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Oud 21 oktober 2007, 12:30   #101
migrantenjong
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Samsa Bekijk bericht
't is nu ook niet alsof de moslims, afrikanen enz een bloedige en wrede geschiedenis kennen, terwijl wij vredelievende europeanen en amerikanen niets anders doen dan ons verdedigen hé. de europese geschiedenis is evengoed doortrokken van bloed, wreedheid, obscurantisme, haat en tirannie.
en neen, we zijn niet aan het 'einde van de geschiedenis' gekomen, waarbij dat soort episodes voorgoed tot het verleden behoort en we voor eeuwig en drie dagen in een liberale -ahem- democratie gaan leven. dat is een lulverhaaltje dat ze u aangepraat hebben
Wij moorden geen volkeren uit. Jij misschien wel in uw vrije tijd.
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Oud 21 oktober 2007, 12:30   #102
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door kilgore Bekijk bericht
Defaitist.Die dag mogen de pakistani's schuilkelders graven.Offensief denken is de boodschap.
Er is overigens ook het rakettenschild.
Klein vraagje.

Hoedefuck helpt een rakettenschild tegen een kofferbom?
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Oud 21 oktober 2007, 20:03   #103
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door baseballpolitieker Bekijk bericht
Als je weet hoeveel politiekers we nu hebben dan weet je dan kan het gewoon niet anders dan dat er minder politiekers zullen zijn, of ze zouden in het unitaire Wallonië opeens iets van 15.000 stemmen per zetel moeten invoeren, zo kan je de zaken ook manipuleren natuurlijk.
Een globale politiek gebeurt al maar een eenheidsstaat is voorlopig nog verre toekomst en nu ook nog heel onrealistisch.
De globale economie is wel gebonden aan landen, denk maar aan boycotten enzo. Jij wilt één groot probleem oplossen maar er zo ook één miljoen kleine bij te krijgen...

Mijn probleem is zinloos geweld , verspilde energie aan futuliteiten, terwijl er dagelijks wereldwijd honderden miljoenen honger lijden, gemarteld en gedood worden. Dat zijn de echte problemen,maar daar er geen pasklare oplossing is, en dit probleem overlaat aan humanitaire groeperingen, leid men de aandacht af via futuliteiten ,als "Brussel, Halle, Vilvoorde" van wie het gros van de Belgische bevolking niet eens weet waarover het gaat.
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Oud 21 oktober 2007, 23:19   #104
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juist
we mogen de grote verbanden niet zien en niet noemen
dan zijn we complotdenkers?
en zo blijven goedbedoelende mensen maar dweilen met de kraan open in al het leed in de wereld...
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 06:02   #105
kilgore
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door migrantenjong Bekijk bericht
Klein vraagje.

Hoedefuck helpt een rakettenschild tegen een kofferbom?
Dat moet daar niet tegen helpen;Daar bestaan andere maatregelen tegen.Eens temeer,een bewezen defaitist die niet offensief denkt.
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 06:03   #106
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Samsa Bekijk bericht
't is nu ook niet alsof de moslims, afrikanen enz een bloedige en wrede geschiedenis kennen, terwijl wij vredelievende europeanen en amerikanen niets anders doen dan ons verdedigen hé. de europese geschiedenis is evengoed doortrokken van bloed, wreedheid, obscurantisme, haat en tirannie.
en neen, we zijn niet aan het 'einde van de geschiedenis' gekomen, waarbij dat soort episodes voorgoed tot het verleden behoort en we voor eeuwig en drie dagen in een liberale -ahem- democratie gaan leven. dat is een lulverhaaltje dat ze u aangepraat hebben
De hele wereld kent een bloedige geschiedenis;de linksen steken altijd alles op het westen uit zelfhaat.
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 11:10   #107
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door kilgore Bekijk bericht
De hele wereld kent een bloedige geschiedenis;de linksen steken altijd alles op het westen uit zelfhaat.
Dat is iets te simplistisch, een typisch rechts trekje.De kolonialisatie en het Vaticaan liggen inderdaad aan de basis van veel ellende.De gevolgen van het fundamentalistisch katholicisme (zie de kruisvaarten) in de middeleeuwen speelt ons nog steeds parten.De bodemschatten van anderen stelen onder het mom te beschaving te willen verspreiden bleef/blijft ook niet ongestraft.Met andere woorden, de pretentie van het Westen over de eeuwen heen, heeft ons geleid waar we vandaag staan en dat is geen fraai beeld.
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 12:31   #108
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door present_1957 Bekijk bericht
Mijn probleem is zinloos geweld , verspilde energie aan futuliteiten, terwijl er dagelijks wereldwijd honderden miljoenen honger lijden, gemarteld en gedood worden. Dat zijn de echte problemen,maar daar er geen pasklare oplossing is, en dit probleem overlaat aan humanitaire groeperingen, leid men de aandacht af via futuliteiten ,als "Brussel, Halle, Vilvoorde" van wie het gros van de Belgische bevolking niet eens weet waarover het gaat.
Die honger he, die is alleen te voorkomen door misdadige regimes en rebellengroepen uit te roeien met geweld.

Vriendelijk glimlachen helpt niet tegen aapmensen zijnde Afrikaanse dictators.
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 12:32   #109
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door kilgore Bekijk bericht
Dat moet daar niet tegen helpen;Daar bestaan andere maatregelen tegen.Eens temeer,een bewezen defaitist die niet offensief denkt.
Ik ken zo reeds een maatregel in mijn hoofd. Eens zien als jij die ook kent.

Vooruit, zoek! Hoe voorkomt men nucleaire terrorisme?
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Oud 22 oktober 2007, 22:08   #110
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door migrantenjong Bekijk bericht
Niet per se een lichtpuntje. De dedovschina ontstond, tenminste dat zeggen ze, toen men overging van een 3-jarige naar een 2-jarige dienstplicht.
De 3-jaartjes gingen toen het leven van de 2-jaartjes zuur maken om het te compenseren. Net zoals alle slechte dingen is dit traditie geworden.
mmh, naar wat ik gelezen heb bestond de Dedovstsjina al in het tsaristische leger. Het is het typische verschijnsel van "hij die er het laatst bijkomt is de pineut". Dus ik denk dat een éénjarige dienstplicht daaraan wat kan verhelpen. Nu ja: eerst en vooral moet het kader meer gezag krijgen om er tegen op te treden, en ook de wil hebben natuurlijk.
__________________
Citaat:
Ivan DeVadder in "De keien vd Wetstraat"14/09/07: vindt u zichzelf 1 van de keien van de Wetstraat?
-Louis Tobback: goh, dat is niet aan mij om dat uit te maken
-Ivan De Vadder: wij vinden alvast dat u één van die keien bent

Laatst gewijzigd door Den Ardennees : 22 oktober 2007 om 22:08.
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Oud 23 oktober 2007, 18:48   #111
present_1957
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door kilgore Bekijk bericht
Mijnheer is de typische linkse masochist die alles op het eigen volk steekt en daarbij ook nog eens de geschiedenis verkracht;Mijneer is ook blind aan het linkeroog.
Voor zoveel domheid pas ik.Wat weet jij overigens van de geschiedenis af? De enige geschiedenis die jou interesseert is de extreem rechts gemanipuleerde.Ik ga uit van een gevoel voor rechtvaardigheid, als dat volgens jou links is, bon dan is dat maar zo. De essentie van mijn diverse reacties is dat je altijd de gevolgen draagt als je iets mispeutert hebt.In de maatschappij kunnen deze gevolgen van heel lange of zelfs blijvende duur zijn.Wat is dat trouwens "eigen volk"? We zijn ook een mengelmoes van diverse volkeren die in de lage landen logeerden de laatste 2000 jaar.Pas in 1830 hielden de bezettingen op, en laten kwam de immigratie. Hoeveel Limburgers hebben bv Italiaanse roots.Of is dit ook verkrachting van de geschiedenis?
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Oud 29 oktober 2007, 10:24   #112
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Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door *Lorre* Bekijk bericht
De internationale leiders moeten voorkomen dat Iran een nucleaire macht wordt, als ze "een derde wereldoorlog" willen vermijden. Dat heeft de Amerikaanse president George W. Bush vandaag gezegd tijdens een persconferentie in het Witte Huis.

Poetin tegen militaire interventie
De Russische president Vladimir Poetin zei eerder deze week tijdens een bezoek aan Iran dat er geen bewijzen zijn dat Iran aan een kernwapen werkt. Poetin is gekant tegen een militaire interventie in Iran en verkiest de diplomatieke weg. In een reactie hierop zei Bush dat hij graag Poetins relaas van zijn ontmoeting met Ahmadinejad wil horen en dat hij hem zal vragen zijn uitspraken te duiden.

Druk uitoefenen
Toch is Bush ervan overtuigd dat ook Rusland geen belang heeft bij een Iraanse kernmacht. Hij herinnerde er bovendien aan dat Rusland en de VS in de VN-Veiligheidsraad samenwerken om Iran met economische sancties van zijn nucleaire plannen te doen afzien. "De VS zullen samen met andere staten druk blijven uitoefenen op Iran tot Teheran besluit zijn nucleaire plannen te laten varen", aldus Bush.
aldus Bush..... maar:

http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/990/Bui...om-werkt.dhtml
Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door De Morgen-AFP
-29/10/2007 10u21:10
> Nieuws
"Geen bewijs dat Iran aan atoombom werkt"
Mohammed el-Baradei.Er is geen enkel bewijs dat Iran werkt aan een atoombom. Dat heeft Mohammed el-Baradei, de directeur van het Internationaal Atoomenergie Agentschap (IAEA), vandaag verklaard.
"Ik beschik op dit moment over geen enkele informatie die wijst op een concreet en actief militair kernprogramma", aldus el-Baradei op nieuwszender CNN. Volgens de IAEA-topman gooien de Amerikanen met hun dreigementen tegen Iran enkel "olie op het vuur".
"Zelfs als Iran op dit moment pogingen doet om een kernwapen te krijgen, zouden ze nog minstens enkele jaren nodig hebben", aldus el-Baradei. Het hoofd van de IAEA benadrukte ook het belang van een diplomatieke oplossing. "We moeten via een creatieve diplomatie blijven werken. We hebben tijd. Ik zie geen andere optie dan de weg van de diplomatiek en de inspecties", benadrukte hij.
De Verenigde Staten beschuldigen Iran er al langer van dat het werkt aan een atoombom. Iran houdt vol dat haar nucleaire activiteiten van niet-militaire aard zijn en blijft de verrijking van uranium voortzetten, ondanks druk van de VS en van de VN-Veiligheidsraad.
Als de VS over informatie beschikken rond de nucleaire plannen van Iran, "dan zou ik heel blij zijn om die informatie te krijgen", stelde el-Baradei nog. "Er blijven nog veel vraagtekens. Maar hebben we in Iran elementen gezien die wijzen op mogelijke kernwapens? Neen." (afp/dm)
Dat trekt weer ontzettend erg op de onbestaande "Weapons of Mass Destruction" waarmee men ons om de oren sloeg betreffende Irak. Ik vond een artikeltje uit die periode: opvallend gelijkend, niet??:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2581017.stm
Citaat:
Tuesday, 17 December, 2002, 04:15 GMT
US weighs Iraq's weapons declaration
President Bush could announce the formal US response to Iraq's declaration of its weapons programmes in a few days' time, White House officials have said.
In his first public comments on the issue, US Secretary of State Colin Powell said there were problems with the Iraqi document submitted on 7 December.
"We approached it with scepticism and the information I have received so far is that that scepticism is well-founded," Mr Powell said in Washington on Monday.

" If the inspectors go to the right site and to the right building and take this kind of samples, I don't think they [the Iraqis] can hide anything "
David Donahue
IAEA lab chief

The Americans have said they will lead a coalition to disarm Iraq by force if it fails to co-operate fully with UN weapons inspectors, who are operating in the country after a four-year absence.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said on Monday that "it was abundantly plain, from the will of the United Nations, that this was Iraq's last chance to inform the world in an accurate, complete and full way what weapons of mass destruction they possessed".
Mr Powell said Washington's official response on the document would be forthcoming towards the end of this week, after the chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix makes his presentation on the 12,000 page document to the Security Council.
Samples

The BBC's Justin Webb in Washington says nothing has yet been set in stone, but it looks as if President Bush himself will deliver America's unfavourable verdict on the Iraqi document.
Our correspondent says it's understood that one of the problems that America will highlight is Iraq's failure to account for chemical and biological agents the country still possessed when the last inspectors let in 1998.
Meanwhile, the first samples collected by inspectors in Iraq have arrived at a laboratory in Austria run by the UN nuclear agency, where they will be analysed for any traces of a nuclear weapons programme.
An initial analysis of the eight samples will take two to three weeks, a spokesman for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) told the Associated Press news agency. Another 20 samples are expected by the weekend.
On a landmark visit to Britain the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad, said he was optimistic the Iraq crisis could be resolved peacefully.
However, the UK Prime Minister, Tony Blair, said there were clear differences in "views and emphasis" over Iraq between him and Mr Assad.
The UN Security Council resolution paving the way for the return of weapons inspectors to Iraq, adopted in November, warns Baghdad of "serious consequences" if it fails to comply with UN disarmament demands.
New inspections
The IAEA has said it hopes to have screening results from the first samples by the time its director, Mohamed El Baradei, reports to the UN Security Council on 27 January.

UN arms inspectors entered six suspect sites on Monday, including a biomedical institute at Baghdad University - the first visit to an academic facility since inspections resumed three weeks ago.
And for a third day running, Monday saw inspectors visit al-Qa'qaa, a site that was involved in the final design of a nuclear bomb before UN teams dismantled the Iraqi nuclear programme following the 1991 Gulf War.
Extra inspectors have now arrived in Iraq, bringing the total to more than 100.
Obertussen is gebleken dat het puur desinformatie was...

Laatst gewijzigd door filosoof : 29 oktober 2007 om 10:41.
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Oud 29 oktober 2007, 11:02   #113
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http://www.usatoday.com/news/washing...ell-iraq_x.htm

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door AFP
Powell calls pre-Iraq U.N. speech a 'blot' on his record
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Secretary of State Colin Powell said Thursday his prewar speech to the United Nations accusing Iraq of harboring weapons of mass destruction was a "blot" on his record.




Ex-Secretary of State Colin Powell said he was a "reluctant warrior" even when illustrating Iraq's threat to the U.N.

By Mario Tama, AFP/Getty Images
"I'm the one who presented it to the world, and (it) will always be a part of my record. It was painful. It is painful now," Powell said in an interview with Barbara Walters on ABC-News. (Related story: The story of WMDs that weren't)
The presentation by the soldier-diplomat to the world body in February 2003 lent considerable credibility to President Bush's case against Iraq and for going to war to remove President Saddam Hussein.
In the speech, Powell said he had relied on information he received at Central Intelligence Agency briefings. He said Thursday that then-director George Tenet "believed what he was giving to me was accurate."
But, Powell said, "the intelligence system did not work well."
"There were some people in the intelligence community who knew at the time that some of those sources were not good, and shouldn't be relied upon, and they didn't speak up," Powell said.
"That devastated me," he said.
Powell in the TV interview also disputed the Bush administration's linking of Saddam's regime with terrorists.
He said he had never seen a connection between Baghdad and the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington in 2001. "I can't think otherwise, because I'd never seen evidence to suggest there was one," he said.
Still, Powell said that while he has always been a "reluctant warrior" he supported Bush on going to war the month after his U.N. speech. "When the president decided that it was not tolerable for this regime to remain in violation of all those U.N. resolutions I am right there with him with the use of force," Powell said.


EN:
http://www.usatoday.com/_ads/interst...-indepth_x.htm

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Associated Press
Posted 9/2/2005 3:59 PM Updated 9/6/2005 2:51 PM





Piecing together the story of the weapons that weren't
By Charles J. Hanley, The Associated Press
Beneath the giant dome of a Baghdad palace, facing his team of scientists and engineers, George Tenet sounded more like a football coach than a spymaster, a coach who didn't know the game was over.

Weapons of mass destruction were not found by these U.N. weapons inspectors, right, in Baghdad Feb. 5, 2003, nor since.
By David Guttenfelder, AP

"Are we 85% done?" the CIA boss demanded. The arms hunters knew what he wanted to hear. "No!" they shouted back. "Let me hear it again!" They shouted again.

The weapons are out there, Tenet insisted. Go find them.

Veteran inspector Rod Barton couldn't believe his ears. "It was nonsense," the Australian biologist said of that February evening last year, when the then-chief of U.S. intelligence secretly flew to Baghdad and dropped in on the lakeside Perfume Palace, chandelier-hung home of the Iraq Survey Group.

"It wasn't that we didn't know the major answers," recalled Barton, whose account matched that of another key participant. "Are there WMD in the country? We knew the answers."

In fact, David Kay, quitting as chief of the U.S. hunt for WMD, or weapons of mass destruction, had just delivered the answer to the world. The inspectors were 85% finished, Kay said, concluding: "The weapons do not exist."

The story of the weapons that weren't there, the prelude to war, was over, but a long post-mortem is still unfolding — of lingering questions in Washington, of revelations from investigations, leaks, first-person accounts. Some 52% of Americans believe the Bush administration deliberately misled them about the presence of banned arms in Iraq, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll taken in June.

Hans Blix, U.N. inspector, says Washington's "virtual reality" about Iraq eventually collided with "our old-fashioned ordinary reality." Now, drawing from findings of the Iraq Survey Group and other official investigations, from U.N., U.S., Iraqi and British documents, from Associated Press interviews and on-scene reporting, from books by Blix and others, it's possible to reconstruct much of the "ordinary reality" of this extraordinary story, one that has changed the course of history.


By Mario Tama, Getty Images
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, left, and Hans Blix listen as Colin Powell make a case against Iraq on Feb. 5, 2003. Blix battled U.S. impatience for war while leading inspections in Iraq.

Destroyed in 1991

The story could begin behind the creamy stone walls of another palace, the hilltop Hashemiyah outside Amman, Jordan, where in August 1995 a prize Iraqi defector was pouring out for interrogators whatever they wanted to know about Baghdad's weapons of mass destruction.

Hussein Kamel, son-in-law of President Saddam Hussein, had headed Iraq's advanced arms programs during the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, when the Baathist regime unleashed chemical weapons against Iranian troops and Iraqi civilians in rebellious Kurdish areas.

What the U.N., American and other debriefers learned from Kamel led to headline-making successes for U.N. inspectors as they tracked down banned arms-making gear inside Iraq.

But an interrogation transcript shows he told them something else as well, something they questioned and kept to themselves: All Iraqi WMD were destroyed in 1991.

Hussein Kamel, soon to be killed by fellow clansmen as a traitor, was telling the truth.

The U.N. experts had entered Iraq in 1991, after U.S.-led forces drove Iraq's invasion army from Kuwait in a lightning war, and the U.N. Security Council required the defeated nation to submit to inspections and destruction of its unconventional arms.

The inspectors withdrew in late 1998, in a dispute over access to sites. By then, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) teams could report that Iraq's nuclear program, which never built a bomb, had been dismantled. As for chemical and biological weapons, only scattered questions remained about possible hidden stockpiles.

In fact, as President George W. Bush took office 25 months later, the CIA was reporting, "We do not have any direct evidence" Baghdad was rebuilding its WMD programs.

Baghdad on his mind

Bush, however, concentrated on Iraq's capital.

The new president quickly called an inner Cabinet meeting to discuss Iraq as a destabilizing force in the Mideast, ex-Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill recalls in the book, The Price of Loyalty. Tenet unrolled a grainy satellite photo of an Iraqi factory, suggested it was making banned weapons, but said his CIA didn't really know, O'Neill said.

Washington and Baghdad had glowered at each other throughout Bill Clinton's presidency, but for a decade it was largely a cold war. Now Bush was ending this White House meeting by ordering Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to study possible military action, O'Neill said. Soon U.S. policymakers began hearing more about Iraq.

In April 2001, Pentagon intelligence said satellites spotted construction at old nuclear sites. Was Iraq resuming bomb research? That same month a CIA report told of another "indicator": Iraq was shopping for thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes, said to be useful as cores of centrifuges to enrich uranium, the stuff of atom bombs.

Then a shipment of the tubes was intercepted in neighboring Jordan, news that upset Baghdad's military industry chief. Abdel Tawab Huweish needed those tubes — 3 feet long, 3 inches wide — to make standard artillery rockets. He now ordered another metal be found, one that wouldn't arouse U.S. suspicions, Huweish later told U.S. arms investigators.

On April 11, 2001, a day after the classified CIA report was distributed, the Energy Department filed a swift dissent. Energy, home of U.S. centrifuge specialists, said the tubes' dimensions weren't well-suited for centrifuges, and were more likely meant for artillery rockets. The U.N. nuclear agency, the Vienna-based IAEA, told U.S. officials the same.

Evidence shows Iraq in 2001 had little interest in nuclear "reconstitution." In one captured document from that May, Iraqi diplomats in Kenya reported to Baghdad that a Ugandan businessman had offered uranium for sale, but they turned him away, saying U.N. sanctions forbade it.

Other 'indicators' surface

The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) for months had been receiving reports from German intelligence about an Iraqi defector, code-named "Curveball," who claimed to have worked on a project to build concealed bioweapons labs atop truck trailers.

Around this time, in June 2001, the trailers that U.S. officials later thought confirmed his account were ordered built at the al-Kindi factory in northern Iraq, inspectors would learn. Contract No. 73/MD/RG/2001 called not for secret weapons labs, however, but for two trailer units to make hydrogen for weather balloons. By this time, too, U.S. intelligence had been informed that Curveball was a possible alcoholic and "out of control."


The tubes tale, Curveball's account and other questionable stories about Iraqi WMD would survive for two years, in presidential speeches and newspaper headlines, on the road to war.

For now, in the summer of 2001, Iraq was back-page news. But Condoleezza Rice, national security adviser, assured an interviewer, "Saddam Hussein is on the radar screen." By summer's end, in the traumatic aftermath of Sept. 11's terror, he was in the crosshairs.

Post-9/11

On the day after Sept. 11, the talk in the White House Situation Room was of "getting Iraq," says former White House anti-terrorism chief Richard A. Clarke. Clarke's memoir says an insistent Bush ordered him to look for "any shred" to tie Iraq to the Sept. 11 attacks — even though U.S. agencies knew al-Qaeda was responsible and Iraq wasn't linked to the terror group.


By Alex Wong, AFP/Getty Images
Joseph Wilson reported the story of Iraq receiving uranium from Nigeria was unfounded.

The immediate target was Afghanistan, however, invaded by U.S. forces in October 2001, and as 2002 began the WMD case against Iraq remained unimpressive. In his annual unclassified review, Tenet didn't even cite evidence of an imminent Iraqi nuclear threat. But Vice President Dick Cheney apparently thought he'd found such evidence, in a DIA report.

It told of a deal in 2000 in which Iraq bought 500 tons of uranium concentrate from Niger in central Africa. The information came from Italian intelligence, based on what it said was an official Niger document. Because of Cheney's interest, the CIA dispatched a seasoned Africa hand, ex-diplomat Joseph Wilson, to Niger to check it out.

After dozens of interviews, Wilson reported back that the story appeared unfounded. The State Department's intelligence bureau also deemed it implausible. In addition, the text of the supposed Niger document, transcribed for the Americans by the Italians, contained misspellings and mistaken titles for people that should have been easily detectable.

It was a forgery. But "Niger uranium" had won a place in the case against Iraq.

Building a coalition

In Iraq itself, the government was far from resurrecting a bomb program: In April 2002 workers in the western desert were busy smelting down the last gear from a long-defunct uranium-enrichment project, U.S. inspectors later learned.

Around this time, U.S. satellite reconnaissance was doubled over suspected Iraqi WMD sites, and analysts soon reported stepped-up activity, suggesting renewed production, at possible chemical weapons factories. What they apparently didn't realize, however, was that activity was being photographed more frequently — not that there necessarily was more activity.

The White House, meanwhile, worked on a political plan.

Leaked British documents show that Prime Minister Tony Blair told Bush at his Texas ranch in April 2002 that London would support military action to oust Saddam. But the British set conditions: Washington should seek re-entry of U.N. inspectors — which Saddam was expected to refuse — and then Security Council authorization for war.

Blair's Cabinet fretted. Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, in the secret minutes of a July 2002 meeting, observed that the case for war was "thin" but Bush had made up his mind. Intelligence chief Richard Dearlove, fresh from high-level Washington talks, also told the 10 Downing St. session that war had become inevitable, and U.S. intelligence was being "fixed" around this policy.

Blair and U.S. officials now deny war was predetermined and intelligence "fixed" to that end. From midsummer 2002 on, however, the Bush administration sharply stepped up its anti-Iraq rhetoric, along with U.S. air attacks on Iraqi defenses, done under cover of patrols over the "no-fly zones," swaths of Iraqi airspace denied to Iraqi aircraft. It also stepped up its citing of questionable intelligence.

As early as July 29, Rumsfeld spoke publicly of reports of Iraqi bioweapons labs "on wheels in a trailer" that can "make a lot of bad stuff."

A second Iraqi exile source had echoed Curveball's talk of such trailers. He was judged a fabricator by the CIA in early 2002, but by July his statements were back in classified U.S. reports. As for Curveball, whose veracity was never checked by the DIA, within three months his German handlers would be telling the CIA he was unreliable, a "waste of time."

As the summer wore on, Cheney struck an urgent, unequivocal tone in public.
[/i]
"Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction," the vice president told veterans assembled at an Opryland hotel in Nashville.
[/i]
In an unusual move, Cheney shuttled to the CIA through mid-2002 to visit analysts 10 times, according to Patricia Wald, a member of the presidential investigative commission headed by Judge Laurence Silberman and ex-U.S. Sen. Charles Robb. The commission concluded analysts "worked in an environment that did not encourage skepticism about the conventional wisdom."

Strong as aluminum

That conventional wisdom took on more urgency on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2002, when the lead article in The New York Times, citing unnamed administration officials, said Iraq "has embarked on a worldwide hunt for materials to make an atomic bomb."

The "tubes" story had been resurrected. Condoleezza Rice went on the TV talk circuit that morning saying the tubes were suited only for uranium centrifuges. Four days later in New York, President Bush was at the marble podium of the U.N. General Assembly, demanding the world body take action on Iraq or become "irrelevant." He, too, cited the aluminum tubes — proof of danger.

But neither the Times story nor administration officials hinted at the background debate over whether the tubes, in reality, were meant for Huweish's rockets. In fact, a CIA officer had recently suggested obtaining dimensions of an Italian rocket on which the Iraqi design was based, to compare them with the tubes. His idea was rejected.

As U.S. officials built up the threat, Saddam handed them a surprise: Iraq would allow Blix's U.N. inspectors back unconditionally.

Bush promptly labeled the Sept. 16 announcement a "ploy." But Iraq's foreign minister, Naji Sabri, told the General Assembly his country was "totally clear" of banned arms.

White Paper and not read

Democratic senators, wary as war momentum built in Washington, demanded a comprehensive intelligence report on Iraq. The CIA and other agencies patched together a classified National Intelligence Estimate, made available to lawmakers in early October.

Its unclassified version, a 25-page White Paper, was packed with "probablys," "mays" and "coulds," uncertainties that somehow led to certainties: "Iraq has continued its weapons of mass destruction programs," and "Baghdad has chemical and biological weapons."

It would eventually emerge that the DIA, a month before the White Paper, had reported there was "no reliable information" on Iraqi chemical weapons production, and it didn't know the nature, amounts or condition of any biological weapons.

Across the Atlantic, Blair's government issued an assessment like the U.S. estimate, with conclusions unsupported by evidence.

"We were told there was other intelligence that we, the experts, could not see," senior British government analyst Brian Jones has since said. It later became clear such intelligence never existed, Jones said.

The Australian biologist Barton, a 1990s weapons inspector who by 2002 was a top Blix aide, was amazed at the British report's unexplained claim that Iraq could "deploy" chemical or biological weapons "within 45 minutes" — a claim picked up by Bush in a radio address.

Over an Irish-pub dinner in New York, Barton asked old friend David Kelly, a British bioweapons specialist, how he could have allowed something "so silly" in the report. "He just shook his head and said something like, 'People put in what they want to put in,'" Barton recalled.

Months later Kelly would commit suicide, caught in a political furor as a source for news reports that the WMD dossier was "sexed up."

The 93-page classified U.S. report had more qualifiers than the White Paper. But Wald says her commission learned that only 17 Congress members read the lengthier estimate. On Oct. 10-11, the two houses voted overwhelmingly to authorize Bush to use military force against Iraq.

U.N. debunking

Then the U.N. Security Council unanimously voted Nov. 8 to send Blix's inspectors to Iraq with expanded powers. It denied Washington "trigger" authority, however, to attack if the Americans deemed Iraq in violation of the resolution.

Blix knew U.S. leaders were impatient. In his book on the crisis, he writes that he met with Cheney at the White House and was told inspections could not go on forever, and Washington "was ready to discredit inspections in favor of disarmament" — that is, forcible disarmament.

On Nov. 27, 2002, the U.N. teams returned to Iraq. Springing surprise inspections across the countryside, the experts soon were debunking U.S. claims. At the Fallujah II chemical plant, for example, caught in a satellite's camera lens in the October U.S. estimate, they found the production line long broken-down.

By December, Saddam was informing senior generals in secret meetings that Iraq truly had no chemical or biological arms, U.S. investigators later learned. Baghdad's troops would have to fight without them.

Back in Washington, WMD "indicators" were being further undercut. "The Administration will ultimately look foolish — i.e. the tubes and Niger!" an Energy Department analyst told a colleague in an e-mail later uncovered by Senate Intelligence Committee investigators.

State of the Union

Preparing for Bush's 2003 State of the Union address, and sensing the weakness, Rice's national security staff asked the CIA for more. It responded with the report of a Niger uranium sale.


By Tim Dillon, USA TODAY
President Bush used shaky information in his State of the Union address in 2003. Vice President Dick Cheney, back, later told a TV audience that Iraq possessed nuclear weapons.

That story had grown still more dubious since Wilson's Niger visit 11 months earlier.

In October 2002, the State Department had obtained a copy of the original "Niger document." Its analysts told sister agencies they suspected forgery, and in mid-January alerted all that it "probably is a hoax." In October, too, Tenet had warned Rice's deputy, Stephen Hadley, against using the alleged uranium sale in a Bush speech.

This time, however, Hadley accepted the uranium nugget — though attributed to the British — to bolster the State of the Union speech.

The tubes story also had slipped deeper into murkiness. State Department intelligence was siding with Energy in viewing them as likely rocket casings. The CIA arranged for centrifuge-like testing of the tubes in January, and they seemed to fail, only to supposedly pass after a "correction" was made.

On Jan. 28, 2003, with the world listening, Bush delivered his annual address.


"The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa," he said. "Our intelligence sources tell us that he has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production."
[i]
The U.S. chief executive also claimed Iraq had mobile bioweapons labs, but this story of Curveball's would fall further apart in the coming days.

On Feb. 3, 2003, word went up the CIA ladder that this Iraqi informant's German handlers "cannot vouch for the validity of the information." The next day, Senate investigators found, a CIA superior e-mailed a worried analyst that "this war's going to happen regardless of what Curve Ball said or didn't say."

Mr. Powell goes from Washington

The timing was critical — the eve of a pivotal presentation by Colin Powell.



Former Secretary of State Colin Powell held a vial of anthrax in trying to demonstrate to the U.N. Feb. 5, 2003 the threat Iraq posed.

That next morning, at the U.N. Security Council's horseshoe table, with CIA chief Tenet behind him, the secretary of state delivered an 80-minute indictment of Iraq, complete with aluminum tubes, up to "500 tons of chemical weapons agent," and artist's conceptions of Curveball's questionable "mobile labs."

Powell's sources went unidentified, tapes of intercepted conversation were cryptic, claims made about satellite photos were uncorroborated.

It turned out the State Department's own analysts had warned, futilely, against saying vehicles in spy photos were chemical "decontamination trucks," since they might be simple water trucks. And a senior CIA officer has told investigators he raised the Curveball concerns with Tenet the night before the speech, something Tenet denies.

After watching the performance on CNN in Baghdad, Amer al-Saadi, Iraqi liaison for the inspections, lamented that "the fiction goes on. It goes on and on."

But Powell's sober authority worked in America, where support for action soared.

Staunch against 'So-called inspections'

On the ground in Iraq, meanwhile, Blix's inspectors grew frustrated at the Iraqis' failure to explain leftover discrepancies from the 1990s. The chief inspector emphasized, however, that "unaccounted for" didn't necessarily mean weapons existed.

In one example, former Iraqi bioweapons specialists would eventually tell U.S. arms hunters that they never documented destruction of one batch of their anthrax in 1991 because it was dumped near a Saddam palace. They feared the dictator's wrath.

By January 2003, the experts from Blix's U.N. commission and Mohamed ElBaradei's IAEA had inspected 13 major "facilities of concern" from the previous fall's U.S. and British reports, and found no signs of weapons-making. The IAEA publicly exposed the Niger document as a forgery, and found the aluminum tubes poor candidates for centrifuges. Checking supposed sites for manufacturing mobile labs, Blix's teams debunked Curveball's tale at the Iraq end.

Washington was unmoved. Administration loyalists dismissed the "so-called inspections." In late February 2003, a Powell aide sternly told Blix nothing would suffice short of Iraq's unveiling its "secret hide sites." Most significantly, Bush ordered no reassessment of his government's collapsing claims.

Blix told the Security Council he could complete the work within months. The White House wasn't interested. "More time, more inspectors, more process, in our judgment, is not going to affect the peace of the world," Bush said on March 6, as the Pentagon counted down toward war.

Cheney at one point even told a TV audience — without challenge from the host — that Iraq possessed nuclear weapons. Of ElBaradei, whose IAEA refuted the claims about uranium and tubes, Cheney said, "I think Mr. ElBaradei, frankly, is wrong." But the CIA had already accepted El Baradei's judgment on the Niger uranium document.

WMDs: 'That is what this war was about'

On March 17, in New York, U.S. diplomats gave up trying to win Security Council backing for war. That evening, on television, Bush told the American people there was "no doubt" Iraq had "some of the most lethal weapons ever devised."

The bombing began two days later, and as U.S. troops swept up the Tigris and Euphrates plain to easy victory, they searched for WMD. "We know where they are," Rumsfeld claimed on March 30. But despite a flurry of false "finds" by eager troops, they weren't there.

Finally, on April 19, U.S. weapons hunters celebrated: An equipment-packed truck trailer had been seized in northern Iraq.




Just before the war, al-Kindi company technicians had tested the unit and it worked, its tubes spewing hydrogen for weather balloons. They could deliver on the 2001 contract. To empty-handed U.S. analysts, however, the vehicle and a second trailer looked like the artist's conception of Curveball's mobile labs, ready to concoct killer germs.

The White House embraced this illusion. "We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories," President Bush assured Polish television on May 29. By then, however, experts had tested a trailer and found no trace of pathogens or toxins.

"They have weapons of mass destruction. That is what this war was about," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said on April 10. But soon the Washington line shifted to claims Iraq had not weapons, but WMD "programs" — also untrue, inspectors later certified. Then the war was framed as one to democratize Iraq.

Through 2003, Iraqis watched their land slip into a chaos of looting, terror bombings and anti-American insurgency. "A country was destroyed because of weapons that don't exist!" Baghdad University's president, Nihad Mohammed al-Rawi, despaired to an AP reporter.

Month by month, David Kay and his 1,500-member Iraq Survey Group labored over documents, visited sites, interrogated detained scientists and came to recognize reality. But when he wanted to report it, Kay ran into roadblocks in Washington.

"There was an absolutely closed mind," Kay tells AP. "They would not look at alternative explanations in these cases," specifically the aluminum tubes and bioweapons trailers.

In December 2003, Kay flew back to Washington and met with Tenet and CIA deputy John McLaughlin. "I couldn't budge John, and so I couldn't budge George," he says. Kay resigned, telling the U.S. Congress there had been no WMD threat.

Ex-CIA spokesman Bill Harlow, speaking for Tenet, points out that Kay himself, in Senate testimony at the time, said the tubes remained an "open question," although it was "more than probable" they were rocket casings.

'Fool's gold'

The Bush administration then sent Charles Duelfer — like Kay a senior U.N. inspector from the 1990s — to take over the arms hunt. He arrived in time for Tenet's secret visit and palace pep talk on Feb. 12, 2004, but, like Kay before him, Duelfer could find no sign of WMD.

Still, the pressure continued. Barton, recruited as a Duelfer adviser, told AP the American chief inspector received an e-mail that March from John Scarlett, head of Britain's Joint Intelligence Committee, urging that nine "nuggets," past allegations, be dropped back into an interim report by Duelfer's group.

Those "sexy bits," as the Australian called them, are believed to have included, for example, baseless speculation that Iraq worked to weaponize smallpox. Duelfer called the nuggets "fool's gold," Barton says, and left them out.

Asked about this, the British Foreign Office said Scarlett contacted Iraq Survey Group leaders as part of his job, but that the report's content was Duelfer's responsibility alone.

Barton said CIA officers in the Iraq Survey Group insisted that its reporting should not discredit the mobile-labs story "because that contradicts what Tenet has said." They also wanted the report to suggest the tubes might have been for centrifuges, although Duelfer's experts concluded otherwise.

Duelfer's interim testimony to Congress in March 2004 said nothing about mobile labs and said the tubes remained under study.

As late as Sept. 30 last year, in an election debate, Bush stuck to his views.

"Saddam Hussein had no intention of disarming," Bush maintained.

A week before, Duelfer had conveyed his 1,000-page final report to the CIA, saying Saddam had disarmed 13 years earlier.

Note: This reconstruction of what happened on the road to war in Iraq is based on government inquiries, official documents, fresh interviews and other sources.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.
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