WMDs? What WMDs? (Insider Report).President Bush insisted during a March 6th press conference that the war on Iraq would be fought to confront "the threat posed to our nation and to peace by Saddam Hussein Saddam Hussein (born April 28, 1937, Tikrit, Iraq—died Dec. 30, 2006, Baghdad) President of Iraq (1979–2003). He joined the Ba'th Party in 1957. Following participation in a failed attempt to assassinate Iraqi Pres. and his weapons of terror." The peril posed by Saddam's weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or , insisted the president on that occasion, was so grave and immediate that our national survival required that we go to war: "I will not leave the American people An American people may be:
In an April 6th interview with the Washington Post, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz Paul Dundes Wolfowitz (born December 22, 1943) is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, working on issues of international economic development, Africa and public-private partnerships. argued that the principal reason for war with Iraq "was the direct threat the Iraqi leader posed to U.S. national security through his possession of weapons of mass destruction." That interview took place as U.S. and allied troops were closing in on Baghdad. The death throes throe n. 1. A severe pang or spasm of pain, as in childbirth. See Synonyms at pain. 2. throes A condition of agonizing struggle or trouble: a country in the throes of economic collapse. of the Iraq regime presented tremendous risk to our forces if Saddam actually possessed WMDs, given that the dying regime would have nothing to lose if it chose to unleash those weapons. Thankfully, this did not happen. As coalition troops seized control of the Iraqi capital and other major cities, the public was treated to footage of joyful joy·ful adj. Feeling, causing, or indicating joy. See Synonyms at glad1. joy ful·ly adv. Iraqis tearing
down Saddam's statute--and other Iraqis gleefully glee·ful adj. Full of jubilant delight; joyful. glee ful·ly adv.glee pillaging shops, stores, and the Iraqi National Museum. But, as of this writing, coalition troops have yet to turn up the elusive WMDs. Amid saturation coverage of Baghdad's liberation, the principal reason for the war--Saddam's alleged possession of WMDs--was all but forgotten. During an April 9th Pentagon press conference, a reporter asked Defense Secretary Rumsfeld how important it was that U.S.-led forces find Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, which provided "the rationale for the war." The normally straight-speaking Rumsfeld offered an artfully opaque reply in which he speculated the WMDs might have been moved out of the country and concluded: "I don't get the thrust of the question." |
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