Impeach Bush - 20 Lies about the
War
Falsehoods ranging from exaggeration to
plain untruth were used to make the case for war. More
lies are being used in the aftermath.
By Glen Rangwala and Raymond Whitaker
The Independent
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=424008
13 July 2003
1. Iraq was responsible for the 11 September attacks
A supposed meeting in Prague between Mohammed Atta,
leader of the 11 September hijackers, and an Iraqi intelligence
official was the main basis for this claim, but Czech
intelligence later conceded that the Iraqi's contact
could not have been Atta. This did not stop the constant
stream of assertions that Iraq was involved in 9/11,
which was so successful that at one stage opinion polls
showed that two thirds of Americans believed the hand
of Saddam Hussein was behind the attacks. Almost as
many believed Iraqi hijackers were aboard the crashed
airliners; in fact there were none.
2. Iraq and al-Qa'ida were working together
Persistent claims by US and British leaders that Saddam
and Osama bin Laden were in league with each other were
contradicted by a leaked British Defence Intelligence
Staff report, which said there were no current links
between them. Mr Bin Laden's "aims are in ideological
conflict with present-day Iraq", it added. Another
strand to the claims was that al-Qa'ida members were
being sheltered in Iraq, and had set up a poisons training
camp. When US troops reached the camp, they found no
chemical or biological traces.
3. Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa for a "reconstituted"
nuclear weapons programme
The head of the CIA has now admitted that documents
purporting to show that Iraq tried to import uranium
from Niger in west Africa were forged, and that the
claim should never have been in President Bush's State
of the Union address. Britain sticks by the claim, insisting
it has "separate intelligence". The Foreign
Office conceded last week that this information is now
"under review".
4. Iraq was trying to import aluminium tubes to develop
nuclear weapons
The US persistently alleged that Baghdad tried to buy
high-strength aluminum tubes whose only use could be
in gas centrifuges, needed to enrich uranium for nuclear
weapons. Equally persistently, the International Atomic
Energy Agency said the tubes were being used for artillery
rockets. The head of the IAEA, Mohamed El Baradei, told
the UN Security Council in January that the tubes were
not even suitable for centrifuges.
5. Iraq still had vast stocks of chemical and biological
weapons from the first Gulf War
Iraq possessed enough dangerous substances to kill
the whole world, it was alleged more than once. It had
pilotless aircraft which could be smuggled into the
US and used to spray chemical and biological toxins.
Experts pointed out that apart from mustard gas, Iraq
never had the technology to produce materials with a
shelf-life of 12 years, the time between the two wars.
All such agents would have deteriorated to the point
of uselessness years ago.
6. Iraq retained up to 20 missiles which could carry
chemical or biological warheads, with a range which
would threaten British forces in Cyprus
Apart from the fact that there has been no sign of
these missiles since the invasion, Britain downplayed
the risk of there being any such weapons in Iraq once
the fighting began. It was also revealed that chemical
protection equipment was removed from British bases
in Cyprus last year, indicating that the Government
did not take its own claims seriously.
7. Saddam Hussein had the wherewithal to develop smallpox
This allegation was made by the Secretary of State,
Colin Powell, in his address to the UN Security Council
in February. The following month the UN said there was
nothing to support it.
8. US and British claims were supported by the inspectors
According to Jack Straw, chief UN weapons inspector
Hans Blix "pointed out" that Iraq had 10,000
litres of anthrax. Tony Blair said Iraq's chemical,
biological and "indeed the nuclear weapons programme"
had been well documented by the UN. Mr Blix's reply?
"This is not the same as saying there are weapons
of mass destruction," he said last September. "If
I had solid evidence that Iraq retained weapons of mass
destruction or were constructing such weapons, I would
take it to the Security Council." In May this year
he added: "I am obviously very interested in the
question of whether or not there were weapons of mass
destruction, and I am beginning to suspect there possibly
were not."
9. Previous weapons inspections had failed
Tony Blair told this newspaper in March that the UN
had "tried unsuccessfully for 12 years to get Saddam
to disarm peacefully". But in 1999 a Security Council
panel concluded: "Although important elements still
have to be resolved, the bulk of Iraq's proscribed weapons
programmes has been eliminated." Mr Blair also
claimed UN inspectors "found no trace at all of
Saddam's offensive biological weapons programme"
until his son-in-law defected. In fact the UN got the
regime to admit to its biological weapons programme
more than a month before the defection.
10. Iraq was obstructing the inspectors
Britain's February "dodgy dossier" claimed
inspectors' escorts were "trained to start long
arguments" with other Iraqi officials while evidence
was being hidden, and inspectors' journeys were monitored
and notified ahead to remove surprise. Dr Blix said
in February that the UN had conducted more than 400
inspections, all without notice, covering more than
300 sites. "We note that access to sites has so
far been without problems," he said. : "In
no case have we seen convincing evidence that the Iraqi
side knew that the inspectors were coming."
11. Iraq could deploy its weapons of mass destruction
in 45 minutes
This now-notorious claim was based on a single source,
said to be a serving Iraqi military officer. This individual
has not been produced since the war, but in any case
Tony Blair contradicted the claim in April. He said
Iraq had begun to conceal its weapons in May 2002, which
meant that they could not have been used within 45 minutes.
12. The "dodgy dossier"
Mr Blair told the Commons in February, when the dossier
was issued: "We issued further intelligence over
the weekend about the infrastructure of concealment.
It is obviously difficult when we publish intelligence
reports." It soon emerged that most of it was cribbed
without attribution from three articles on the internet.
Last month Alastair Campbell took responsibility for
the plagiarism committed by his staff, but stood by
the dossier's accuracy, even though it confused two
Iraqi intelligence organisations, and said one moved
to new headquarters in 1990, two years before it was
created.
13. War would be easy
Public fears of war in the US and Britain were assuaged
by assurances that oppressed Iraqis would welcome the
invading forces; that "demolishing Saddam Hussein's
military power and liberating Iraq would be a cakewalk",
in the words of Kenneth Adelman, a senior Pentagon official
in two previous Republican administrations. Resistance
was patchy, but stiffer than expected, mainly from irregular
forces fighting in civilian clothes. "This wasn't
the enemy we war gamed against," one general complained.
14. Umm Qasr
The fall of Iraq's southernmost city and only port
was announced several times before Anglo-American forces
gained full control - by Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
among others, and by Admiral Michael Boyce, chief of
Britain's defence staff. "Umm Qasr has been overwhelmed
by the US Marines and is now in coalition hands,"
the Admiral announced, somewhat prematurely.
15. Basra rebellion
Claims that the Shia Muslim population of Basra, Iraq's
second city, had risen against their oppressors were
repeated for days, long after it became clear to those
there that this was little more than wishful thinking.
The defeat of a supposed breakout by Iraqi armour was
also announced by military spokesman in no position
to know the truth.
16. The "rescue" of Private Jessica Lynch
Private Jessica Lynch's "rescue" from a hospital
in Nasiriya by American special forces was presented
as the major "feel-good" story of the war.
She was said to have fired back at Iraqi troops until
her ammunition ran out, and was taken to hospital suffering
bullet and stab wounds. It has since emerged that all
her injuries were sustained in a vehicle crash, which
left her incapable of firing any shot. Local medical
staff had tried to return her to the Americans after
Iraqi forces pulled out of the hospital, but the doctors
had to turn back when US troops opened fire on them.
The special forces encountered no resistance, but made
sure the whole episode was filmed.
17. Troops would face chemical and biological weapons
As US forces approached Baghdad, there was a rash of
reports that they would cross a "red line",
within which Republican Guard units were authorised
to use chemical weapons. But Lieutenant General James
Conway, the leading US marine general in Iraq, conceded
afterwards that intelligence reports that chemical weapons
had been deployed around Baghdad before the war were
wrong. " It was a surprise to me ... that we have
not uncovered weapons ... in some of the forward dispersal
sites," he said. "We've been to virtually
every ammunition supply point between the Kuwaiti border
and Baghdad, but they're simply not there. We were simply
wrong. Whether or not we're wrong at the national level,
I think still very much remains to be seen."
18. Interrogation of scientists would yield the location
of WMD
" I have got absolutely no doubt that those weapons
are there ... we have the co-operation of the scientists
and the experts, I have got no doubt that we will find
them," Tony Blair said in April. Numerous similar
assurances were issued by other leading figures, who
said interrogations would provide the WMD discoveries
that searches had failed to supply. But almost all Iraq's
leading scientists are in custody, and claims that lingering
fears of Saddam Hussein are stilling their tongues are
beginning to wear thin.
19. Iraq's oil money would go to Iraqis
Tony Blair complained in Parliament that "people
falsely claim that we want to seize" Iraq's oil
revenues, adding that they should be put in a trust
fund for the Iraqi people administered through the UN.
Britain should seek a Security Council resolution that
would affirm "the use of all oil revenues for the
benefit of the Iraqi people". Instead Britain co
sponsored a Security Council resolution that gave the
US and UK control over Iraq's oil revenues. There is
no UN-administered trust fund. Far from "all oil
revenues" being used for the Iraqi people, the
resolution continues to make deductions from Iraq's
oil earnings to pay in compensation for the invasion
of Kuwait in 1990.
20. WMD were found
After repeated false sightings, both Tony Blair and
George Bush proclaimed on 30 May that two trailers found
in Iraq were mobile biological laboratories. "We
have already found two trailers, both of which we believe
were used for the production of biological weapons,"
said Mr Blair. Mr Bush went further: "Those who
say we haven't found the banned manufacturing devices
or banned weapons - they're wrong. We found them."
It is now almost certain that the vehicles were for
the production of hydrogen for weather balloons, just
as the Iraqis claimed - and that they were exported
by Britain.
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=424008
Please contact your House Member and Senators today,
particularly
if they are Republicans, and INSIST that they hold public
hearings on the reasons given by Mr. Bush for going
to war against Iraq (contact information may be found
in the blue government section of your local phone book).
It has been clear to me for some time that Mr.
Bush has committed impeachable offenses in his rush
to war. It's
time that he be held to account.
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