Showing posts with label WMDs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WMDs. Show all posts

Saturday, January 6, 2007

Iraq War Mythology Part II: Weapons of Mass Destruction

I will be writing a series of posts on what I like to call Iraq War Mythology. The purpose of these posts will be to tackle common misconceptions, or myths, about the war in Iraq. I hope to take on these issues in a comprehensive but thoughtful manner. My goal is to find the facts and refute the myths.

In this post I will tackle what is perhaps the greatest myth of the Iraq War: Saddam had no Weapons of Mass Destruction. The WMD issue is a hotly contested issue with strong points to be made on both sides. We have all heard Bush's political opponents and the press constantly declare: Saddam had no WMDs. The argument which follows is that Bush lied or misled the American people into supporting an unnecessary war; a war against a nation which did not attack us and which had nothing to do with 9/11 or the war on terror. For the sake of refuting the WMD myth, I will try to focus only on the issue of whether Saddam did in fact have WMDs.

Saddam's brutal use of chemical weaponsTo start, we do know that Saddam did have Weapons of Mass Destruction, primarily chemical weapons, which he used routinely during his bloody reign. He used WMDs against his enemies and he used WMDs against his own people.

Saddam Hussein was proud of his use of chemical weapons against Iranians. During his trial by the Iraqi government, Saddam said he would take responsibility "with honor" for his use of WMDs against Iranians during the Iran-Iraq War. The Iraq Survey Group listed the following examples of Iraq's known uses of chemical weapons:







Examples of Known Iraqi Use of CW
The war with Iran ended in August 1988. By this time, seven UN specialist missions had documented repeated use of chemicals in the war. According to Iraq, it consumed almost 19,500 chemical bombs, over 54,000 chemical artillery shells and 27,000 short-range chemical rockets between 1983 and 1988. Iraq declared it consumed about 1,800 tons of mustard gas, 140 tons of Tabun, and over 600 tons of Sarin. Almost two-thirds of the CW weapons were used in the last 18 months of the war. Examples of CW use by Iraq:


Use in Iran-Iraq war, 1983-1988

August 1983 Haij Umran
Mustard , fewer than 100 Iranian/Kurdish casualties
October-November 1983 Panjwin
Mustard, 3,000 Iranian/Kurdish casualties
February-March 1984 Majnoon Island
Mustard, 2,500 Iranian casualties
March 1984 al-Basrah
Tabun, 50-100 Iranian casualties
March 1985 Hawizah Marsh
Mustard & Tabun, 3,000 Iranian casualties
February 1986 al-Faw
Mustard & Tabun, 8,000 to 10,000 Iranian casualties
December 1986 Um ar-Rasas
Mustard, 1,000s Iranian casualties
April 1987 al-Basrah
Mustard & Tabun, 5,000 Iranian casualties
October 1987 Sumar/Mehran
Mustard & nerve agent, 3,000 Iranian casualties
March 1988 Halabjah& Kurdish area
Mustard & nerve agent, 1,000s Kurdish/Iranian casualties
April 1988 al-Faw
Mustard & nerve agent, 1,000s Iranian casualties
May 1988 Fish Lake
Mustard & nerve agent, 100s or 1,000s Iranian casualties
June 1988 Majnoon Islands
Mustard & nerve agent, 100s or 1,000s Iranian casualties
July 1988 South-central border
Mustard & nerve agent, 100s or 1,000s Iranian casualties

Use in Southern Iraq against the Popular Uprising, 1991

March 1991, an-Najaf - Karbala area

These are selected uses only. Numerous other smaller scale CW attacks occurred.



Attack on Halabja

Saddam also used chemical weapons against his own civilian population. Source. The strongest evidence of Saddam's brutal use of chemical weapons against his own people came during the Anfal campaign. The Anfal campaign has been cited by human rights groups as a campaign of genocide. It was during the Anfal campaign that Saddam used chemical weapons upon the city of Halabja. It is reported to be the largest chemical weapon attack on a civilian population in modern times. Source.

Saddam's Enemies

There is no question whether Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. There is no question whether Saddam used weapons of mass destruction. But did Saddam Hussein still have weapons of mass destruction in March of 2003, when the United States launched Operation Iraqi Freedom? The short answer is yes, but this is a complicated question.

The reason this is such a complicated question is because it has been used to evidence whether or not the United States was justified in going to war with Iraq. In many circles the WMD issue is believed to be the only reason the United States went to war with Iraq, a myth I have already debunked. The issue has become highly politicized because if Saddam still had WMDs, then Bush was right and he did not lie to the American people.

Let's look back at the reasons the US government invaded Iraq- specifically to the legislation which authorized the invasion of Iraq.





Whereas after the liberation of Kuwait in 1991, Iraq entered into a United Nations sponsored cease-fire agreement pursuant to which Iraq unequivocally agreed, among other things, to eliminate its nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons programs and the means to deliver and develop them, and to end its support for international terrorism;

Whereas the efforts of international weapons inspectors, United States intelligence agencies, and Iraqi defectors led to the discovery that Iraq had large stockpiles of chemical weapons and a large scale biological weapons program, and that Iraq had an advanced nuclear weapons development program that was much closer to producing a nuclear weapon than intelligence reporting had previously indicated

In these two paragraphs, with regards to weapons of mass destruction, we see used as justification for invasion Iraq's failure to eliminate its 1) nuclear 2) biological and 3) chemical weapons programs 4)and the means to deliver and 5) develop them. Important for our analysis is also the 6) large stockpiles of chemical weapons.

The first justification for war that we will investigate is Iraq's failure to eliminate its large stockpiles of chemical weapons. The vast majority of media reports about WMDs have focused on the notion that no weapons of mass destruction have been found. Anti-war advocates, the press, and Bush's political opponents all came to the premature conclusion that no WMDs were discovered in Iraq. These groups further postulated that because such a strong case was made in the build up to the 2003 invasion, that Bush and his allies must have fabricated or exaggerated the case made for invasion of Iraq. When early reports of chemical weapon finds were made (example 2, example 3) they were under reported, dismissed by critics, and later denied by the US government.

The critics dismissed these early finds because they were "old" and were being found in small numbers as opposed to "large stockpiles." For instance, from the links provided in the preceding paragraph (emphasis added):





"There is no doubt that the warheads contain chemical weapons," ... "The problem is what period they came from, whether the (Persian) Gulf War or earlier, and whether they were usable, partly usable or not at all."

and:





In May, a booby-trapped artillery shell apparently filled with the sarin nerve agent exploded alongside a Baghdad road but caused no serious injuries to the U.S. forces who discovered it. At the time, officials stopped short of claiming the munition was definite evidence of a large weapons stockpile in prewar Iraq or evidence of recent production by Saddam's regime.

and





The UNMOVIC official said the group needs to know more from the Bush administration before it's possible to determine if this is "old or new stuff". It is known that Iraq used sarin during the Iraq-Iran war, however.

... the shell belonged to a class of ordnance that Saddam's government said was destroyed before the 1991 Gulf war (search). Experts believe both the sarin and mustard gas weapons date back to that time.

It is possible that these early reports were so under-reported because the press wanted absolute confirmation of what was found before they were willing to drop the charges that there were no WMDs and that Bush lied in order to take the United States to war. If they were waiting for such a confirmation, it would explain why these stories were never reported by most of the press. Why? The US government would later come to deny most, if not all, of the early reported finds of WMDs. Example 1. Example 2.

Was the United States government being honest when it reported that these early finds were false alarms? We cannot say with any degree of certainty if any of these early reported finds were actually authentic WMD discoveries. It is possible that the government was being honest in denying these few isolated reports.

However, In 2006 at the urging of congress, the executive branch declassified some "key points" from a National Ground Intelligence Center report on the recovery of chemical munitions in Iraq.

The report made public for the first time an acknowledgement by the US government that WMDs had been found in Iraq dating back to 2003. From 2003 to 2006 approximately 500 "degraded" WMDs were recovered in Iraq. This information was classified and kept secret from the American public until July of 2006.

This report also raises some very interesting questions. If the US government had been finding WMDs since the 2003 invasion, why keep quiet amid all of the harsh criticism?

Why classify information that would vindicate the US position in the lead up to the war?

One possible explanation is National Security.

If we look closely at one of the early reported finds, the national security justification starts to take focus:









Polish troops had been searching for munitions as part of their regular mission in south-central Iraq when they were told by an informant in May that terrorists had made a bid to buy the chemical weapons, which date back to Saddam Hussein's (search) war with Iran in the 1980s, Gen. Marek Dukaczewski told reporters in Warsaw.

"We were mortified by the information that terrorists were looking for these warheads and offered $5,000 apiece," Dukaczewski said. "An attack with such weapons would be hard to imagine. All of our activity was accelerated at appropriating these warheads."

Dukaczewski refused to give any further details about the terrorists or the sellers of the munitions, saying only that his troops thwarted terrorists by purchasing the 17 rockets for a Soviet-era launcher and two mortar rounds containing the nerve agent for an undisclosed sum June 23.

To put it plainly, the US government wasn't the only group searching for Saddam's chemical weapon stockpiles. Moreover they didn't exactly have complete ground control in Iraq. While the US was on a search and destroy mission, terrorist groups were offering top dollar for chemical weapons. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see why the Bush administration would want to keep quiet about actual WMD finds. If the US government admitted that WMDs were being found all over Iraq and admitted further that these weapons were still extremely lethal, the logical consequence would be that terrorist groups the world over would be scrambling to find the Saddam's WMDs before the US army could destroy them.

The 2006 unclassified memo outlying "key points" from a National Ground Intelligence Center report on the recovery of chemical munitions in Iraq states clearly that not all of Saddam's chemical munitions have been recovered. They are assessed to still exist. Moreover, they still have the potential to be lethal AND we know terrorists and insurgents are actively seeking to acquire them.

For many, the 2006 unclassified memo was proof enough. The smoking gun had been found. Bush was right and his political opponents, the press, and the anti-war crowd were all wrong. But this is still a fairly complicated issue because the WMD issue was falsely deemed the only reason American invaded Iraq.

For some, old, degraded, war relics were not a proper justification for war. It would be impossible to please everyone. One of the first reported WMD finds was a sarin filled warhead that had been unwittingly turned into an IED. Critics immediately pointed out that this was only one WMD, and did not represent a stockpile. As more small caches of WMDs were reported, the critics pointed out that these small finds did not represent the large stockpiles they claimed were used to justify the invasion. Even today, when we now know that 500 WMDs were recovered from Iraq, critics point out that these WMDs were leftovers from the Iraq-Iran war, that they were likely so degraded as to be harmless. For some, no matter how much evidence is presented, it doesn't meet the ever changing benchmark of what would justify the war in Iraq.

What we now know is this: The US government has recovered approximately 500 chemical munitions and believes there is still more to be found. The critics who say these are "old" WMDs cannot refute that old or not they represent a stockpile which Saddam, and the UN weapons inspectors, failed to destroy in accordance with the cease-fire agreement.

But what about the ongoing weapons programs? Why were no "new" WMDs recovered? Thus far, the US government claims they haven't found any new WMDs. As with the "old" WMDs, there could be strategic reasons for denying their recovery, so the first theory is that they have been recovered and that this is being kept under wraps. A critic of this theory would likely point out that there is no evidence whatsoever to support it AND it requires the belief that the US government is keeping this information from the world. Well, prior to the June 21, 2006 memo, there was no proof that any WMDs had been found and the US government had kept evidence of the 500 WMDs recovered classified. Unfortunately, this explanation is entirely speculative in nature.

A more popular theory is that Saddam moved his "new" WMDs out of the country, most likely to Syria. This theory has received support from Iraqi Generals, Israeli Intelligence, Former UN Inspectors, and possibly even Syrian Journalists. The theory has not been ruled out by the US government; however, the US has said repeatedly that they have no evidence of such a transfer. How could Saddam have transferred so much WMD related materials out of the country with the International community looking on? There are many who believe that Russia played a role in the removal and disbursement of evidence of Saddam's ongoing programs.

In April of 2004, a chemical bomb attack was foiled by Jordanian Intelligence. The attack was masterminded by Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi.





Jordanian officials say the arrests occurred after suspected militants entered Jordan from neighboring Syria in at least three vehicles filled with explosives, detonators and raw material to be used in bomb-making.
Source.

Some believe that since the chemical-bomb was directed by Iraqi al Qaeda terrorist Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi, and that the weapons were believed to have traveled through Syria, that the chemical weapons components may have originated in Iraq and been later purchased by the terrorist plotters in Syria.

If, however, "new" WMDs were not recovered in Iraq or moved to neighboring countries, does this mean that Saddam had no ongoing 1) nuclear, 2) biological, or 3) chemical weapons programs, nor 4) the means to deliver and 5)develop them?

With regards to 5) the means to develop WMDs, Saddam definitely had the means to reinstate his WMD programs. In fact, we know for certain that Saddam made inquires as late as 2001 about how long it would take to have the programs up and running.

We also know that Saddam had a tremendous amount of dual-use equipment in Iraq. Saddam was even able to purchase dual-use equipment and chemicals despite UN sanctions:













Iraq had an effective system for the procurement of items that Iraq was not allowed to acquire due to sanctions. ISG found no evidence that this system was used to acquire precursor chemicals in bulk; however documents indicate that dual-use laboratory equipment and chemicals were acquired through this system.

...

Available evidence indicates Iraq destroyed its hidden CW weapons and precursors, but key documentation and dual-use equipment were retained and were later discovered by inspectors.

...

The lack of inspectors allowed further dual-use infrastructure to be developed. The lack of effective monitoring emboldened Saddam and his illicit procurement activities.

...

Reflecting the importance the Regime attached to industrial and scientific progress and aiming to recover from the war with Iran, Baghdad undertook in the mid 1990s a centralized, national effort to coordinate Iraqi industrial activities. By the late 1990s, fueled by resources available through the Oil-for-Food program, that effort underlay a specific initiative aimed at boosting the capabilities of Iraqi pesticide and pharmaceutical industries, including the capability to manufacture dual-use chemicals. Although ISG found no direct evidence linking dual-use chemical production to an active or latent CW program, research and development on types of specific chemicals linked to Iraq’s CW program raises concerns about the legitimacy of Iraq’s chemical plans.
Source.

Dual-use equipment can be used for making relatively harmless materials, such as pesticides, medicine, shampoo, etc., but can also be quickly converted for the purpose of making deadly WMD chemicals. Some of the equipment used in making WMDs has turned up in foreign junkyards. The UN provided evidence of WMD-related materials turning up in Jordanian and Dutch scrap yards.

The Seventeenth UNMOVIC Quarterly Report from May 28, 2004 stated:

6. The Commission’s experts are conducting an investigation in parallel with the IAEA Iraq Nuclear Verification Office regarding the discovery of items from Iraq that are relevant to the mandates of UNMOVIC and IAEA at a scrapyard in the
Netherlands. In particular, following a visit of IAEA to a scrapyard in Rotterdam to investigate increased radiation readings, it was discovered, through photographs taken at the time, that engines of SA-2 surface-to-air missiles were among the scrap (see figure below). They are the type of engines used in the Al Samoud 2 proscribed missile programme. In addition, a number of items and equipment that may also be relevant to the UNMOVIC mandate were seen among the scrap. The existence of missile engines originating in Iraq among scrap in Europe may affect the accounting of proscribed engines known to have been in Iraq’s possession in March 2003. Both IAEA and UNMOVIC have kept the Security Council informed of this matter.

7. A team of Commission experts visited the site concerned in the Netherlands and examined one missile engine that had been salvaged from the scrap metal process. By comparing the serial production number on the engine with information in the UNMOVIC database, the experts were able to confirm that the engine was one from an SA-2 missile that had been tagged by United Nations inspectors in the past and had not been declared as having been fired. Representatives of the scrapyard company indicated that a number of similar engines (5 to 12) had been seen in the scrapyard in January and February of this year. More engines could have been processed and passed through the yard unnoticed. Company staff confirmed that other items made of stainless steel and other corrosion-resistant metal alloys bearing the inscription “Iraq” or “Baghdad” had been observed in shipments delivered from the Middle East since November 2003. A number of items were examined and sampled on-site by UNMOVIC experts with a portable metal analyser and were determined to be composed of inconel and titanium — both dual-use materials subject to monitoring. Photographs of other materials bearing Arabic script were taken.


8. Despite the active cooperation of the Government of the Netherlands and the company concerned, it was not possible to determine how many other engines and other material previously subject to monitoring in Iraq may have passed through this scrapyard (or others). It should also be noted that the scrapyard that was visited by UNMOVIC deals in high-quality stainless steel. Items and equipment made of dualuse materials subject to the provisions of the monitoring plan may also be coming out of Iraq to other destinations. The Commission is continuing its investigation.

9. In addition, the Commission is aware from comparative analysis of recent satellite imagery that a number of sites previously known to have contained equipment and materials subject to monitoring have been either cleaned out or destroyed. An example of such imagery is provided in the appendix to the present report. It is not known whether such equipment and materials were still present at the sites during the time of coalition action in March and April of 2003. However, it is possible that some of the materials may have been removed from Iraq by looters
of sites and sold as scrap.


The Eighteenth UNMOVIC Quarterly Report from August 27, 2004 stated:
Investigations into scrap material found outside Iraq
3. The Commission has continued its investigation into the discovery of items relevant to its mandate that have been exported from Iraq as scrap metal. At the beginning of June, Commission experts went to Jordan and with the support and cooperation of Jordanian authorities visited a number of trading companies dealing with the export of scrap metal from Iraq to Jordan. They visited scrapyards associated with the respective trading companies and interviewed relevant personnel, including trading company managers, merchants and truck drivers of Jordanian and Iraqi nationality.

4. A significant number of items relevant to the UNMOVIC mandate were observed at the scrapyards. They included 20 SA-2 missile engines, a solid propellant-mixing vessel tagged by UNMOVIC during its 2002-2003 inspection activities in Iraq, fragmented remains of an SA-2 airframe and booster, as well as four chemical-related vessels made of corrosion-resistant material that had been tagged by the Commission as dual-use items. According to information received from the trading company representatives, the tagged chemical vessels had been dismantled from the chemical industrial complex near Fallujah. The Commission’s experts were able to confirm that information by comparing the serial numbers of the United Nations tags still attached to the vessels with information in the UNMOVIC database.

5. During interviews conducted with more than 20 persons involved in the scrap metal trade, it was determined that the first scrap metal started arriving in Jordan from Iraq in June 2003. The flow of stainless steel and other more valuable alloys commenced later in the summer and continued in 2004. A rough estimate made by scrap company managers was that a total of 60,000 tons of Iraqi scrap metal had passed through Jordan’s largest free trade zone in 2003 and an additional 70,000 tons up until June 2004. UNMOVIC experts were told that that amount comprised only a small part of all scrap materials exported from Iraq to the other countries that border Iraq and further to Europe, North Africa and Asia. It was also said that a lot of high-quality industrial production equipment from facilities all over Iraq had been purchased by unnamed contractors at low cost, dismantled and moved out of the country. If correct, this could include equipment subject to monitoring in Iraq.

6. According to some of the merchants, the authorities in Iraq had overall control of the scrap export business. Several sites that were monitored previously by UNMOVIC were mentioned as having been razed. Information on the web site of the Iraqi Ministry of Trade (www.motiraq.org) sets out the licensing and other procedures for the export of scrap. There are seven stipulated border crossings to all of Iraq’s neighbouring countries, via which scrap metals can be exported. The Iraqi port of Umm Qasr is also authorized to trade directly with the rest of the world.

7. Following the visit to Jordan, information was received from the Government of the Netherlands of the discovery in early July by a Rotterdam scrap company of an additional 22 SA-2 missile engines in a shipment from Turkey. The Commission requested the support of the Government of Turkey to facilitate a visit by UNMOVIC experts to a Turkish company believed to be involved in the trading of scrap originating in Iraq.

8. With the cooperation of the Government of Turkey, a team of UNMOVIC and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) experts visited an Istanbul scrapyard in the second half of July 2004. No items of relevance to UNMOVIC were found at the yard of the company. The team was told that the Turkish company only acted as a transit broker for scrap metal originating in Iraq. Turkish customs officials later explained that scrap from Iraq was transported through Turkey under seal to customs clearing yards, where it was loaded into containers for onward shipment to foreign markets. The experts observed the removal of customs tags from one of the trucks arriving from Iraq. While they were not able to witness the unloading of the truck into the container, a cursory examination of the upper layers of the load did not reveal any items related to Iraq’s past weapons programmes or materials subject to monitoring. When questioned, no one recalled seeing any missile engines or other materials relevant to UNMOVIC, but it was stated that it was quite possible that some had passed through Turkey.

9. With the agreement of the relevant Member States, UNMOVIC intends to observe the destruction of the SA-2 missile engines located in Jordan and the Netherlands together with other tagged and dual-use equipment that had been under monitoring in Iraq. All identifying data have been recorded and photographs have been taken.

The mere existence of Iraqi dual-use equipment and chemicals is proof of Saddam's failure to destroy his WMD development capabilities. Additionally, Saddam employed legions of scientists who were experts in the production of WMD related technology. Why keep these scientists on the payroll when you have no intention of ever putting them to use in their area of expertise?

From at least 1999 onward Saddam became increasingly interested in the activities of the IAEC and began holding regular meetings with representatives of the IAEC. Saddam also began to personally intervene in matters related to the IAEC, ranging from internal personnel issues, to prompting other organizations to work with the IAEC and utilize the IAEC’s scientific capabilities. In late 1996, Saddam agreed to the Oil-for-Food program, resulting in significant fund, which he was able to use to bolster his scientific base.


A former scientist at the IAEC spoke of many scientists leaving the IAEC in 1999 because conditions were so poor. The scientist claims that Saddam personally intervened, beginning in 1999, to improve conditions and raise salaries. He also made what the scientist called “a blanket rule” at this time forbidding scientists from leaving their posts.

Dr. Huwaysh recalled that in 2001 and 2002 the frequency of meetings between Saddam and Iraqi nuclear scientists increased. During the same time frame, Saddam also issued a Presidential Order to the President of the IAEC, Dr. Fadil Al-Janabi, that he should keep nuclear scientists together at the IAEC in order to pool their skills and have them available when needed for starting numerous new projects. Dr. Huwaysh did not know the specific details of any of these projects.

Dr. Huwaysh also recalled that, circa 2000, when Saddam found out that former nuclear workers in the IAEC were not being paid as well as those in the MIC, he met with Al-Janabi, initiated raises in their salaries, and instituted a bonus scheme.

A former MIC official stated that, in January 2002, Saddam issued an order requiring the MIC to cooperate with the IAEC and to implement projects in the areas of physics, machining, and electronics.

Saddam also began to take an increased interest in the welfare of former nuclear scientists in the MIC. Dr. Huwaysh stated that in 2000 Saddam began asking about the welfare of former PC-3 scientists within the MIC and referred to them as “my people.” Saddam, a former IAEC Chairman in the mid-1970s, reportedly made it clear that he cared greatly about the former nuclear program and began showing a renewed level of interest in it at this time.
Source.

Dual-use equipment and nuclear scientists were not the only evidence of Iraq's means to develop nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons. There is substantial evidence to prove that Saddam did not abandon his nuclear aspirations.

ISG has uncovered two instances in which scientists linked to Iraq’s pre-1991 uranium enrichment programs kept documentation and technology in anticipation of renewing these efforts—actions that they contend were officially sanctioned.

A former engineer in the pre-1991 EMIS program claimed he was told by the head of MIC in 1997 to continue his work with ion implantation at his Al Tahaddi lab as a way to preserve EMIS technology.

The former head of Iraq’s pre-1991 centrifuge program also retained prohibited documents and components in apparent violation of the Regime’s directives. Though this activity was isolated, it also had the potential to contribute to a possible restart of Iraq’s uranium enrichment programs.
Source.

The "former head" of Iraq's centrifuge program made headlines when he turned over the "prohibited documents and components." For instance:

Nuke program parts unearthed in Baghdad back yard

The parts, with accompanying plans, were unearthed by Iraqi scientist Mahdi Obeidi who had hidden them under a rose bush in his garden 12 years ago under orders from Qusay Hussein and Saddam Hussein's then son-in-law, Hussein Kamel.

U.S. officials emphasized this was not evidence Iraq had a nuclear weapon -- but it was evidence the Iraqis concealed plans to reconstitute their nuclear program as soon as the world was no longer looking.

The parts and documents Obeidi gave the CIA were shown exclusively to CNN at CIA headquarters in Virginia.

Obeidi told CNN the parts of a gas centrifuge system for enriching uranium were part of a highly sophisticated system he was ordered to hide to be ready to rebuild the bomb program.

"I have very important things at my disposal that I have been ordered to have, to keep, and I've kept them, and I don't want this to proliferate, because of its potential consequences if it falls in the hands of tyrants, in the hands of dictators or of terrorists," said Obeidi, who has been taken out of Iraq with the help of the U.S. government.

Obeidi also said he was not the only scientist ordered to hide that type of equipment.

"I think there may be more than three other copies. And I think it is quite important to look at this list so they will not fall into the hands of the wrong people," he said.

Centrifuges are drums or cylinders that spin at high speed and separate heavy and light molecules, allowing increasingly enriched uranium to be drawn off.
More.

It is unclear why this find was not considered to be a smoking gun. An Iraqi scientist was ordered by his government to hide and retain components necessary for producing a nuclear weapon. At the very least, the centrifuge could be used to enrich uranium, which could later be used in a radioactive "dirty bomb."

A great deal of media attention was focused on whether Iraq wanted to purchase natural/yellow cake Uranium from Niger. One piece of evidence would later turn out to be a forged document which alleged a final transaction; however, there was still credible evidence to indicate that Iraq was seeking uranium from Niger.

Consider the argument provided in Christopher Hitchens Slate article, Wowie Zahawie:

In February 1999, Zahawie left his Vatican office for a few days and paid an official visit to Niger, a country known for absolutely nothing except its vast deposits of uranium ore. It was from Niger that Iraq had originally acquired uranium in 1981....

...

However, the waters have since become muddied, to say the least. For a start, someone produced a fake document, dated July 6, 2000, which purports to show Zahawie's signature and diplomatic seal on an actual agreement for an Iraqi uranium transaction with Niger. Almost everything was wrong with this crude forgery....

...

But this doesn't alter the plain set of established facts.... The European intelligence services, and the Bush administration, only ever asserted that the Iraqi regime had apparently tried to open (or rather, reopen) a yellowcake trade "in Africa." It has never been claimed that an agreement was actually reached. What motive could there be for a forgery that could be instantly detected upon cursory examination?

There seem to be only three possibilities here. Either a) American intelligence concocted the note; b) someone in Italy did so in the hope of gain; or c) it was the product of disinformation, intended to protect Niger and discredit any attention paid to the actual, real-time Zahawie visit.
Read the whole article.

Factcheck.org also had an interesting analysis of the controversy, in which the Butler report is cited:

Butler Report: It is accepted by all parties that Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999. The British Government had intelligence from several different sources indicating that this visit was for the purpose of acquiring uranium. Since uranium constitutes almost three-quarters of Niger’s exports, the intelligence was credible.

Whether or not Iraq was trying to purchase uranium from Niger was an issue that received an enormous amount of attention from the press. What is truly amazing is how little press was dedicated to that fact that Iraq actually had uranium in its possession when the US invaded in 2003.

After the invasion, at least 1.8 tons of uranium was removed from Iraq by the US government.
U.S. transferred nearly 2 tons of uranium from Iraq to U.S. without U.N. authorization
UNITED NATIONS – The United States didn't have authorization from the U.N. nuclear watchdog when it secretly shipped from Iraq uranium and highly radioactive material that could be used in so-called "dirty bombs," U.N. officials said Wednesday.

The nearly 2 tons of low-enriched uranium and approximately 1,000 highly radioactive items transferred from Iraq to the United States last month had been placed under seal by the International Atomic Energy Agency at the sprawling Tuwaitha nuclear complex, 12 miles south of Baghdad, the officials said.

...

According to the letter, the United States informed the IAEA on June 30 that approximately 1.8 tons of uranium, enriched to a level of 2.6 percent, another 6.6 pounds of low-enriched uranium, and approximately 1,000 highly radioactive sources had been transferred on June 23.

...

In 1992, after the first Gulf War, all highly enriched uranium – which could be used to make nuclear weapons – was shipped from Iraq to Russia, the IAEA's Zlauvinen said.

After 1992, roughly 2 tons of natural uranium, or yellow cake, some low enriched uranium and some depleted uranium was left at Tuwaitha under IAEA seal and control, he said.

...

IAEA inspectors left Iraq just before last year's U.S.-led war. After it ended, Washington barred U.N. weapons inspectors from returning, deploying U.S. teams instead in a so far unsuccessful search for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.

...

ElBaradei's letter said that an unspecified amount of nuclear material still at Tuwaitha consists mainly of natural uranium, some depleted uranium and some low enriched uranium waste, which is subject to IAEA monitoring.
Read the full article.

The UN left nearly 2 tons of yellow cake uranium, a small amount of "low enriched" uranium, and an undisclosed amount of depleted uranium in Iraq. Then Saddam threw the UN out of Iraq, effectively putting the Uranium back in his possession.

In summation, we know that Saddam had strong nuclear aspirations. In the early 90's, Saddam was as close as one year away from creating a nuclear weapon. We know that while Saddam did apparently suspend these programs, he never fully abandoned his nuclear programs. Saddam kept nuclear scientists on his payroll, and ordered them not to leave. Iraqi scientists hid documents and equipment used in making nuclear weapons with the intent of reinstating the nuclear weapons programs. Additionally, Saddam had in his possession nearly two tons of yellow cake uranium, which was originally purchased from Niger, and Saddam was suspected of wanting to purchase additional uranium - a suspicion supported by a 1999 trip by Iraqi diplomats to Niger.

Dual use equipment, scientists capable of creating WMDs - including nuclear bombs, a nuclear centrifuge, and nearly two tons of uranium are not the only evidence of Saddam's capability to develop WMDs. Large chemical caches and chemical weapons factories have been found in Iraq.

For instance:

Iraq Raid Yields Possible Chemical Production Facility

WASHINGTON, Aug. 13, 2005 – Acting on detainee-provided tips, coalition forces found what's believed to be an insurgent chemical production facility and chemical storage locations during Aug. 9 raids in northern Iraq, officials in Iraq reported today

This article gives some additional information on the find:


Alleged chemical weapons factory uncovered in Iraq
August 14, 2005


BAGHDAD -- US troops raiding a warehouse in the northern city of Mosul uncovered a suspected chemical weapons factory containing 1,500 gallons of chemicals believed destined for attacks on US and Iraqi forces and civilians, military officials said yesterday.



The early morning raid last Monday found 11 precursor agents, "some of them quite dangerous by themselves," a military spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Steven Boylan, said in Baghdad.



Combined, the chemicals would yield an agent capable of "lingering hazards" for those exposed to it, Boylan said. The likely targets would have been "coalition and Iraqi security forces, and Iraqi civilians," partly because the chemicals would be difficult to keep from spreading over a wide area, he said.




This was not the only chemical lab discovered in Iraq:

Iraqi forces find chemical materials in lab
Iraqi soldiers have discovered chemical materials in a Falluja lab....

...

Iraq's interim National Security Adviser Kasim Dawood announced discovery of the lab with chemical materials which he said was "manufacturing death, intoxication and assassination."

"We have also discovered in this laboratory a pamphlet and instructions showing how to manufacture explosives and toxins," Dawood said. "And they also talk about the production of anthrax."

Critics of these finds are quick to point out that the labs were "new," having been established after the US invasion in 2003. Critics have claimed that Saddam had no ongoing weapons programs, but because of US interference in Iraq, more terrorists are being made and that they are the ones behind the chemical labs. Critics claim the attempt to make the world safer by removing Saddam has failed and continued attempts to wage war on terror will bring similar consequences. This assertion walks a fine line between delusion and utter madness. More importantly, this line of thinking overlooks some important facts: Chemical weapons labs require 1) chemicals and 2) equipment. Just because a chemicals weapon lab sprouts up in a new location does not mean that contents of the lab are new.

Terrorists and insurgents in Iraq could not create chemical weapon labs without access to chemicals and the equipment necessary for converting these chemicals into weapons. But how did the terrorists acquire chemicals, in one instance 1,500 gallons plus the equipment for making chemical weapons in Iraq? This would be a very difficult question to answer, unless of course Saddam had chemicals and equipment for weaponizing these chemicals scattered across Iraq. We already know that terrorists were offering $5,000 per warhead, for chemical warheads. Reports of looting across Iraq is common knowledge. Additionally, the UN has reported that satellite surveillance of monitored sites have shown entire buildings including all of their contents have disappeared. It doesn't require much of a stretch of the imagination to wonder if the terrorists and insurgents in Iraq acquired the chemicals and equipment through purchase or looting of former Iraqi sites.



If Saddam had destroyed his WMD capabilities, this problem could not exist.

With regards to 4) the means to deliver nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons, Saddam clearly had ongoing programs which violated UN sanctions and the ceasefire between Iraq and the United States. This information has been reported in the press since prior to the Iraq invasion.

GlobalSecurity.org has an excellent article on the Al Samoud, which contains the following:


In February 2003, U.N. inspectors evaluated two versions of the Al Samoud 2 missile using four separate computer models. Both versions were found to exceed the range limit of 150 kilometers set by the U.N. Security Council. The lighter version of the Al Samoud 2 was estimated to have a range of 193 kilometers, while the heavier version would be capable of a 162 km range. Accordingly, it was requested that all Al Samoud 2 missiles and warheads be delivered to the inspectors for destruction.

The Al Samoud was not the only missile Iraq was developing in violation of the cease-fire agreement.


Despite the limitations imposed by the UN sanctions and the international arms embargo, Iraq was able to produce and field the domestically designed Al Fat’h composite solid-propellant ballistic missile. The goal of the program, which commenced in June 1997, was to develop a missile that could deliver a 300-kg payload to a range of 150 km with an accuracy of 150 meters Circular Error Probable (CEP). The accuracy requirement for an unguided version of the Al Fat’h was 750 meters CEP. The Al Fat'h program began under the Ababil-100 project in the early 1990s. By 1994 the liquid- and solid-propellant missile development programs under Ababil-100 had split, and the solid-propellant program retained the Ababil-100 name. The Iraq Survey Group (ISG) concluded that the Al Fat'h was used with a unitary High Explosive (HE) warhead or a Submunition warhead, and was not intended for Chemical or Biological Weapon (CBW) use.
Source.

Prior to the war 2003 invasion of Iraq, the UN uncovered the smoking gun with regards to Saddam's ongoing program to develop the means to deliver WMDs. The discovery of Saddam's Al Samoud 2 and Al Fatah were proof of an ongoing weapons program in violation of UN restrictions. The Iraq survey group would later declare that the warheads were merely fitted with a "high-explosive (HE) warhead" and that there was no evidence that the Iraqi government had "considered or designed bulk-filled CBW warheads for the Al Samud." However, the Iraq survey group also stated:
Although ISG has recovered no evidence to suggest that “special” warheads were developed for the Al Samuds, the warhead is a direct extrapolation of the impact warhead design for the Scud and Al Husayn missiles and could be modified in the same way Iraq modified the Al Husayn HE warhead to produce crude CBW warheads.

Iraq retained the intellectual capital for reproducing these kinds of “special” warhead designs, so modification and production of this crude type of warhead could be achieved in a matter of weeks with a relatively small team of specialized individuals.

Simply put, in the matter of a few weeks Saddam could modify the Al Samoud and the Al Fatah to carry a chemical or biological warhead using the exact same methods he used to modify previous missiles in order to create WMDs.

With regards to the myth that no WMDs were found: 500 chemical weapons, a nuclear centrifuge and nuclear weapon documents, 1.8 tons of uranium, 2 ongoing illegal missile programs capable of being converted for use with WMDs, enough dual-use equipment to reinstitute WMD production within weeks, and experienced scientists capable of making WMDs on the government payroll have all been found in Iraq. We don't know if Saddam's WMD programs manufactured "new" WMDs between 1996 and 2003, but we do know that he kept his programs in place, that he continued to acquire components which could be used in his weapons programs, and that he did not destroy his chemical weapon caches.

None of this information that I have acquired exclusively through internet research(including the ISG report, UNMOVIC reports, and mainstream news articles) is secret, hard to find, or otherwise unavailable to anyone, least of all investigative journalists. Nevertheless "investigative journalists" continue to print "No WMDs have been found in Iraq." It is false, wrong, misleading, and calculated. The next time you hear someone say, "but no WMDs were found" you will know better; and hopefully you will speak up.

Friday, January 5, 2007

Iraq War Mythology Part 1: Why America Invaded Iraq

I will be writing a series of posts on what I like to call Iraq War Mythology. The purpose of these posts will be to tackle common misconceptions, or myths, about the war in Iraq. I hope to take on these issues in a comprehensive but thoughtful manner. My goal is to find the facts and refute the myths.

The first Iraq war myth I wish to tackle regards the reason America invaded Iraq. There are two common misconceptions regarding why America invaded Iraq. The first myth, which gained traction early on in anti-war protests - primarily before the actual invasion took place- was that America was waging a war for oil. The second myth, which has become far more pervasive and which has largely eliminated the first misconception, is that the only reason we invaded Iraq was to find weapons of mass destruction.

Here are some good sources which reflect the notion that oil is, if not one of the biggest issues, the only issue in a war with Iraq. (WARNING please do not take these links seriously. The logic behind them is seriously flawed. They all contain bold assertions which are based on assumption and do not logically pan out)

A U.S.-led ouster of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein could open a bonanza for American oil companies long banished from Iraq, scuttling oil deals between Baghdad and Russia, France and other countries, and reshuffling world petroleum markets, according to industry officials and leaders of the Iraqi opposition.
Source.

This Looming War Isn't About Chemical Warheads or Human Rights: It's About Oil
Along with the concern for 'vital interests' in the Gulf, this war was concocted five years ago by oil men such as Dick Cheney

...

Once an American regime is installed in Baghdad, our oil companies will have access to 112 billion barrels of oil. With unproven reserves, we might actually end up controlling almost a quarter of the world's total reserves. And this forthcoming war isn't about oil?
Source.

American presidents have never hesitated to use this power when deemed necessary to protect U.S. oil interests in the Gulf. When, following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, the first President Bush sent hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia in August 1990, he did so with absolute confidence that the application of American military power would eventually result in the safe delivery of ever-increasing quantities of Middle Eastern oil to the United States. This presumption was clearly a critical factor in the younger Bush's decision to invade Iraq in March 2003.
Source.

Iraq War is "War for Oil" - Los Angeles Times

"While the Bush administration, the media and nearly all the Democrats still refuse to explain the war in Iraq in terms of oil, the ever-pragmatic members of the Iraq Study Group share no such reticence. Page 1, Chapter 1 ... lays out Iraq's importance: "It has the world's second-largest known oil reserves." The report makes visible to everyone the elephant in the room: that we are fighting, killing and dying in a war for oil. The Iraq Study Group would commit U.S. troops to Iraq for several more years to ... provide security for Iraq's oil infrastructure. We can thank the Iraq Study Group for making its case publicly. It is now our turn to decide if we wish to spill more blood for oil
Source.

Here are some excellent refutations to the notion that America invaded Iraq for oil (These are included as a counterbalance to the erroneous logic above):

For example, the author of a recent letter to The Collegian, Ashland University’s student newspaper, simply lists a few facts—American consume "more 25 percent of the world’s oil output", Iraq has "the world’s second-largest proven reserves of oil in the world," and American oil companies "currently have no stake in the Iraqi oil market"—then connects the dots to conclude that any war against Iraq would have nothing to do with liberating Iraqis from a brutal tyrant, but everything to do with "liberating oil."

At its heart this is nothing more than what even sophisticated leftists refer to as "vulgar Marxism." There is no need to prove that the Bush administration has oil in mind. One must merely show that there is a possibility that a material interest might be involved, then sit back with a knowing smirk, confident that the true motive has been uncovered. Further evidence—indeed, any further argument—is unnecessary. The rhetoric coming from the White House and the Pentagon might fool the hoi polloi, but not the jaded mind of the economic determinist.
Source.

Nothing demonstrates the political and moral bankruptcy of the American liberal left more clearly than the current attempt to portray military action against Iraq as "for the oil".
...
The flagrant misrepresentation in this assertion seems to be an attempt to trivialize an invasion as motivated by a business decision on behalf of one of the left's favorite scapegoats - the oil business. Such a characterization fails on the basis of being an extremely bad business decision.
...
A war "for the oil" thus can be subjected to a cost-benefit analysis.
...
So the most likely outcome of an Iraqi invasion is a reduction of supplies and increased prices; clearly an additional cost attributable to an invasion, not a benefit, and exactly contrary to a claim that the invasion is "for the oil".
...
Estimates of the costs to the government of the United States for an invasion of Iraq seem to be mostly between $50 billion to $200 billion. If we invade Iraq for oil, the U.S. government must be able to derive a benefit from the oil greater than this cost. What is not clear is how Washington would be paid back for the war.
...
Governments can charge taxes and fees. The United States will not be intending to occupy Iraq, but to establish a new government. The new government will be expected to honor international commitments and contracts, particularly debt repayment. Iraq owes Russia about $8 billion. The United States has no taxing or fee-charging authority in Iraq. If the United States did, by brute force, impose a tax on Iraqi crude, it could not be an add-on to the market price at which crude is sold in the international market or no one would buy it. If that crude is taxed on the net to Iraq, it must be a fee taken from the Iraqi government share and could not be more than about $3 per barrel without imposing an intolerable burden on a country which the United States will be trying to stabilize economically and politically. The United States government currently pays about 4 percent for long-term (10-year) money; that corresponds to $4 billion per year for a 100-billion-dollar war. A $3-per-barrel tax will bring in about $2.4 billion per year; not enough even to pay the interest on the cost of the war.
...
Could we increase production in Iraq after an invasion? Yes, but that increase would also require investment just as it would anywhere. We can make that investment in Iraq if the opportunity is available or elsewhere if it is not. But in Iraq any investment for oil would be increased by the large sunk cost of the war. That cost is not justified by the amount of oil production. Nothing is changed by an invasion and the cost of the war is still a large cost without any return based on oil.

From a political and diplomatic standpoint, the United States will probably not be able to impose any taxes or fees on the production nor take any competitive advantage for American companies.
...
So not only can the United States not receive any direct payback of the cost of the war from the oil, but any significant increase of Iraqi supplies will probably not be realized for a few, or possibly several, years.

As a business decision, invading Iraq "for the oil" is a loser, a big loser. Anyone who would propose, in a corporate boardroom, invading Iraq for the oil would probably find his career rather short. No, the slogan "no war for oil" is a blatant misrepresentation propagated for political reasons.
Source.

Evan Maloney: Do you think he is going to keep the oil fields after the war?
Protestors: Well, yeah. Yes
Evan Maloney: Why didn't we keep the oil fields after the original Gulf War?
Protestors: (dumb look) uh... gee.. I dunno... That's a very good question. I'm not sure.
Watch the Amazing Video.

The congressional resolution to attack Iraq (if it didn’t comply with U.N. resolutions) was justified by 23 paragraphs of reasons among which were:
1) Iraq didn’t honor the 1991 cease-fire agreement.
2) Caches of illegal weapons had been discovered in Iraq -- Iraq had thwarted U.N. attempts to supervise their destruction.
3) The U.S. Congress in 1998 had concluded that Iraq’s weapons programs represented a threat to the U.S. and it authorized President Clinton to deal with it.
4) Iraq posed a continuing threat because of its weapons and because it supported terrorist groups.
5) Iraq had used illegal weapons.
6) Iraq had demonstrated a continuing hostility toward the U.S.
7) Members of al Qaeda were training in Iraq.
8) The attack of 9-11 underscored the danger of having illegal weapons in the hands of terrorists and the danger that was posed by the willingness of nations like Iraq to provide such weapons to them (and through them, to the U.S.).
Source.

"There had been a perspective that is widely spread among Arabs and the anti war, even some Iraqis, that America came to Iraq to steal the oil and other natural resources from Iraq (I don't know if anyone supports this idea in the USA) and I’ve got sick of seeing this ridiculous idea written on the walls in Baghdad or on signs held by the supposed peace activists or even being spoken in interviews on al-jazeera or other Arab media by those who pretend that they care for the interests of the Iraqi people. I wonder how their brilliant, clear thinking got to that nonnegotiable conclusion!!?
...
Everyone knows that the American forces need about (4 billion) dollars/month for their supplies, operations and reconstruction work. I find it so naive for someone to think that the USA is spending 4 billions a month to 'steal' 1,5 billions.

"The USA has already spent (or assigned) over 200 billion dollars, which requires the Americans to wait for over 10 years to get their money back.

"What a great investment!!!

"And that's only in the case that America is 'stealing' all the oil or money of Iraq, while as a matter of fact, all the money that oil yields is spent to provide food, medications and of course to pay salaries to the Iraqis. The war was never for oil itself, the aims of the war were freeing the Iraqi people, destroying Saddam's WMD's, fighting international terrorism and the spread of freedom and democracy in the M.E.
Source.

"What are we accomplishing with a war for oil that we couldn't achieve more easily via peaceful means?"

We can't be going to war to get Saddam to sell us oil because he already does.

Do we want him to sell us MORE oil? Well then all we'd have to do is ask. Iraq is desperate to acquire more revenue.

Do we want to increase the price of oil to make the oil companies more profitable? Again, that's easy to do. We could simply destroy the Iraqi oil fields in retaliation for their attacks on our planes in the "no fly" zone. That would cause a large temporary spike in the price of oil.

Do we want to get more oil on the world market so we can buy cheaper oil? We could easily convince the UN to remove the sanctions and Iraq would quickly double their oil production. They're currently producing way under capacity.

Do we want to get the oil field contracts that the French and Russians have? Behind the scenes, Bush could have offered to have the sanctions lifted if Hussein would have torn up the contracts he had with the French and Russians. If we didn't want the sanctions in place they'd be gone and the contracts Saddam made with the French and the Russians? They don't mean anything when you're dealing with a dictator like Hussein -- unless you've got a military capable of enforcing the deal. Also, just as a side note, the war, the occupation, and aid we'll give Iraq will end up costing us much more than those oil fields are worth even if we would have gotten them all (which we won't).

Do we want to control the country that has the 2nd largest supply of oil in the world so we'll still have a source of oil after much of the rest of the planet has gone dry? Well, this makes no sense at all in world where relationships between nations change regularly. Think about how our relationships with Pakistan, Russia, South Korea, & Germany have changed just since 9/11. The only way we could insure that we would still have access to Iraq's oil decades from now would be to make them into a US colony with a puppet ruler who actually takes orders from us. Is there anyone out there who actually thinks this is going to happen despite the fact that we're not doing it anywhere else in the world today?
Source.

Who is getting the money you might ask? According to multiple sources, the money, 6.9 billion in 2004 with a total of 10.79 billion, including 2003 oil proceeds are in the Central Bank of Iraq. Much of these proceeds are earmarked by the Iraqi Interim Government for reconstruction efforts along with 8.1 billion remaining from the recently released Food for Oil funds administered by the UN and transferred to the coalition on Nov. 21, 2003.

Of course, the CTs got heated up over the transfer and began calling it the black hole, insisting that 4 billion in oil for food money was missing based on their estimations. Little did they know that they were probably right on target with missing money, but it wasn't the coalition that took it.
Source.

There are countless more sources of claims that the Iraq war was about oil and countless more sources refuting undeniably that acquiring oil was NOT the reason America invaded Iraq. I am certain their are far better examples than the ones I have hastily brought together, but the preceding links are fine for the purpose of demonstration.

The claim that America was preparing to wage a war for oil was made primarily before the actual invasion of Iraq. It was an effective argument up until about the time that it was proven wrong.

America has been in Iraq for several years now, and there have been no reports of the Bush administration stealing oil from the Iraqi people. As many of the above sources point out, if Bush wanted oil from Iraq so badly, why not just have the UN lift sanctions and buy it directly from Saddam? That would have been far less costly than engaging in war.

After the invasion, a new myth took over as the prevailing war rationale: WMDs were the only reason America went to war. This notion quickly became very popular because Bush's political opposition and the media were very quick to declare that Iraq had no WMDs, and that Bush must have known that there were no WMDs. Their conclusion: Bush lied about the only reason we went to war.

The "No WMD" myth is a myth unto itself. However the myth that recovering Saddam's WMDs were the sole reason we went to war is as pervasive as any of the common misconceptions about Iraq. How often have you heard someone say, "the only reason we went into Iraq was for WMDs!" or "Bush lied about the primary reason for invading Iraq."

As many educated in the political process are aware, the President cannot declare war. It takes an act of Congress to commit the United States to war. Prior to the 2003 Iraq War invasion, the United States congress authorized the President to go to war with the following piece of legislation (warning, long and technical):

Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of United States Armed Forces Against Iraq

Whereas in 1990 in response to Iraq's war of aggression against and illegal occupation of Kuwait, the United States forged a coalition of nations to liberate Kuwait and its people in order to defend the national security of the United States and enforce United Nations Security Council resolutions relating to Iraq;

Whereas after the liberation of Kuwait in 1991, Iraq entered into a United Nations sponsored cease-fire agreement pursuant to which Iraq unequivocally agreed, among other things, to eliminate its nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons programs and the means to deliver and develop them, and to end its support for international terrorism;

Whereas the efforts of international weapons inspectors, United States intelligence agencies, and Iraqi defectors led to the discovery that Iraq had large stockpiles of chemical weapons and a large scale biological weapons program, and that Iraq had an advanced nuclear weapons development program that was much closer to producing a nuclear weapon than intelligence reporting had previously indicated;

Whereas Iraq, in direct and flagrant violation of the cease-fire, attempted to thwart the efforts of weapons inspectors to identify and destroy Iraq's weapons of mass destruction stockpiles and development capabilities, which finally resulted in the withdrawal of inspectors from Iraq on October 31, 1998;

Whereas in 1998 Congress concluded that Iraq's continuing weapons of mass destruction programs threatened vital United States interests and international peace and security, declared Iraq to be in "material and unacceptable breach of its international obligations" and urged the President "to take appropriate action, in accordance with the Constitution and relevant laws of the United States, to bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (Public Law 105-235);

Whereas Iraq both poses a continuing threat to the national security of the United States and international peace and security in the Persian Gulf region and remains in material and unacceptable breach of its international obligations by, among other things, continuing to possess and develop a significant chemical and biological weapons capability, actively seeking a nuclear weapons capability, and supporting and harboring terrorist organizations;

Whereas Iraq persists in violating resolutions of the United Nations Security Council by continuing to engage in brutal repression of its civilian population thereby threatening international peace and security in the region, by refusing to release, repatriate, or account for non-Iraqi citizens wrongfully detained by Iraq, including an American serviceman, and by failing to return property wrongfully seized by Iraq from Kuwait;

Whereas the current Iraqi regime has demonstrated its capability and willingness to use weapons of mass destruction against other nations and its own people;

Whereas the current Iraqi regime has demonstrated its continuing hostility toward, and willingness to attack, the United States, including by attempting in 1993 to assassinate former President Bush and by firing on many thousands of occasions on United States and Coalition Armed Forces engaged in enforcing the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council;

Whereas members of al Qaida, an organization bearing responsibility for attacks on the United States, its citizens, and interests, including the attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, are known to be in Iraq;

Whereas Iraq continues to aid and harbor other international terrorist organizations, including organizations that threaten the lives and safety of American citizens;

Whereas the attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001 underscored the gravity of the threat posed by the acquisition of weapons of mass destruction by international terrorist organizations;

Whereas Iraq's demonstrated capability and willingness to use weapons of mass destruction, the risk that the current Iraqi regime will either employ those weapons to launch a surprise attack against the United States or its Armed Forces or provide them to international terrorists who would do so, and the extreme magnitude of harm that would result to the United States and its citizens from such an attack, combine to justify action by the United States to defend itself;

Whereas United Nations Security Council Resolution 678 authorizes the use of all necessary means to enforce United Nations Security Council Resolution 660 and subsequent relevant resolutions and to compel Iraq to cease certain activities that threaten international peace and security, including the development of weapons of mass destruction and refusal or obstruction of United Nations weapons inspections in violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 687, repression of its civilian population in violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 688, and threatening its neighbors or United Nations operations in Iraq in violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 949;

Whereas Congress in the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution (Public Law 102-1) has authorized the President "to use United States Armed Forces pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 678 (1990) in order to achieve implementation of Security Council Resolutions 660, 661, 662, 664, 665, 666, 667, 669, 670, 674, and 677";

Whereas in December 1991, Congress expressed its sense that it "supports the use of all necessary means to achieve the goals of United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 as being consistent with the Authorization of Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution (Public Law 102-1)," that Iraq's repression of its civilian population violates United Nations Security Council Resolution 688 and "constitutes a continuing threat to the peace, security, and stability of the Persian Gulf region," and that Congress, "supports the use of all necessary means to achieve the goals of United Nations Security Council Resolution 688";

Whereas the Iraq Liberation Act (Public Law 105-338) expressed the sense of Congress that it should be the policy of the United States to support efforts to remove from power the current Iraqi regime and promote the emergence of a democratic government to replace that regime;

Whereas on September 12, 2002, President Bush committed the United States to "work with the United Nations Security Council to meet our common challenge" posed by Iraq and to "work for the necessary resolutions," while also making clear that "the Security Council resolutions will be enforced, and the just demands of peace and security will be met, or action will be unavoidable";

Whereas the United States is determined to prosecute the war on terrorism and Iraq's ongoing support for international terrorist groups combined with its development of weapons of mass destruction in direct violation of its obligations under the 1991 cease-fire and other United Nations Security Council resolutions make clear that it is in the national security interests of the United States and in furtherance of the war on terrorism that all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions be enforced, including through the use of force if necessary;

Whereas Congress has taken steps to pursue vigorously the war on terrorism through the provision of authorities and funding requested by the President to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations or persons who planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001 or harbored such persons or organizations;

Whereas the President and Congress are determined to continue to take all appropriate actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations or persons who planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such persons or organizations;

Whereas the President has authority under the Constitution to take action in order to deter and prevent acts of international terrorism against the United States, as Congress recognized in the joint resolution on Authorization for Use of Military Force (Public Law 107-40); and

Whereas it is in the national security of the United States to restore international peace and security to the Persian Gulf region;

Now, therefore, be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SEC. 1. SHORT TITLE.

This joint resolution may be cited as the "Authorization for the Use of Military Force Against Iraq".

SEC. 2. SUPPORT FOR UNITED STATES DIPLOMATIC EFFORTS

The Congress of the United States supports the efforts by the President to--

(a) strictly enforce through the United Nations Security Council all relevant Security Council resolutions applicable to Iraq and encourages him in those efforts; and

(b) obtain prompt and decisive action by the Security Council to ensure that Iraq abandons its strategy of delay, evasion and noncompliance and promptly and strictly complies with all relevant Security Council resolutions.

SEC. 3. AUTHORIZATION FOR USE OF UNITED STATES ARMED FORCES.

(a) AUTHORIZATION. The President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in order to


(1) defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and
(2) enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council Resolutions regarding Iraq.

(b) PRESIDENTIAL DETERMINATION.

In connection with the exercise of the authority granted in subsection (a) to use force the President shall, prior to such exercise or as soon there after as may be feasible, but no later than 48 hours after exercising such authority, make available to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President pro tempore of the Senate his determination that

(1) reliance by the United States on further diplomatic or other peaceful means alone either (A) will not adequately protect the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq or (B) is not likely to lead to enforcement of all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq, and

(2) acting pursuant to this resolution is consistent with the United States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations or persons who planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorists attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.

(I have ommitted the rest of the act)


I'll bet you didn't read all of that. Don't worry, neither did the press, nor did Bush's political opponents, apparently. This list is a summary of the joint resolution

1. Iraq entered into a cease-fire agreement in which Saddam agreed to:
a) cease fire
b) eliminate its nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons programs and
c) the means to deliver and
d) develop them and
e) end its support for international terrorism.

2. Iraqi defectors led to the discovery that Saddam had been hiding his weapons and ongoing weapons programs.

3. Iraq threw out UN inspectors in 1998, violating the cease-fire agreement.

4. In 1998 Congress passed a law specifically requesting the President to bring Iraq into compliance with the UN resolutions

5. Iraq posed a continuing threat to US national security, international peace, and security in the Persian Gulf.

6. Iraq, in violation of UN resolutions, continued in the brutal repression of its people.

7. Iraq's failure to return people wrongfully detained, including a US serviceman.

8. Iraq's failure to return property wrongfully seized from Kuwait.

9. Iraq's demonstrated willingness to use WMDs against other nations and its own people.

10. Iraq's continuing hostility toward, and willingness to attack, the United States, including a 1993 attempt to assassinate former President Bush, and attacks on nations enforcing the No-Fly zone.

11. Members of Al Qaeda were known to be in Iraq

12. Iraq's continued support of international terrorism

13. The risk Saddam's WMDs posed to the United States in Saddam's hands or in the hands of international terrorists

14. The established US policy towards Iraq was for regime change

There is no doubt that WMDs were one of the reasons America invaded Iraq; but it is wrong to say that it was the only reason or even that it was the primary reason.

Why did Congress list so many reasons if the only one that mattered was the WMD issue? Regardless, the myths regarding the rationale for invading Iraq are busted. It wasn't to steal or otherwise acquire oil and it wasn't only to find WMDs.