Circle of lies coming to a close
By Imad hadouri
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/D9D2791A-EA23-4C23-AB8A-D7EB77AA8A1D.htm
Sunday 10 August 2003, 13:15 Makka Time, 10:15 GMT
Dr Imad Khadouri is a nuclear scientist and an ex-employee of Iraq�s nuclear
project who now lives in Canada
Related:
The war on Iraq: justifications and motives
The consequences of the US failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq
extend beyond the political controversies now raging in London and Washington
over the false justifications for invading the country.
The specious claims also consigned thousands of Iraqi children, women and men
to their deaths at the hands of UN economic sanctions which strangled the
country for 13 years.
Iraq's chemical and biological weapons capability and its nuclear weapons
programme were roundly destroyed in the 1991 Gulf War.
But western and Israeli intelligence communities are not prepared to accept
that Iraq had actually taken such a step.
The Americans have been scouring Iraq for WMDs for months to little avail.
Barton Gellman reported in the Washington Post on 13 June 2003 that �A covert
Army Special Forces unit, operating in Iraq even before the war began in
March, has played a dominant but ultimately unsuccessful role in the Bush
administration's stymied hunt for weapons of mass destruction, according to
military and intelligence sources in Baghdad and Washington.
The unit was called Task Force 20, and was drawn from elite Army units known
popularly as Delta Force.
The Americans have been scouring Iraq for WMDs for months to little avail.
Its principle aim was to "seize, destroy, render safe, capture, or recover
weapons of mass destruction�.
Reports indicate that Delta Force troops arrived in Iraq in early February.
Despite their impressive support facilities and detection capabilities,
including roving biological and chemical laboratories, they have failed to
uncover any evidence of Iraqi WMDs.
Task Force 20 was followed in April 2003 by more than 900 specialists of the
75th Exploitation Task Force.
It has also �found no working non-conventional munitions, long-range missiles
or missile parts, bulk stores of chemical or biological warfare agents or
enrichment technology for the core of a nuclear weapon� which were
specifically cited by the Americans as part of Iraq's concealed WMDs arsenal.
The task force left Iraq in early June empty-handed and thoroughly dismayed.
Fiasco
The neo-conservatives have responded to their failure by passing the buck.
After 11 September 2001, the Deputy Secretary of Defence Paul Wolfowitz
established a small super-intelligence group, who self-mockingly called
themselves "the cabal."
They were based in the Pentagon's Office of Special Plans. They relied on data
gathered by other intelligence agencies and also on information provided by
the Iraqi National Congress, the exile group headed by Ahmad Chalabi.
The director of the Special Plans operation was Abram Shulsky, a scholarly
expert on the works of the political philosopher Leo Strauss, a
neo-conservative ideologue.
He served in the Pentagon under Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Perle
during the Reagan Administration, after which he joined the Rand Corporation.
Paul Wolfowitz was a key figure in "the cabal"

By last fall the weight of the Office of Special Plans had rivalled both the
CIA and the Pentagon's own Defence Intelligence Agency as President Bush's
main source of intelligence.
This office cherry-picked and funnelled information regarding Iraq's possible
possession of weapons of mass destruction and its alleged connection with al-Qaida.
A great deal of the bad information produced by Shulsky's office, which found
its way into speeches by Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and President George Bush, came
from Chalabi's INC.
The INC itself was sustained by its neo-conservative allies in Washington,
including the shadow "Central Command" at the American Enterprise Institute.
Recanting too late
In mid-June 2003 the White House changed tack and put the CIA head George
Tenet in charge of the search for WMDs, shifting the responsibility away from
the Pentagon.
By this time the CIA had already downgraded its two own specialised teams on
Iraq, the Iraq Task Force, a special unit set up to provide 24-hour support to
military commanders during the war, and the Iraq Issue Group which is
responsible for the core analysis of all the intelligence the United States
collects on Iraq.
A senior official of the former was recently reassigned to the CIA's personnel
department and the head of the latter was despatched on an extended mission to
Iraq.
On 14 June 2003 Greg Miller of the LA Times quoted an anonymous agency
official as saying that "two of the key players on this problem have
essentially been sent into deep exile."
The official added that the changes seemed designed to show the administration
that "we're being responsive to charges that we did not perform well."
In taking over the search from the Pentagon, CIA Director George Tenet had
direct responsibility over a newly created Iraq Survey Group, which is now in
the country, to "significantly expand" the hunt for chemical and biological
weapons.
Five thousand children are dying every month ... I don't want to administer a
programme that results in figures like these."
-Denis Halliday, former UN Humanitarian Coordinator
Tenet adroitly passed the baton to David Kay, a former UNSCOM inspector in
1991, to serve as a "special advisor" to the newly formed 1400 strong team,
and to be in charge of �refining� the overall approach for the search for
Iraq�s weapons.
Kay�s aim is summed up in the following statement he made:
�For me, the real change occurred in '94. By 1994 I was no longer an
inspector, but I was testifying and writing on Iraq that 'There is no ultimate
success that involves UNSCOM. It's got to be a change of regime. It's got to
be a change of Saddam'."
Elusive mystery
By that time, all that was left of Iraq�s WMD programmes were reports,
memories and ruined establishments.
Hussain Kamil, who headed all Iraqi WMD programmes, had attested to that in
his testimony to Hans Blix, who was in charge of UNSCOM in 1995.
Kamil died in 1996 but his testimony was suppressed for another seven years.
Kay, who is now in Baghdad, may soon be jarringly awakened to the reality of
his sustained misinformation on Iraqi WMDs with the capture of Abid al-Hamid
Mahmood Himood, Saddam�s most trusted secretary.
Himood was in total charge of preventing the UN inspection teams from
encroaching upon Saddam�s palaces and private spaces.
He was privy to relevant communications with Iraqi officials during their
encounters with UN inspection teams searching Iraq before 1998 and the
rejuvenated inspections teams in the autumn of 2002.

Thousands of Iraqis suffered under crippling sanctions
Himood will only be collaborating the claims of Amer al-Saadi, the chief
scientific consultant to the Iraqi government who surrendered to the
occupation forces in April 2003.
Al-Saadi maintains that Iraq has had no WMDs for the past 10 years. Himood
will confirm that this was in fact true.
Kay has probably interrogated Himood by now. Kay cannot any longer claim to be
stymied by the tricks and subterfuges of an intact Iraqi regime so expect him
to produce ever more imaginative explanations for the mystery of the elusive
Iraqi WMDs.
Devastating economic sanctions
When Denis Halliday, the courtly Irishman who spent 34 years with the UN,
resigned in 1998 as the UN's Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq in protest at
the effects of the embargo on the civilian population, he gave the following
explanation:
"...the policy of economic sanctions is totally bankrupt. We are in the
process of destroying an entire society. It is as simple as that ... Five
thousand children are dying every month ... I don't want to administer a
programme that results in figures like these."
"We have heard that half a million children have died [because of sanctions
against Iraq]. I mean that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And - you
know, is the price worth it?"
The US secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, was asked this on 11 May 1996
in a �60 Minutes� programme in the US. She answered: "It is a very hard
choice, but I think, we think, the price is worth it."
============
"The president says he feels compassion for me, but the best way to show that
compassion is by meeting with me and the other mothers and families who are
here," Sheehan said. "Our sons made the ultimate sacrifice and we want
answers. All we're asking is that he sacrifice an hour out of his five-week
vacation to talk to us, before the next mother loses her son in Iraq."
-- Cindy Sheehan, Camp Casey, Crawford, Texas
http://truthout.org/cindy.shtml
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