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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bushs claims on Iraqi weapons--lies in pursuit of war
By Patrick Martin
1 February 2003
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In his State of the Union speech last Tuesday George W. Bush
resorted to the big lie technique in an attempt to
terrify the American people with the prospect of a September 11-style
attack, this time employing nuclear, biological or chemical weapons,
attributing that danger to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
Bush presented no evidence, simply asserting a wholly invented
connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda that contradicts everything
known about the politics of both the Islamic fundamentalists and
the secular Baath Party dictatorship in Baghdad. (The Los
Angeles Times, citing a senior US intelligence official
who asked not to be identified, reported January 30 that
there was no evidence linking Iraq to Mohammed Atta or the September
11 attacks, and that claims of other Iraqi connections to Al Qaeda
were wildly overstated and lacked a factual
basis.)
It was the world turned upside down. Bush is commander in chief
of the most powerful military force in the world, armed to the
teeth with nuclear weapons, cruise missiles, smart bombs and all
the other paraphernalia of high-tech warfare. Saddam Hussein heads
a ruined and impoverished state that no longer completely controls
its own national territory, let alone possesses the capability
to inflict damage on the United States. Yet when Bush turned to
the subject of Iraq in his speech, he began by declaring that
Saddam Hussein will not be permitted to dominate a vital
region and threaten the United States.
Bush sought to boost the credibility of his case for war with
a series of allegations about Iraqi possession of weapons
of mass destruction. These allegations are based on gross
distortions or outright lies, which deserve examination. However,
it is necessary first to establish two basic facts.
First, the real reason for the imminent war against Iraq is
the US drive to seize oil resources and establish a position of
unchallenged hegemony in the Middle East. It has nothing to with
Iraqs supposed possession of chemical and biological weapons
or its capability to produce them. Dozens of nations possess such
a capability, which is inherent in modern chemical and food processing
industries. To enforce a global ban on such technology would require
returning the entire planet, outside of the US and a few favored
client states, to nineteenth or even eighteenth century levels
of economic life.
Second, given the military threat from the United States and
Israel, both nuclear-armed, it would be perfectly natural for
Iraq to seek to acquire or build such weapons. Bush declared,
towards the conclusion of his speech, that the only possible reason
for Iraq to possess weapons of mass destruction is to dominate,
intimidate or attack. These words sum up the manner in which
Bush seeks to employ the US military arsenal, including its nuclear
forces. Other countries, potential targets of American military
action, might advance another reason for the possession of chemical,
biological and nuclear weapons: self-defense against the most
powerful imperialist nation.
In his litany of allegations of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction,
Bush began by dismissing the fact that UN weapons inspectors have
found nothing since their return to Iraq, claiming that it was
not their job to conduct a scavenger hunt. Rather,
he said, It is up to Iraq to show exactly where it is hiding
its banned weapons, lay those weapons out for the world to see
and destroy them as directed. Nothing like this has happened.
This is an example of asserting a conclusion and making it
the premise of the argument. The starting point is the unsupported
claim that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction. Its failure
to turn over these weapons is then cited as proof of concealment
and non-cooperation. Of course, if Iraq had turned over a stockpile
of banned weapons, that would have been cited by the White House
as proof of Iraqi violations. The war drive would continue, with
US officials demanding: What else is Saddam Hussein hiding?
Much of the rest of Bushs indictment consisted of similarly
unsupported claims, such as the assertion that Iraq has built
mobile germ-warfare laboratories, or that Iraq is blocking U-2
spy flights over its territory. (The UN refuses to conduct such
flights as long as Iraq continues to fire anti-aircraft weapons
at US and British warplanes, which repeatedly invade Iraqi airspace,
enforcing the no-fly zones that were established by
Washington, not by the UN Security Council.)
Chemical and biological programs
Bush went on to charge Iraq with possession of chemical and
biological toxins, citing reports by UN weapons inspectors. He
said: The United Nations concluded in 1999 that Saddam Hussein
had biological weapons materials sufficient to produce over 25,000
liters of anthrax; enough doses to kill several million people.
He hasnt accounted for that material. He has given no evidence
that he has destroyed it.
Note the carefully worded formulation: the UN inspectors allege
biological weapons material sufficient to produce
anthrax, not that Iraq either produced the anthrax or succeeded
in weaponizing it. There were similar formulations in relation
to botulinum toxin, VX and sarin nerve gas.
Much of this weapons material is commonplace in
facilities making vaccines, insecticides and other biological
and chemical products for agriculture and industry. Chlorine and
phenol, for instance, are raw materials for the synthesis
of precursor chemicals used to produce blister and nerve agents,
as one CIA report put it. The two chemicals are also used in common
disinfectants and in water treatment plants, vital for a modern
society.
The projected death tollsBush spoke of a stockpile of
weapons sufficient to subject millions of people to death
by respiratory failureare extrapolated by assuming
that, for example, every ounce of available chlorine in the country
was consumed in the production of chlorine gas for warheads, not
used in everyday industrial processes. One might as well claim
that Iraq was planning to build a tunnel to the United Statesthrough
which terrorists would presumably marchbecause the total
length of all the structural steel in the country, placed end
to end, would reach from Baghdad to Washington.
Bush deliberately distorted both the content and the context
of the UN reports. Virtually all of the work of the inspectors
during the 1991-1998 periodto the extent that CIA and Mossad
agents within UNSCOM (the previous UN inspections agency) were
not engaged in spying on the Iraqi regime and trying to target
Saddam Hussein for assassinationwas devoted to inventorying
and destroying the chemical and biological weapons that Iraq had
built in the 1980s and used during the Iran-Iraq War.
The US government was well informed about these weapons because
it assisted Iraq in building them. Washington supported their
use against Iranian conscripts, since the US strategic priority
was to forestall victory by Iran in the bloody eight-year war.
(The top US emissary to Saddam Hussein under the Reagan administration,
who discussed such criminal methods with Iraqi officials in Baghdad,
was none other than the current secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld.)
The vast bulk of these biological and chemical weapons were
expended by the Iraqi military against Iran, or destroyed by US
bombing during the Persian Gulf War. The remainder were seized
by UNSCOM and destroyed. For instance, of the approximately 13,000
artillery shells filled with mustard gas that Iraq had on hand
in 1991, 12,792 were accounted for by UNSCOM. The balance of a
few hundred are unlikely to have been stockpiled secretly, since
the number is too small to have any significant military value.
(Thousands are required per square mile of battlefield.)
Even the US and Britain never claimed that Iraq continued production
of chemical and biological weapons during the inspection regime
of 1991 to 1998. If there had been a considerable secret store
of such weapons remaining from those manufactured during the Iran-Iraq
War, the material would have degraded over time.
An UNSCOM paper from 1998, cited by former inspector Scott
Ritter, declared: Taking into consideration the conditions
and the quality of CW-agents and munitions produced by Iraq at
that time, there is no possibility of weapons remaining from the
mid-1980s. The same is true of biological toxins produced
in the 1980s. Botulinum has a shelf life of about a year, while
wet anthrax, the principal form produced by Iraq, has a relatively
short lifespan as well.
The Pentagons own studies on Gulf War illnessconducted,
of course, by a government determined to deny veterans of that
conflict any benefitsdownplayed the likelihood that Iraqi
chemical and biological warfare stocks could have caused damage
in 1991, let alone in 2003, noting that Iraqi production techniques
were poor and the resulting toxins too diluted to be militarily
effective. One Pentagon report declared: We believe Iraq
was largely cooperative in its latest declarations because many
of its residual munitions were of little useother than bolstering
the credibility of Iraqs declarationbecause of chemical
agent degradation and leakage problems (Chemical
Warfare Agent Issues During the Persian Gulf War, Persian
Gulf War Illnesses Task Force, April 2002).
What about weapons made from 1998 to November 2002, during
the four-year absence of UN inspectors? Last fall, before the
resumption of UN inspections, the US and British governments repeatedly
claimed that Iraq had restarted production of chemical and biological
weapons at a number of facilities. Since November, however, UN
inspectors have visited the most important of these locations
and found nothing. The plants in question are being used in manufacturing
the wide range of chemical and biological substances needed in
a country whose two main economic activities are intensive agriculture
and petroleum processing.
As for the quantities cited by Bush25,000 liters of anthrax,
38,000 liters of botulinum, 500 tons of nerve agents, etc.these
are UN projections of how much Iraq could have produced
by 1991 if all its facilities had been working full-blast and
all necessary raw materials had been in plentiful supply. They
are not estimates of how much Iraq actually produced, how
much was left after the Iran-Iraq War, or how much might remain
in Baghdads possession.
Yet these numbers have been translated by US government officials
and by the American media into a secret Iraqi stockpile,
supposedly validated by the UN inspectors.
Even more grotesque is Bushs arithmetic on shells capable
of carrying chemical agents. He cited CIA claims that Iraq had
once had 30,000 such munitions. Inspectors recently turned
up 16 of them, despite Iraqs recent declaration denying
their existence, Bush said. Saddam Hussein has not
accounted for the remaining 29,984 of these prohibited munitions.
Bush cited no timeframe for his figures, but other accounts
say that Iraq produced or imported the 30,000 shellswith
a range of only six milesfor use during the Iran-Iraq War,
when most of them were fired. Iraq could not provide an accurate
count of the number actually used, not surprising given the chaotic
conditions of an eight-year war in which the battle lines shifted
back and forth within the territory of both countries. The 16
shells were found empty of any chemicals, packed in an unmarked
box in an Iraqi army munitions depot, alongside several million
conventional shells.
Nuclear weapons
Even more brazen were the lies about Iraqs nuclear weapons
program. Bush declared, The International Atomic Energy
Agency confirmed in the 1990s that Saddam Hussein had an advanced
nuclear weapons development program, had a design for a nuclear
weapon and was working on five different methods of enriching
uranium for a bomb.
This, of course, refers to Iraqs pre-1991 program, which
was completely dismantled by US bombing and UNSCOM inspections.
There is no evidence that this program was ever reestablished.
Iraq, as a huge oil producer, has never needed a significant nuclear
power system for generating electricity. As a result, the principal
obstacle to Iraqs development of a nuclear weapon is the
lack of fissile materialuranium 235 or plutonium. Production
of fissile material is an enormously complex enterprise requiring
huge resources that cannot be concealed from an inspection program,
or even from external satellite surveillance.
Bush cited a British government report that Saddam Hussein
recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.
Britain has not identified the country in Africa and the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said that without such information
it cannot investigate the claim. The only such Iraqi inquiry that
is documented, however, took place in 1981-82, and was rebuffed
by Niger, which needed the permission of France, Spain and Japan
to export uranium. This failed attempt, more than 20 years old,
was presented by Bush as though it were new.
The head of the IAEA, Mohammed ElBaradei of Egypt, in his report
last week to the UN Security Council, praised Iraqi cooperation
with nuclear inspectors and said they had found no evidence of
Iraqi concealment or restarting of the nuclear program that was
under way before the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
Bush also recycled the most publicizedand most discreditedallegation
against Iraq, saying, Our intelligence sources tell us that
he has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable
for nuclear weapons production. US officials repeated this
charge throughout the fall campaign to obtain Security Council
resolution 1441. Iraqi officials maintained that the aluminum
tubes were bought for use in short-range battlefield rocket launchers,
similar to bazookas. Such weapons are not proscribed by UN resolutions.
ElBaradeis report to the Security Council January 27
vindicates the Iraqi statements. He said, [T]he IAEAs
analysis to date indicates that the specifications of the aluminum
tubes sought by Iraq in 2001 and 2002 appear to be consistent
with reverse engineering of rockets.
The use of such transparent fabrications is itself a measure
of both the cynicism and the desperation of the Bush administration.
This is a government that adheres to the precept: the bigger the
lie, the better. War, however, is the most unforgiving environment
for such a method. The US administration is embarked on a course
of action that will, once the lies and fear-mongering are exploded
by events, produce political convulsions at home and abroad.
See Also:
Bushs State of the Union
speech: the war fever of a ruling elite in crisis
[30 January 2003]
US plans shock and awe
blitzkrieg in Iraq
[30 January 2003]
Blix report to the UN: diplomatic
charade masks US imperialist war aims
[29 January 2003]
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