| | Regardless, Saddam had hundreds of thousands of tons of biological and chemical weapons which he had repeatedly used in the past. The fact that they are now MISSING is of great concern.
-- Yet, many experts on such weapons have concluded the vast majority of the stockpile was created in the late 1980s, which means they're innert at this time. --
And yet many other experts found it completely reasonable to suspect the madman murderer was stockpiling the weapons for more mass murder. Did you actually read the result of the Iraq Study group? Saddam had an established track record of doing everything he could to ensure the ability to kill as many people as possible with any weapon available.
Conclusion of the ISG on Iraq's WMD programs http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/report/2004/isg-final-report/isg-final-report_vol3_cw-01.htm
ISG believes that none of these events weakened Saddam’s resolve to possess a robust CW capability. Baghdad believed its need for chemical weapons was justified, based on its fear of hostilities with Iran and Israel. The Regime, we judge, was also motivated by an unstated desire to elevate its status among Arab nations. ISG believes that Saddam deferred but did not abandon his CW ambitions.
* Saddam implied, according to the former Presidential Secretary, that Iraq would resume WMD programs after sanctions in order to restore the “strategic balance” within the region and, particularly, against Israel. * Saddam was fascinated by science and by the possibilities it offered for enhancing his military power base. He felt that possessing the technological capability to develop WMD conferred the intrinsic right on the country to do so, according to a former senior Iraqi official. * According to an Iraqi academic scientist, Saddam issued an edict in 1993-1994 that all Iraqi universities address problems encountered in the military and industrial sectors. This marked a departure from past practice where the government denied such work to universities. * Following this order, Iraqi research universities were required to become self-funding. MIC projects accounted for much of the research funding during this time, according to a leading university scientist.
Following Husayn Kamil’s defection, Saddam took steps to better manage Iraqi industry, and with the creation of the Iraqi Industrial Committee (IIC) in September 1995, the stage was set for a renewal of Iraq’s chemical industry. The IIC coordinated a range of projects aimed at developing an indigenous chemical production capability for strategically important chemicals that were difficult to import under UN sanctions, according to reporting.
* The lack of inspectors allowed further dual-use infrastructure to be developed. The lack of effective monitoring emboldened Saddam and his illicit procurement activities.
Concurrently, Iraq continued to upgrade its indigenous manufacturing capability, pursuing glass-lining technology and manufacturing its own multipurpose controllers.
There is an extensive, yet fragmentary and circumstantial body of evidence suggesting that Saddam pursued a strategy to maintain a capability to return to WMD production after sanctions were lifted by preserving assets and expertise. In addition to preserved capability, we have clear evidence of his intent to resume WMD production as soon as sanctions were lifted. All sources suggest that Saddam encouraged compartmentalization and would have discussed something as sensitive as WMD with as few people as possible.
The picture that emerges is that UN Sanctions and the Gulf War seriously derailed Saddam's CW programs, but he instituted significant measures to re-instate it as quickly as possible. Had the Iraq war not occurred, he no doubt would be doing exactly what he was doing for the previous 30 years.
-- The Nigerian Yellowcake report was proven false if I remember correctly.
Like most of your other opinions on this matter, and American history, they are extremely disingenuous, superficial, or completely wrong.
Saddam routinely paid cash tributes to Hamas and Hezbollah, and would reward the families of suicide victims.
-- There's one thing you should know, tyrants boast to cover their impotencies. --
What a horribly offensive brush off. Nice attempt to defer a serious issue with some vague syllogism, but Tyrants also actually kill millions of people, and usually do so with a scary fervor. Id be hard pressed to think victims of Palestinian terrorists in Israel would find your brush off so lighthearted. I wonder what world you live in where you can shrug off murders who would not hesitate to kill YOU.
from BBC News http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2846365.stm
A Hamas suicide bomber's family got $25,000 while the others - relatives of militants killed in fighting or civilians killed during Israeli military operations - all received $10,000 each.
Another banner in the hall described the cheques as the "blessings of Saddam Hussein" and PALF speakers extolled the Iraqi leader in fiery speeches.
"Saddam Hussein considers those who die in martyrdom attacks as people who have won the highest degree of martyrdom," said one.
The party estimated that Iraq had paid out $35m to Palestinian families since the current uprising began in September 2000.
Did you catch that? 35 MILLION DOLLARS paid to murderous terrorists specifically in reward to their terrorism This is not 'boasting' oh but you called Saddam impotent, arent you funny. Give yourself a big ol pat on the back.
-- Actually, there's probably more fossil fuels off the Gulf of Mexico than there is in Iraq. Take the gloves off oil exploration , then you'll have more oil closer to home with relatively more friendly neighbors to suffer. --
I don't doubt that, there would be nothing better to do to undermine the power of the middle east tyrannies than to find a huge oil supply outside of the middle east, or to convert to a nuclear powered infrastructure, which we should have done decades ago. But absent a magical historical restructuring, the simple fact is that a murderous tyrant was sitting atop one of the worlds largest energy supplies and was using it for, not surprisingly, murder and tyranny.
It might be nonsensical, but I have to wonder, if it's okay to intervene when it's not a threat to my person, then why is okay to intervene when it is?
Huh? Are you saying that it is NOT ok to act in your own self defense when your well being is threatened? Define 'threatened' and replace 'you' with 'your nation' and you will see the logical rational extension of self defense.
I'm not trying to goad you, but I'm trying to see what exactly you're selling, because you see the current trend in DC is to shape the course of other nations whether they're beligerent(sp?) or not (especially when they're not).
Yeah, like when we invaded the non-belligerent nations of Canada, France, and Luxembourgh. What are you talking about? What non beligerant nations have we tried to 'shape the course of' and what does 'shape the course of' mean?
One example of this is our attempts to stop other nations from electing socialists to office such as in the case of Chile
Are you stuck in the 60's here? What are 'we' doing to stop people from electing socialists in Chile today? Today Chile is the least socialist, and MOST prosperous nation in South America.
If folks like yourself were in DC, I'm betting intervention would go way down and would be codified in a manner that I would even approve. But there's not many folks like you in DC, so until that happens, I want the beast of the State chained down, beaten, and drugged. --
I advocate the creation of an alliance of liberal constitutional democracies, the richest and freest nations of the world, which happen to be the most militarily powerful, enact a '12 step' program of sorts working in the long term on converting every shitty murderous tyranny to first supporting rule of law, and then second representative government. Various tactics of sanctions, blockades, information campaigns, strategic military strikes against critical government or military targets, or in the worst case, an outright military occupation with international monitoring groups. Because of the growing threat that rapid technological advances pose and the clear historical track record of murderous dictatorships, who start all the wars, culture all the pandemics, cause all the famines, and breed all the terrorists, our over arching long term foreign policy position must be one with the clear and focused goal of ridding the world of murderous dictatorships. They are not legitimate nations, they murder millions of their own people, they cause global instabilities, and present numerous existential threats. Given our finite resources and lack of omniscience, we must always deal the best blow we can against our worse enemy in the name of this cause.
I gave a near hour long presentation on this very idea to 12 members of the Strategic Studies Group of the Navy War College, which included 2 retired Admirals. It was not an argument they had heard before and the presentation was given in the context of a non-profit organization I am a staff member on which is working to identify all the existential threats humanity faces and the strategies we need to implement to mitigate those threats. I presented the clear connection between the growing power of these murderous and illegitimate states and the threat they pose as technology rapidly progresses and fewer resources are needed to kill larger numbers of people. The War College approached our organization to try to identify threats we may face that they have not been paying sufficient attention to. Judging from their reactions I think I had significant impact on them. Some of these people are only a few steps removed from the administration.
John McCain explicitly advocates a foreign policy focused on reducing the power of Rogue States and on the creation of an alliance of democracies, contrasting the UN which is full of tyrannies.
Democratic Foreign policy is only humanitarian or altruistic and damaging to our nation, Cold War foreign policy focused only on the containment of communism, and paid little attention to the well being of the nations caught in the cross fire. As Condaleeza Rice said, for 50 years we bought stability at the price of freedom, and got neither. Republican foreign policy orbits around this idea but does not yet explicitly identify it. Libertarian foreign policy is murderously idiotic.
If all the liberal constitutional democracies participated in the Invasion / occupation / stabilization / democratiziation of Iraq it would have gone on with much much fewer problems. Even though the US asked for assistance most of the western nations sat on their morally relativistic assess and chose to do nothing.
-- I don't support any State in any form. --
So you are an anarchist? No wonder you oppose national self defense in any form, you oppose national existence, so something that you don't think should exist obviously should not have people acting to defend it.
-- Interesting fact, but that doesn't refute my point. Name how many Iraqi regiments were mustered in the deposition of Saddam and the Baathists, and you'll have a point. Otherwise, you're tryin to shoe horn as hard as you can. --
Actually it does refute your point, you just tried to change your point. You said
"We did have allies such as Spain and France, but I don't believe either gave us boots on the ground to 'liberate' us, we fought and won our own independence on our own effort."
France gave us thousands of 'boots on the ground' and directly helped to liberate us. The continental Americas would have been blockaded by the British Navy without the ongoing major naval battles the French engaged in. You keep trying to paint this blatantly wrong historical picture that America fought and won it's independence without any significant help. It's complete bullshit, France gave so much assistance that it crippled their economy.
Over 100,000 Shi'ites rose up against Saddam post Gulf War I, and we dropped the ball and abandoned them, and they were all murdered. I don't blame them for not rising up this time either.
About 90% of the gunpowder used by American forces in the first 2 years of the war was from France. Indeed a tremendous amount of the supplies and arms came from France. The battle of Yorktown had more French 'boots' on the ground than American. Without Frances participation we would not have won the revolutionary war.
-- Then why didn't we do the same for the Iraqi resistance fighters? --
Is this attempt to change the question an acknowledgement then that America could not have won the revolutionary war without France's help?
Were are not discussing the appropriate means by which we should assist allies (the Iraqi Resistance) in fighting common enemies (the murderous tyranny of Saddam) we are discussing whether it is ever right AT ALL to every assist an ally in fighting a common enemy. Once you concede the point that at some times it is, then we can discuss the appropriate manner and degree in which it should be carried out.
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