AvIntelBAGHDAD JANE | Ritter of ArabiaSat Sep 21 20:41:17 2002208.152.73.211BAGHDAD JANE | Ritter of ArabiaDate: Sat, 21 Sep 2002 09:08:33 -0700From: "AvIntel" - AvIntel@netzero.com Probably cannot trust Ritter, we know that. But the extremely PRO ATTACKIRAQ AT ANY COST opinions that Wall Street Journal is printing daily, won'twin them any awards for objective news reporting. I scan some of the majorpapers and I've never seen a major newspaper like WSJ that is running daily"topple Saddam" and "attack Iraq now" and even items that purport that ourgasoline prices will come down when we attack Iraq. You'd think the hawksof Bush are actually sitting on the editorial board for WSJ. Maybe theyhang out in the same corners?As my friend Carmen mentioned, the DEVIL is really into CONFUSION./s/: Darren- AvIntel & InfoEdge Groupshttp://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110002312BAGHDAD JANERitter of ArabiaHow did a tough Marine become an apologist for Saddam Hussein?BY STEPHEN F. HAYESSaturday, September 21, 2002 12:01 a.m. EDTOn the eve of the Gulf War, a young Marine named Scott Ritter wanted toquit. But when President George H.W. Bush began dispatching troops to thePersian Gulf, Mr. Ritter changed his mind. "I can't leave the Marine Corpswhen my country's getting ready to go to war," he said later. "That's adishonorable thing to do."Today, as a second President Bush prepares the country for war in the sameland, Scott Ritter is seemingly doing PR for Saddam Hussein, appearinganywhere he can get an audience to dispute the contention that Saddam is athreat to the world. Mr. Ritter shows up on National Public Radio, "TheNewsHour with Jim Lehrer," CBS, ABC, NBC and each of the all-news cablenetworks. Prominent newspapers--the Boston Globe, Newsday, the BaltimoreSun, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times--have published his rants.He is quoted approvingly by members of Congress and world leaders. Indeed,Scott Ritter has probably become the leading opponent of intervention inIraq.But he wasn't always a dove.Mr. Ritter worked in intelligence at Central Command during the Gulf War,and shortly thereafter joined UNSCOM, the U.N. team assigned to rid Iraq ofits weapons of mass destruction. In his seven years in that role, Mr. Ritterearned a reputation as a tough, some would say belligerent, inspector. TheIraqis hated him, and complained each time UNSCOM sent the American "cowboy"inspector. To the extent that U.N. inspectors were able to partially disarmSaddam, Mr. Ritter deserves much of the credit.But by 1998, Iraqi obstruction of inspectors reached absurd levels. Mr.Ritter ripped the Clinton administration for its fear of confronting Saddam,whom he described as a "real and meaningful threat." He resigned his post invery public protest.In congressional testimony that September, Mr. Ritter declared that Iraq was"winning its bid to retain its prohibited weapons," and cautioned about thefuture. "Once effective inspection regimes have been terminated," hetestified, "Iraq will be able to reconstitute the entirety of its formernuclear, chemical, and ballistic missile delivery system capabilities withina period of six months." The inspections ended in December. That month, Mr.Ritter amplified his earlier warnings in an article in The New Republic:"Even today, Iraq is not nearly disarmed," he declared. "Based on highlycredible intelligence, UNSCOM suspects that Iraq still has biological agentslike anthrax, botulinum toxin, and clostridium perfringens in sufficientquantity to fill several dozen bombs and ballistic missile warheads, as wellas the means to continue manufacturing these deadly agents. Iraq probablyretains several tons of the highly toxic VX substance, as well as sarinnerve gas and mustard gas. These agents are stored in artillery shells,bombs, and ballistic missile warheads. And Iraq retains significant dual-useindustrial infrastructure that can be used to rapidly reconstitutelarge-scale chemical weapons production."Then, at precisely the time Saddam was to have reconstituted his arsenalaccording to Mr. Ritter's projection, the former inspector flipped. "Iraqtoday possesses no meaningful weapons of mass destruction capability," Mr.Ritter declared. "Iraq represents a threat to no one."What explains Scott Ritter's change of heart? Only he knows, of course. Butas his views have changed, he's taken money from a source who has led manyto question his objectivity.Over the past two years, Mr. Ritter has taken $400,000 from ShakirAl-Khafaji, an Iraqi-American businessman with ties to Saddam, to produce adocumentary called, "In Shifting Sands." Mr. Ritter concedes that Mr.Al-Khafaji is "openly sympathetic with the regime in Baghdad." And that maybe an understatement. Mr. Al-Khafaji runs propaganda sessions for Saddam.Euphemistically known as "expatriate conferences," the biannual gatheringsdecry the "terrorism and genocide" the U.S. commits against the Iraqi peoplethrough U.N. sanctions.Mr. Ritter claims Mr. Al-Khafaji had no editorial input on the film project,a claim he undermines by openly admitting that his benefactor is responsiblefor arranging Mr. Ritter's interviews with high-ranking Iraqi governmentofficials, including chief propagandist, Tariq Aziz. Even before his projectwas completed, Mr. Ritter predicted at a press conference that "the U.S.will definitely not like this film." These contacts no doubt helped Mr.Ritter earlier this month, when he returned to Baghdad and became the firstAmerican to speak before the Iraqi National Assembly."There are those who wish Iraq harm regardless of the circumstances orcosts, and many of these currently reside in the government of the UnitedStates," he told the Iraqis. "We must find a way to overcome the politics offear and those who practice it. The best way to do this is to embrace thetruth. In regards to the current situation between Iraq and the UnitedStates, the truth is on the side of Iraq."Mr. Ritter's arguments lately have deteriorated, from discrepant todisturbing. On Dec. 7, in a speech delivered at the Center for PolicyAnalysis on Palestine in Washington, Mr. Ritter suggested that Saddam wouldbe justified in working with al Qaeda to blow up a U.S. government building.Here is Mr. Ritter's take on the Prague meetings between an Iraqi spy andMohamed Atta, as transcribed by the Center: "What it appears transpired wasthat the Iraqi intelligence officer spoke with Mohamed Atta at length aboutan attack, but it was an attack on a radio transmission tower of Radio FreeEurope in Prague, Czechoslovakia. If you're the Iraqi government and you'relooking at the Iraqi National Congress (the prominent opposition group),they are a legitimate enemy. Indeed, you could make the case that the RadioFree Europe transmission tower, under international law, is a legitimatetarget."At times, Mr. Ritter seems confused about what, exactly, he should besaying. In one sentence he'll declare Iraq "fundamentally disarmed," and inthe same interview argue that Saddam would be a fool to get rid of hisweapons of mass destruction because his neighbors won't get rid of theirs.Nothing will keep Mr. Ritter from sharing his views on the possibility ofSaddam's nuclear arsenal. In an interview from Baghdad, Mr. Ritter was askedabout a New York Times exposé on the Iraqi government's procurement ofaluminum pipes. These pipes, say weapons experts, are precisely those neededto manufacture nuclear weapons. No one, of course, other than Iraq insiderscan be sure that those pipes would be used for that purpose.But Scott Ritter confidently says he knows that they will not. "Thousands ofaluminum pipes, and we're going to go to war over thousands of aluminumpipes? This is patently ridiculous. These are aluminum pipes coming in forcivilian use. They are not being transferred to a covert nuclear processingplant or any covert nuclear activity whatsoever."With such assurances, who needs inspectors?Mr. Hayes is a staff writer for The Weekly Standard.=============================================================== YOUNG PATRIOT ATTACKED BY SCHOOL AUTHORITIEShttp://www.apfn.org/apfn/young_patriot.htm
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