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#1
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"Saddam Hussein was telling the truth, this time.
The United States just didn't believe him. So it took the most powerful military in the world 18 years to find the remains of the only U.S. Navy pilot shot down in an aerial battle in the 1991 Gulf War. Michael "Scott" Speicher's bones lay 18 inches deep in Iraqi sand, more or less right where a group of Iraqis had led an American search team in 1995. The search for Speicher was frustrated by two wars, mysteriously switched remains, Iraqi duplicity and a final tip from a young nomad in Anbar province." See: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091128/...hidden_in_sand |
#2
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On Nov 29, 1:12*pm, wrote:
"Saddam Hussein was telling the truth, this time. Which of these men lied and which told the truth on WMD: Saddam Hussein, Tony Blair or George Bush? Glad they found his remains. |
#3
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Eunometic wrote:
Which of these men lied and which told the truth on WMD: Saddam Hussein, Tony Blair or George Bush? Hussein lied, Blair and Bush did not. |
#4
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On Nov 29, 9:22*am, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: Eunometic wrote: Which of these men lied and which told the truth on WMD: *Saddam Hussein, Tony Blair or George Bush? Hussein lied, Blair and Bush did not. Ah, so, desuka Blair told Iraq had no WMD GORDON RAYNER, LONDON November 27, 2009 FORMER British prime minister Tony Blair received intelligence that Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction had been ''dismantled'' 10 days before Britain invaded Iraq, the Chilcot inquiry has been told. The British Foreign Office did not believe Iraq had nuclear missiles, but Mr Blair told Parliament Saddam was still a threat to the Middle East with chemical and biological weapons that could be launched at 45 minutes' notice. But Sir William Ehrman, the director of international security at the Foreign Office from 2000 to 2002, told the inquiry into the Iraq war: ''We were getting, in the very final days before military action, some [intelligence] on chemical and biological weapons that they were dismantled and [Saddam] might not have the munitions to deliver it. ''On March 10 [2003] we got a report saying the chemical weapons might have remained disassembled and that Saddam hadn't yet ordered their reassembly, and he might lack warheads capable of effective dispersal of agents.'' Despite the information, coalition forces invaded Iraq on March 20, 2003. The issue of Iraq's ability to produce or use weapons of mass destruction is central to the inquiry, which must determine whether Mr Blair misled Parliament over reasons for going to war. Tim Dowse, the head of counter-proliferation at the Foreign Office between 2001 and 2003, told the inquiry Iraq had not been "top of the list" for nations causing concern about the spread of weapons of mass destruction in the two years before the invasion. Mr Dowse said Iran, North Korea and Libya had caused far greater alarm than Saddam's regime. He said that when he came to the job in 2001, both Libya and Iran had been placed ahead of Iraq. And while Saddam had supported Palestinian terrorist groups, the assessments worked on by his officials described the regime's contacts with al-Qaeda as "quite sporadic". "After 9/11, we concluded Iraq actually stepped further back. They did not want to be associated with al-Qaeda. They weren't natural allies,'' he said. The Foreign Office ranked Iraq only the fourth most dangerous rogue state trying to develop WMD in 2001. Sanctions made it virtually impossible for Saddam to restart his nuclear program, the inquiry heard, and even without sanctions it would likely have taken five years for it to build a nuclear weapon. The hearing continues. http://www.theage.com.au/world/blair...1126-juj4.html |
#5
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On Nov 30, 1:22*am, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: Eunometic wrote: Which of these men lied and which told the truth on WMD: *Saddam Hussein, Tony Blair or George Bush? Hussein lied, Blair and Bush did not. Not according to General(Rtd) Sir Hugh "Michael" Rose KCB, CBE, DSO, QGM often known as Mike Rose. As well as commanding 22 SAS, he was Commander UNPROFOR Bosnia in 1994 during the Yugoslav Wars. He has called for Tony Blair prosecution as a war criminal. That would be equivalent to Collin Powel calling for the impeachment of President Bush. Misleading Parliament is taken very seriously in westminister systems. |
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