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Recent
Stories
June
2, 2003
Arundhati
Roy
Day of the Jackals
Norman
Madarasz
Behind the Neo-Con Curtain: Plato,
Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom
Alain
Frachon and Daniel Vernet
The Strategist and the Philosopher: Strauss and Wohlstetter
Anthony
Gancarski
Anti-Imperialism, Then & Now
Standard
Schaefer
Wasted at the Pentagon
Jason
Leopold
Rocky's Advice to the Dems
Guthrie
& Albert
HUAC 58 Years Letter
Steve
Perry
The Politics of Terror Alerts
May
31, 2003
Alexander
Cockburn
A Whiner Called Horowitz
Gary Leupp
The Frauds of War
Dave
Lindorff
Clinton, Bush, Lies and Impeachment
Tom Stephens
Does It Matter that the Bush Administration Lied?
Sasan
Fayazmanesh
Who Is Next?
Joanne
Mariner
Trivializing Terrorism
Wayne
Madsen
Ayatollah Rumseld's Busy Week
Larry Magnuson
Is a Television a Radio or a Billboard?
Elaine
Cassel
Wake Up, America!
Gila Svirsky
Waiting for the Lament to End
Susan
Davis
Kitchen Dreams
Chris Clarke
Barbra Streisand: Environmental Hypocrite
Chris
Floyd
Bush Locates Source of World Evil: God
Adam Engel
Gravity's End Zone
Poets'
Basement
Reiss, Guthrie, Orloski, Albert
May
30, 2003
Ben
Tripp
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Agenda
Neve
Gordon
The Bad Fence
Todd
Steiner
Endangered Ocean
Robert
Freeman
Bush's Tax Cuts: a Form of National Insanity
Sean
Carter
Utah Gets Fired Up for Executions
Daniel
Bacher
How Bush's War Violated International Laws
Tariq
Ali
Re-Colonizing Iraq
Steve
Perry
Bush Wars
Web Log
May
29, 2003
CounterPunch
Wire
WMD: Who Said What When
Jason
Leopold
Despite Thin Intelligence Reports,
US Plans Overthrow of Iran Regime
Ron
Jacobs
Popular Uprising, Inc.
Michelle
Ciaccorra
Bush's Nuclear Policy: Do As I Say, Not As I Do
Yves Engler
The Economics of Health Care in
America: Pay More to Die Sooner
Kimberly
Blaker
Vouchers for Jesus
Harry
Browne
Stakeknife: Britain's Army Spy at
the Top of the IRA
Stew
Albert
Cops of the World
Steve Perry
Greens 04: In or Out?
May
28, 2003
David
Vest
DubyaCo.: It's Not So Funny Any More
Dave
Lindorff
My Grandfather's Medal
John
Stanton
America's Dying: Arts and Philosophy Hold the Key
Bernard
Weiner
A PNAC Primer
Robert
Jensen
Texas Dems Set a Standard for the Rest of the Party
Ahmad Faruqui
The Oil Business of Regime Change:
the CIA and Iran
Hammond
Guthrie
Disarming Conundrums
Steve Perry
What If There's No Such Thing as Al-Qaeda?
May
27, 2003
Kurt
Nimmo
Condoleezza Rice: Huckstress for Israeli
Myths
Anthony
Gancarski
Hillary: a Dem the NeoCons Could Love?
Patrick
Cockburn
Terror, Bush and Joseph Conrad
John Chuckman
an Interpretation of Bush's Character
Kathleen
Christison
What Sharon Wants, Sharon Gets
Jeffrey
Blankfort
AIPAC Hijacks the Roadmap
Steve
Perry
Trouble in the Hinterlands
May
26, 2003
Franklin
C. Spinney
Test Anxiety: Star Wars, Punctuated
Epistimology and the Triumph of Medievalism
Elaine
Cassel
Supreme Sacrifice
Sam
Hamod
When Trained Killers Return Home
Stew Albert
The Final Conflict
May
24 / 25, 2003
Gary
Leupp
The Philosopher Kings: Leo Strauss
and the Neo-Cons
Uri Avnery
The Hannibal Procedure
Diane
Christian
Who's the Real Enemy?
"Just Cause" or "Kill the Bastards"
Alexander
Cockburn
Derrida's Double Life
William
S. Lind
Is Saddam Really Out of the Game?
William
Cook
Road to Nowhere
David Krieger
Bush's War on the Poor: Economic Justice
Ilan
Pappe
Academic Freedom Under Assault in Israel
Wayne Madsen
American Idle
Noah
Leavitt
Slowing Sowing Justice in the Killing Fields
Walt Brasch
Americans are Liars
Lenni
Brenner
John Brown and Dutch Bill
Mickey
Z.
Hope, Crosby & Al Qaeda
Michael
Ortiz Hill
Grievous Harm Here and Abroad
Adam Engel
Towers of Babel
Poets'
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Albert, Guthrie, Alam, Orloski
May
23, 2003
Standard
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Ron
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Long Live People's Park!
Michael
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Elaine
Cassel
Tigar to Ashcroft: "Secrecy is the Enemy of Democratic Govt."
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The Shi'a of Iraq
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After the Layoffs (poem)
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June
4, 2003
Manufacturing
the Iraq War
Shaky Evidence
and Bad Intelligence
By JASON LEOPOLD
Here's what we know so far about Iraq's alleged
weapons of mass destruction: of the 600 or so sites identified
by United States intelligence and Iraqi officials as places where
the country biological weapons may be hidden, about 100 of these
sites have been searched over the past six weeks and not a single
spec of anthrax or other WMD has been uncovered.
Two skeletal trailers that may have
been used to develop anthrax or botulism, scrubbed from top to
bottom when it was found, leaving no biological weapons traces
behind, according to the Department of Defense, is the only evidence
the U.S. has found so far to justify it's preemptive strike against
Iraq. But this is far from a "smoking gun and the prospects
for finding any WMD in the months ahead are becoming grim.
The media is peppering U.S. military
officials in Iraq on why WMD haven't been found yet. The responses
are short and to the point.
"I honestly don't know," said
Stephen Cambone, undersecretary of defense for U.S. intelligence,
during a briefing May 30.
Prior to the war, nearly every major
media outlet warned, based on reports from the Pentagon, that
Iraq's cache of chemical and biological weapons could be used
on U.S. and British troops sent in to Iraq to destroy Saddam
Hussein's regime.
To back up these claims, President Bush
and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said Saddam's history
of using WMD on his own people and in the war the country fought
against Iran was evidence of the viciousness of the dictatorship.
So are we to believe that Saddam suddenly got a dose of humanity,
opting instead to let his regime being torn apart rather than
go out in a blaze of glory? Or could it be that Iraq either destroyed
its WMD or never had anything substantial to begin with?
Looking back at the events that led up
to the war, it's likely the latter. The Bush administration never
presented the proof to the United Nations that its intelligence
suggesting Iraq was developing chemical and biological weapons
was superior to that of the U.N. weapons inspectors who actually
combed through the country looking for stockpiles of anthrax,
botulism or VX. Now the military, which has taken over inspections,
are finding exactly what U.N. weapons inspectors found, nothing.
Even Al Capone's safe had a couple of empty bottles of liquor
in it when Geraldo Rivera opened it up twenty years ago.
In October 2002, President Bush gave
a speech in Cincinnati and spoke about the imminent threat Iraq
posed to the U.S. because of the country's alleged ties with
al-Qaeda and its endless supply of chemical and biological weapons
"Surveillance photos reveal that
the (Iraqi) regime is rebuilding facilities that it had used
to produce chemical and biological weapons," Bush said.
"Iraq possesses ballistic missiles with a likely range of
hundreds of miles -- far enough to strike Saudi Arabia, Israel,
Turkey, and other nations -- in a region where more than 135,000
American civilians and service members live and work. We've also
discovered through intelligence that Iraq has a growing fleet
of manned and unmanned aerial vehicles that could be used to
disperse chemical or biological weapons across broad areas. We're
concerned that Iraq is exploring ways of using these UAVS for
missions targeting the United States. And, of course, sophisticated
delivery systems aren't required for a chemical or biological
attack; all that might be required are a small container and
one terrorist or Iraqi intelligence operative to deliver it.'
None of this intelligence information
has ever panned out, according to dozens of news reports over
the past five months. Most notably, according to the International
Atomic Energy Agency, Bush erred when he said last year that
Iraq was six months away from developing a nuclear weapon. Furthermore,
the president's claims that thousands of high-strength aluminum
tubes sought by Iraq were intended for a secret nuclear weapons
program.
Bush said last September in a speech
that attempts by Iraq to acquire the tubes point to a clandestine
program to make enriched uranium for nuclear bombs. But experts
contradicted Bush, saying that the evidence is ambiguous.
The report, from the Institute for Science
and International Security, a copy of which was acquired by the
Washington Post, "also contends that the Bush administration
is trying to quiet dissent among its own analysts over how to
interpret the evidence."
David Albright, a physicist who investigated
Iraq's nuclear weapons program following the 1991 Persian Gulf
War as a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency's inspection
team, the Post reported, authored the report.
The institute, headquartered in Washington,
is an independent group that studies nuclear and other security
issues."
"By themselves, these attempted
procurements are not evidence that Iraq is in possession of,
or close to possessing, nuclear weapons," the report said,
according
to the Post story. "They do not provide evidence that
Iraq has an operating centrifuge plant or when such a plant could
be operational."
The lack of evidence and public blunders
by other high-ranking officials in the Bush administration is
endless.
Secretary of State Colin Powell made
it clear in an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal February
3, a day before his famous meeting at the U.N. where he presented
"evidence" of an Iraqi weapons program, which turned
out to be the empty trailers the U.S. military found earlier
this month, that there was no "smoking gun"
"While there will be no "smoking
gun," we will provide evidence concerning the weapons programs
that Iraq is working so hard to hide," Powell said in his
op-ed. "We will, in sum, offer a straightforward, sober
and compelling demonstration that Saddam is concealing the evidence
of his weapons of mass destruction, while preserving the weapons
themselves."
However, Powell did no such thing. Instead,
Powell held up a small vial of anthrax at the U.N. meeting to
illustrate how deadly just a small vial can be and then used
that to couch his claims that Iraq's alleged stockpile of anthrax
would be much deadlier.
The same day, February 3, White House
Press Secretary Ari Fleischer dodged a dozen or so questions
about the intelligence information from sources in Iraq and from
the CIA that showed, without any doubt, that Iraq possessed WMD.
"I think the reason that we know
Saddam Hussein possesses chemical and biological weapons is from
a wide variety of means. That's how we know," Fleischer
said.
In virtually every press briefing, which
is archived
on the White House's web site, and every speech by President
Bush between January and the days leading up to the war in March
hundreds of questions were directed at Bush during stake outs
and Fleischer at his press briefings about what intelligence
information the U.S. had that could be declassified to support
it's allegations that Iraq was either developing WMD or was hiding
them. However, not a single shred of proof was offered up by
the White House to back up its claims.
Moreover, when the White House finally
seized on something tangible prior to the war, such as the existence
of long-range missiles, Iraq started destroying the weapons in
the presence of U.N. inspectors. But at this point war with Iraq
was inevitable.
In an interview with Meet the Press February
9, Tim Russert, the program's host, asked Powell about one of
the alleged WMD sites Powell spoke about at a U.N. meeting the
week before. Russert asked Powell if the U.S. knew where certain
weapons in Iraq were being stored why not just send the U.N.
inspectors in or destroy the facility rather than go to war?
Powell's response is poignant.
"Well, the inspectors eventually
did go there, and by the time they got there, they were no longer
active chemical bunkers," Powell said.
To suggest today, nearly two months after
the war in Iraq started, whether there may have been an intelligence
failure now that WMD have yet to be found is to suggest there
was some sort of intelligence in the first place.
Besides, Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and Assistant Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz both
said publicly during interviews last week that the war in Iraq
was planned two days after the 9-11 terrorist attacks, well before
the issue of WMD was every discussed by the Bush administration.
Today's
Features
Arundhati
Roy
Day of the Jackals
Norman
Madarasz
Behind the Neo-Con Curtain: Plato,
Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom
Alain
Frachon and Daniel Vernet
The Strategist and the Philosopher: Strauss and Wohlstetter
Anthony
Gancarski
Anti-Imperialism, Then & Now
Standard
Schaefer
Wasted at the Pentagon
Jason
Leopold
Rocky's Advice to the Dems
Guthrie
& Albert
HUAC 58 Years Letter
Steve
Perry
The Politics of Terror Alerts
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