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You probably missed the news because it didn't get much play, but a small, crude weapon of mass destruction may have been used by Saddam's terrorists in Iraq this week.

The apparent weapon was sarin gas, a highly toxic nerve agent that causes victims to choke to death. Developed by the Nazis, it has been used in the past by terrorists in Japan to kill a dozen subway riders and panic thousands, and by Saddam Hussein, who produced tons of it to kill Iraqi Kurds.

Rigged as an "improvised explosive device," or roadside bomb, the 155-millimeter howitzer shell was accidentally detonated by a U.S. ordnance team. Two men were treated for what an Army spokesman called "minor exposure" to the nerve gas.

You never saw such a rush to dismiss this as not news. U.N. weapons inspectors whose reputations rest on denial of Saddam's W.M.D. pooh-poohed the report. "It doesn't strike me as a big deal," said David Kay.

"Sarin Bomb Is Likely a Leftover From the 80's" was USA Today's Page 10 brushoff; maybe the terrorists didn't know their shell was loaded with sarin. Besides, say our lionized apostles of defeat, a poison-gas bomb does not a "stockpile" make. Even the Defense Department, on the defensive, strained not to appear alarmist, saying confirmation was needed for the field tests.

In this rush to misjudgment, we can see an example of the "Four Noes" that have become the defeatists' platform.

The first "no" is no stockpiles of W.M.D., used to justify the war, were found. With the qualifier "so far" left out, the absence of evidence is taken to be evidence of absence. In weeks or years to come — when the pendulum has swung, and it becomes newsworthy to show how cut-and-runners in 2004 were mistaken — logic suggests we will see a rash of articles and blockbuster books to that end.

These may well reveal the successful concealment of W.M.D., as well as prewar shipments thereof to Syria and plans for production and missile delivery, by Saddam's Special Republican Guard and fedayeen, as part of his planned guerrilla war — the grandmother of all battles. The present story line of "Saddam was stupid, fooled by his generals" would then be replaced by "Saddam was shrewder than we thought."

This will be especially true for bacteriological weapons, which are small and easier to hide. In a sovereign and free Iraq, when germ-warfare scientists are fearful of being tried as prewar criminals, their impetus will be to sing — and point to caches of anthrax and other mass killers.

Defeatism's second "no" is no connection was made between Saddam and Al Qaeda or any of its terrorist affiliates. This is asserted as revealed truth with great fervor, despite an extensive listing of communications and meetings between Iraqi officials and terrorists submitted to Congress months ago.

Most damning is the rise to terror's top rank of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who escaped Afghanistan to receive medical treatment in Baghdad. He joined Ansar al-Islam, a Qaeda offshoot whose presence in Iraq to murder Kurds at Saddam's behest was noted in this space in the weeks after 9/11. His activity in Iraq was cited by President Bush six months before our invasion. Osama's disciple Zarqawi is now thought to be the televised beheader of a captive American.

The third "no" is no human-rights high ground can be claimed by us regarding Saddam's torture chambers because we mistreated Iraqi prisoners. This equates sleep deprivation with life deprivation, illegal individual humiliation with official mass murder. We flagellate ourselves for mistreatment by a few of our guards, who will be punished; he delightedly oversaw the shoveling of 300,000 innocent Iraqis into unmarked graves. Iraqis know the difference.

The fourth "no" is no Arab nation is culturally ready for political freedom and our attempt to impose democracy in Iraq is arrogant Wilsonian idealism.

In coming years, this will be blasted by revisionist reportage as an ignoble ethnic-racist slur. Iraqis will gain the power, with our help, to put down the terrorists and find their own brand of political equilibrium.

Will today's defeatists then admit they were wrong? That's a fifth "no."


Homepage:: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/19/opinion/19SAFI.html?ex=1085544000&en=ff9eb455e4ade53e&ei=5062&partner=GOOGLE


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Typical zionist propaganda

19.05.2004 06:50


An insightful artical that brought to light many things we did not know. What a refreshing break from the more obvious stories like say, Verint and Amdoc setting up Iraqi phones so israel can tap their phones like they do ours.

Ira

Ira Goldman
e-mail:: goldman762@yahoo.com



Unlikely Sarin was Saddam's

19.05.2004 22:13


If you would consider former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter credible then his accounts prior to the invasion of Iraq may be useful in trying to determine whether or not the sarin gas used recently was part of Saddam Hussein's supposed hidden stockpiles of chemical weapons. According to Ritter, the inspectors from 1991 to 1998 destroyed 100 percent of Iraq's nuclear program and the production equipment for the chemical weapons. During the first Gulf War, Iraq's plant for producing sarin and tabun chemical weapons was destroyed. Biological weapons anthrax and botulinum toxin have a shelf life of three years, and their manufacturing plant was destroyed by inspectors. The inspections, which ended in 1998, left 5 to 10 percent of Iraq's weapons program unaccounted for. With a shelf life of three to five years, any weapons that Iraq may still have had are now useless.

Source: "War on Iraq" William Rivers Pitt with Scott Ritter, Context Books

As for people not being able to accept that Arab nations are "culturally ready for political freedom" and now we have to "impose democracy", Arab nations have tried to have democracy only to have those movements smashed by us. Take democratically elected in 1953 Mohammad Mossadegh of Iran who was overthrown by a CIA coup and replaced with the Shah because Mossadegh nationalized Iran's oil which was previously owned by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.

Source: "ALL THE SHAH'S MEN: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror" by Stephen Kinzer, Wiley Books, 2003

Dramatek





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