<* US *> wrote in message news:iojdi4pgd8j74ktjudt8gg20qb584n9ti1@4ax.com...
> On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 07:58:43 -0600, "Doopman"
> wrote:
>
>>...cite your source.
>
> If you weren't an idiot, you'd have said that in response
> to the claim of WMD in Iraq.
>
> Instead, in your idiocy, you worship war criminals.
Saddam's defiance of 14 UN resolutions
http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/iraq/decade/sect2.html
The Halabja poison gas attack occurred in the period March 16-17, 1988,
during the Iran-Iraq War. Chemical weapons (CW) were used by the Iraqi
government forces in the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja, killing thousands of
people, most of them civilians (3,200-5,000 dead on the spot and
7,000-10,000 injured[1]). Thousands more died of horrific complications,
diseases, and birth defects in the years after the attack.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halabja_poison_gas_attack
"We shouldn't be surprised to see a car bomb with nuclear [material] explode
[in] Washington, either germ or chemical," Saddam tells aides. "So this is
coming," Saddam says on the tapes, "but not from Iraq," he adds, seeming to
indicate that Iraq would not be the source of any such attack.
An unidentified Saddam aide replies that biological weapons are easy to
construct: ". any biologist can make it in water tank and kill 100,000
person . so you can't accuse a country, one person can do it. One American
person can do it in a house, next to the White House."
On another tape, Saddam says future terrorism will be with WMD. "It is
possible in the future to see a booby trap and the explosion turns out to be
nuclear, germ or chemical."
U.S. intelligence analysts have confirmed to the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence that Saddam's voice on the audiotapes is
authentic. The analysts believe most of the tapes were recorded in the '90s,
after the first Gulf War.
"What the tapes show is that between the first gulf war and the second gulf
war, Saddam Hussein had not lost his appetite for, or interest in, weapons
of mass destruction," says Gary Milhollin of the Wisconsin Project, an
advocacy group working to slow the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
"To the contrary, he was almost obsessed by them.''
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11373537/
What's so special about this book? It's an eyewitness account, detailed and
nearly indisputable, about the WMD that did exist, were shuffled around by
Saddam's lieutenants to keep the United Nations from finding them, and were
airlifted to Syria when Allied troops converged on Baghdad!
http://www.newsmax.com/boone/saddam_hussein_wmd/2008/08/25/124654.html
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