Lawmakers, Experts Debate Iraq Weapons of Mass Destruction
By Dan Robinson
Capitol Hill
29 June 2006
Robinson report - Download (mp3) 1.5 MB
The ongoing controversy over weapons of mass destruction in Iraq
has again been in the spotlight on Capitol Hill. A congressional
hearing (Thursday) heard from U.S. military officials and
experts about chemical munitions discovered in Iraq since 2003.
The term Weapons of mass destruction (WMD) may seem to many
people simple to define, but Thursday's hearing showed once
again the extent to which the exact definition has become a
political football since the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003.
According to declassified portions of a report by the U.S.
Army's National Ground Intelligence Center 500 rocket and
artillery shells discovered in Iraq contained either the deadly
nerve agent sarin, or mustard gas - both of which can cause
serious injury and death.
In making details of the report public recently, two Republican
lawmakers, Senator Rick Santorum and Congressman Pete Hoekstra,
pointed to it as further justification for U.S. and coalition
military action in Iraq.
But critics dismissed the information, saying the type of
munitions and their age, dating back to the 1980's and Iraq's
war with Iran, don't even come close to fitting the WMD
definition that many Americans believed formed the basis for war
in Iraq.
The Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee,
Duncan Hunter, used his opening statement to describe what he
said was the purpose of the hearing.
"Tell us what you have, without embellishment, without
conclusions, without editorials, but very simply, just the
facts," said Duncan Hunter.
However, the hearing was largely an attempt by majority
Republicans to underscore their contention that WMD were always
present in Iraq.
Curt Weldon is a Pennsylvania Republican:
"We now have verified the existence of about 500 such weapons
and the intelligence report assesses that others, ones that
could be sold on the black market, that could fall into the
hands of terrorist or insurgents, that could end up outside of
Iraq, exist there," said Curt Weldon.
Lieutenant General Michael Maples, head of the Defense
Intelligence Agency, testified that although in degraded
condition, the munitions found and the substances they contained
posed, on their own, a potential risk to U.S. forces, and were
vulnerable to falling into the hands of terrorists.
"They would represent a danger in Iraq for those who could come
in contact with them or if they fell into the hands of others
potentially they could become a threat either within Iraq, and I
believe as the Director of National Intelligence stated, the
possibility of use outside of Iraq could not be ruled out," said
General Maples.
Army Colonel John Chiu expanded.
"Regardless of the purity of the sample, any remaining agent [in
the shells] is toxic, with potential to be lethal," said Colonel
Chiu.
However, Democratic lawmakers on the committee contended there
is a big difference between the impression President Bush and
administration officials gave about a possible imminent threat
from Iraqi WMD development in the months before the U.S.
invasion, and the munitions found since 2003.
Democratic lawmakers Susan Davis and Jim Cooper:
DAVIS: "It is very difficult to characterize these as these
imminent threat weapons that we were told we were looking for,
and that Saddam had."
COOPER: "I hate to see our nation's military used for the
political gain of one party."
Former Iraq weapons inspector David Kay, who caused controversy
in 2004 when he said no weapons of mass destruction had been
found in Iraq, says discovery of chemical munitions in Iraq
should come as no surprise.
He had this exchange with Ike Skelton, the top Democrat on the
Arms Services Committee:
SKELTON: "Was there evidence of stockpiles of at least 100
metric tons or as much as 500 metric tons of chemical agents?"
KAY: "No, there was no evidence found of that."
However, Frank Gaffney, a former defense official known for his
hawkish views on Iraq, and now heading the Center for Security
Policy, asserts there can no doubt about WMD in Iraq.
"Whatever the derivation of this word was, in the current
political parlance of this country, these weapons were weapons
of mass destruction," said Frank Gaffney. "There remain WMD, I
think almost certainly in considerable numbers in Iraq that
could conceivably have some terrorist application."
Thursday's public hearing of the Armed Services Committee was
followed by a classified hearing behind closed doors, where
military officials said they could provide lawmakers with
further details regarding the 500 chemical shells found in Iraq.
URL:
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-06-29-voa78.cfm
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