WMD (W. Makes Dumb)

Written by Hal Pawluk
Published June 24, 2003

The current excuse for not finding Weapons of Mass Destruction (known as Chemical and Biological Weapons before the White House PR Department got hold of the term) is that they were looted before the Americans got to them.

What's next? "My dog ate 'em"?

http://www.itv.com/news/1813966.html

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WMD (W. Makes Dumb)
Published: June 24, 2003
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Section: Politics
Writer: Hal Pawluk
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#1 — June 24, 2003 @ 17:03PM — Michael Croft [URL]

No, next we stop talking about it, because we're on to Iran. Or Burma. I hate it when I agree with George Will.

#2 — June 24, 2003 @ 17:04PM — Michael Croft [URL]

George on WMD: http://www.sacbee.com/content/opinion/national/will/story/6887650p-7837314c.html

#3 — June 24, 2003 @ 20:07PM — Brian Flemming [URL]

Paul Krugman today:

...some commentators have suggested that Mr. Bush should be let off the hook as long as there is some interpretation of his prewar statements that is technically true. Really? We're not talking about a business dispute that hinges on the fine print of the contract; we're talking about the most solemn decision a nation can make. If Mr. Bush's speeches gave the nation a misleading impression about the case for war, close textual analysis showing that he didn't literally say what he seemed to be saying is no excuse. On the contrary, it suggests that he knew that his case couldn't stand close scrutiny.

Consider, for example, what Mr. Bush said in his "denial and deception" speech about the supposed Saddam-Osama link: that there were "high-level contacts that go back a decade." In fact, intelligence agencies knew of tentative contacts between Saddam and an infant Al Qaeda in the early 1990's, but found no good evidence of a continuing relationship. So Mr. Bush made what sounded like an assertion of an ongoing relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda, but phrased it cagily -- suggesting that he or his speechwriter knew full well that his case was shaky.

Other commentators suggest that Mr. Bush may have sincerely believed, despite the lack of evidence, that Saddam was working with Osama and developing nuclear weapons. Actually, that's unlikely: why did he use such evasive wording if he didn't know that he was improving on the truth? In any case, however, somebody was at fault. If top administration officials somehow failed to apprise Mr. Bush of intelligence reports refuting key pieces of his case against Iraq, they weren't doing their jobs. And Mr. Bush should be the first person to demand their resignations.

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