

Not to mention that Israel’s defense should also remain relevant as a future responsibility of the United States – even if one unilaterally adopted (because, as has been made clear time and again, nobody wants Sharon to have to make these decisions alone). As for whether or not Hussein had the capability to harm his neighbors – or the stockpiles with which to do so, after which an argument can also be made -, that’s still under investigation.
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Post by SirNitram »

'Dur, delusional is delusional'

Of course, Axis can't fathom that there are levels of delusion, and that one might be insane enough to think they can weather an invasion but not believe that they can launch an attack successfully.
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Axis Kast wrote:
Completely ignore? No. Notice similarities in failures of electronic surveillance to give the entire picture? Absolutely.
Just keep ignoring UNSCOM/UNMOVIC and the lack of any equivalent regime in North Korea, you look really honest. You're arguing a point noone has MADE.
That’s no answer to the question. If our surveillance failed to give proper early warning in North Korea, why would it succeed in Iraq? UNSCOM can only be in certain locations at certain times; we’d still need to rely on satellites even if Blix was perennially in town.
North Korea didn't build a uranium enrichment plant that electronic surveillance missed, Kast. Furthermore, to claim that inspectors wouldn't spot something like an URANIUM ENRICHMENT PLANT is the most absurd thing I've ever heard.

Caught after a period of years – years that Iraq has also enjoyed without the presence of men on the ground.
And the facilities Iraq built during that time are ... where? Ah yes, nothing new was built. The US jumped all over even the most feeble construction at the site Israel bombed over 20 years ago- that was a few sheds and they spotted that.
North Korea developed uranium-enrichment facilities;
Bzzzt. It had a program. It is not known to have a uranium enrichment facility at all, by anyone.
you’re saying Iraq couldn’t focus on other levels in the hierarchy of illegal missile or warhead construction? You need to acknowledge what it all comes down to, Vympel: these are as much your determinations as the threat of Iraq is George Bush or Tony Blair’s.
The key to nuclear nonproliferation is the weaponized/enriched material. That Iraq could build the other requirements is not only true, it's also a practical tautology. A science professor with rudimentary knowledge could build a workable weapon, PROVIDED he had the material.

But to what end? In good faith, yet over poor intelligence? Hell, even the 45-minute issue is falling back onto the radar screen as something knocked up to Blair by national security officials.
I don't care about motive. I care about facts. Particularly, I care about facts that are not factual at all.

Blatant opinion.
Blatant fact, demonstrated amply by the past 12 years.

Delusional is delusional is delusional. You where challenged on that basic issue long ago, Vympel.
Now there's a slippery slope fallacy if I ever saw one. If delusional is delusional is delusional, explain why Iraq didn't launch an unprovoked WMD attack on Israel, and was in fact, deterred from doing so.
Not to mention that Israel’s defense should also remain relevant as a future responsibility of the United States – even if one unilaterally adopted (because, as has been made clear time and again, nobody wants Sharon to have to make these decisions alone). As for whether or not Hussein had the capability to harm his neighbors – or the stockpiles with which to do so, after which an argument can also be made -, that’s still under investigation.
It sure as fuck wasn't 'still under investigation' before the war. They went in with bullshit and hoped they'd be vindicated. That is obvious.
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Post by Axis Kast »

Of course, Axis can't fathom that there are levels of delusion, and that one might be insane enough to think they can weather an invasion but not believe that they can launch an attack successfully.
Yes, there are levels of delusion. Precisely my point in walking all over the argument that self-preservation is indication of total mental wellbeing. It wasn’t that Hussein was insane enough to look to a victory, but that he was insane enough to presume it as a foregone conclusion (in a specific situation, or as relates to the war as a whole).
Just keep ignoring UNSCOM/UNMOVIC and the lack of any equivalent regime in North Korea, you look really honest. You're arguing a point noone has MADE.
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. 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, 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. What it all boils down to is that given certain precedents – the planes buried at al-Taqqadum, the length of North Korea’s own evasion of detection by satellite, and Hussein’s long history of non-compliance –, considering Iraq a danger despite containment is quite legitimate.
North Korea didn't build a uranium enrichment plant that electronic surveillance missed, Kast. Furthermore, to claim that inspectors wouldn't spot something like an URANIUM ENRICHMENT PLANT is the most absurd thing I've ever heard.
And yet they’d begun a uranium enrichment program, no? That implies the presence of a facility in which uranium was in fact enriched. 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. :roll:
And the facilities Iraq built during that time are ... where? Ah yes, nothing new was built. The US jumped all over even the most feeble construction at the site Israel bombed over 20 years ago- that was a few sheds and they spotted that.
It doesn’t mean they might have missed something. In any case, I agree: outright reconstruction of previously-detected, previously-shattered facilities is begging discovery. That does not however mean that, like North Korea, Iraq couldn’t try something far less conventional.
Bzzzt. It had a program. It is not known to have a uranium enrichment facility at all, by anyone.
You mean like the paper-trail program Iraq could as easily have developed? :lol:
The key to nuclear nonproliferation is the weaponized/enriched material. That Iraq could build the other requirements is not only true, it's also a practical tautology. A science professor with rudimentary knowledge could build a workable weapon, PROVIDED he had the material.
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.

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.
I don't care about motive. I care about facts. Particularly, I care about facts that are not factual at all.
Motive is an issue because honest mistakes detract less from the credibility of our leadership than statements made with actual, malignant or misleading intent.
Blatant fact, demonstrated amply by the past 12 years.
Now you’re stating opinion as fact. Whether or not Iraq was a threat is a matter of specific opinion to specific people. Your own position will not change that.
Now there's a slippery slope fallacy if I ever saw one. If delusional is delusional is delusional, explain why Iraq didn't launch an unprovoked WMD attack on Israel, and was in fact, deterred from doing so.
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? We have been talking about Saddam’s delusions since day one, Vympel. An early admission would have saved much time.
It sure as fuck wasn't 'still under investigation' before the war. They went in with bullshit and hoped they'd be vindicated. That is obvious.
It wasn’t under investigation at all until six months before! :roll:
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Post by Axis Kast »

On what construction facilities require:

El-Baradei:

"Saddam's team of nuclear scientists still lack the fissile material to complete the bomb, and there have been no indications from satellite imagery of any attempt to build a facility capable of enriching uranium to bomb-grade quality. For that complex process the Iraqis would need substantial infrastructure and a power supply that could be spotted by American spy satellites." The Times, August 2002
This talks about bomb completion and uranium enrichment. There are several other means by which Saddam could undertake prohibited research or development.
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SirNitram
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Post by SirNitram »

Axis Kast wrote:
On what construction facilities require:

El-Baradei:

"Saddam's team of nuclear scientists still lack the fissile material to complete the bomb, and there have been no indications from satellite imagery of any attempt to build a facility capable of enriching uranium to bomb-grade quality. For that complex process the Iraqis would need substantial infrastructure and a power supply that could be spotted by American spy satellites." The Times, August 2002
This talks about bomb completion and uranium enrichment. There are several other means by which Saddam could undertake prohibited research or development.
It all becomes clear: Axis has no idea how a nuclear bomb works, so he assumes if they are just missing the fissile material, they are a serious danger.
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Out Of Context theatre: Ron Paul has repeatedly said he's not a racist. - Destructinator XIII on why Ron Paul isn't racist.

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Axis Kast
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Post by Axis Kast »

It all becomes clear: Axis has no idea how a nuclear bomb works, so he assumes if they are just missing the fissile material, they are a serious danger.
You'll have to excuse me if I'd rather deal with an Iraq at Step 1 than an Iraq as Step 9 - especially since the sanctions régime was proven full of holes.
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SirNitram
Rest in Peace, Black Mage
Posts: 28367
Joined: 2002-07-03 04:48pm
Location: Somewhere between nowhere and everywhere

Post by SirNitram »

Axis Kast wrote:
It all becomes clear: Axis has no idea how a nuclear bomb works, so he assumes if they are just missing the fissile material, they are a serious danger.
You'll have to excuse me if I'd rather deal with an Iraq at Step 1 than an Iraq as Step 9 - especially since the sanctions régime was proven full of holes.
Yea, holes which spare parts which can't produce refined material passed through.. OH NO!

Seriously, moron, what you call step one is what we knew they were capable of: Producing bombs and being able to send a guy to a Western university.
Manic Progressive: A liberal who violently swings from anger at politicos to despondency over them.

Out Of Context theatre: Ron Paul has repeatedly said he's not a racist. - Destructinator XIII on why Ron Paul isn't racist.

Shadowy Overlord - BMs/Black Mage Monkey - BOTM/Jetfire - Cybertron's Finest/General Miscreant/ASVS/Supermoderator Emeritus

Debator Classification: Trollhunter
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