zimmerman8k said:
Maybe Bush and Howard genuinely believed their incompetent intelligence agencies and they were acting with totally sound intentions. But we will never know (or at least not for many years) because of course most of this information cannot be release because of national security.
True that.
zimmerman8k said:
However, if we look at the quality of the evidence that has been made available much of it is disturbingly weak, and reaks of fabrication. For instance, the British report on WMD relied upon by the US that was plagerised from a uni students paper.
Can you give me a link for that please?
zimmerman8k said:
"Can you cite any example of evidence supporting Iraq's WMD capacity that would be persuasive enough to justify invasion?"
Some experts, such as former
Pentagon investigator Dave Gaubatz, allege that not all of the potential sites that may have WMDs have been searched. On
February 12,
2006, he appeared on
Fox News Channel and claimed he and fellow military investigators identified four underground bunkers with five foot thick concrete walls in southern Iraq believed to hold WMD. Iraqi informants had brought these sites to the attention of Gaubatz and his colleagues. Gaubatz claims that, for various reasons, these sites have never been inspected by the
Iraq Survey Group or the
CIA, and made a plea the sites be inspected.
[67] Gaubatz also reiterated his claims in a telephone interview with
The New York Sun.
[68]
On
August 14,
2005,
The Washington Post published an article reporting a raid on a suspected chemical weapons facility in Iraq where (according to the US military) chemical weapons had been uncovered and were now in the process of being classified. The
Post reported that "the suspected lab was new, dating from some time after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003."
[69]
The Washington Times editorialized on a moment on the "Saddam tapes" that revealed "Saddam was actively working on a plan to enrich uranium using a technique known as plasma separation. This is particularly worrisome because of the date of the conversation: It took place in 2000, nearly five years after Iraq's nuclear programs were thought to have stopped."
[70]
zimmerman8k said:
It's been repeated so much its become a cliche but I'll say it anyway: Atilla, Given Iraq's oil reserves, do you really believe that Bush was not motivated to find a pretext to invade Iraq for economic and strategic gain?
I've heard that one many times as well
Here's my reasoning, if Bush really wanted Iraq's oil why did he bother with the north part of Iraq, with Baghdad and with all the other uselless towns and villages? The U.S. Military is trained to do many things but most specifically it is trained to take and hold. All they would have needed to do is to take and hold the oil reserves establish a huge presence of warships in the Perisan Gulf and just start shipping. Why does the U.S. bother with hunting terrorists or trying to protect civilians or patrolling area's which have no oil? Why is it still expensive to buy oil (I am talking in America not Australia)? Makes no sense what so ever IMO. That is why I believe that he did not invade for oil.