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Keyword: Weapons of Mass Destruction

Answers to Sean Hannity, No. 22 Email Print

Mr. Hannity: "I'm no opponent of open and honest debate, even over questions of foreign policy...I would never claim that an earnest difference of opinion about foreign policy is unpatriotic....But when it comes to debate during wartime, I think one principle is clear: The only responsible argument is one that's made in good faith. The Democrats have violated that principle." (pp. 214-215)

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Answers to Sean Hannity, No. 19 Email Print

Mr. Hannity: Saddam Hussein was an evil outlaw, a cruel tyrant who deserves death.

My response: News of the evil character of Saddam Hussein has been greatly exaggerated. Hussein did flaunt the UN by refusing weapons inspectors entry into some parts of Iraq between 1987 and 1991 and between 1998 and 2002. He invaded Kuwait in 1990, and a few dishonorable troops in his army butchered scores of innocent people during that invasion. He unquestionably ran a tight ship of the central Mideast country, denying the Iraqi people many freedoms we take for granted and executing thousands of political dissidents. And when some treasonous Kurds and revolutionary Shiites plotted to overthrow Saddam's government in the 1980s, he overreacted by killing 175,000 people, most of whom were innocent.

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A Convoluted Book Email Print

Disarming Iraq, Hans Blix, 304 pages, Pantheon Books, New York, 2004.

Convoluted. That's the word that came to my mind after finishing this enlightening yet strongly opinionated account written by the high-profile man who was in charge of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and then the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), the two United Nations commissions responsible for divesting Iraq of illegal nuclear, chemical, germ and radiological armaments. On the one hand, Blix presents many unknown details regarding the twelve-year-long international efforts to ensure that Iraq was free of weapons of mass destruction and the Iraqi government's varying degrees of cooperation with those efforts, especially in the months prior to the US-led invasion of that country. But on the other hand, Blix--both as an inspector and in the book--permits his own bias to cloud his judgment, handles the entire affair in a roundabout and disconnected manner, and uses circular reasoning that leads nowhere.

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Are Americans as Ignorant on the Iraq War as Time Magazine States They Are? Email Print

Time Magazine's March 13, 2006 issue presents the statistics: "85% -- Proportion who say the main mission in Iraq is to retaliate for Saddam's role in 9/11."

Who took the poll?  When?  Where?  Otherwise it is as meaningless as the drivel dished out by Time writers Joe Klein and Charles Krauthammer.  If the poll is accurate the American public is far more ignorant of reality than I thought they were.

In personal conversations I have had with individuals, which is not a scientific analysis, approximately 90% say the U.S. went into Iraq for a three letter word - "Oil"!  This is often followed by a few choice four-letter words!

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