Posted on 07/07/2004 5:08:09 PM PDT by xlib
A university with a strong agricultural program would be a good place to look. Many of the bacteria samples sold to Iraq were cultivated at the University of Iowa at Ames, Iowa -- particularly the anthrax.
The controls (export licensing) failed to do what they were intended to do but, to be fair, the policy was sound and well directed. Saddam's ruthlessness was then (the 1980s) a developing characteristic, not fully manifested. What we can now read as warning signs seem to have been lost in the contingencies of the moment. There are always dire prognostications but at what point do they rise to the level that requires more than proper posturing? I don't think I would have been ready, in the 1980s, to commit an expeditionary force to the Mideast to prevent the possible rise of a possible threat. We would have been stumbling blindly into a hornet's nest.
I am not willing to cede the moral high ground to the babbling deviants who seize on the existance of commonplace shipments as proof positive of our complicity with a madman. In hindsight the destinations of some of the agents causes pause, but that is hindsight. We are not responsible for Saddam Hussein and only in the most tertiary sense did we contribute to the carnage that characterizes the Mideast.
It's beyond question that the US was supporting Iraq in the Iran/Iraq war, especially in the early years, and rightly so, given the alternative. Even if we knew then that Saddam was a megalomaniac, (and we surely had some idea) it was still prudent to keep him occupied stymieing (sp?) Iran's regional ambitions. If US-sourced precursors continued to flow into Iraq after it was clear that both sides were using gas, I'm inclined to think it was bureaucratic inertia rather than deliberate, especially since most of this stuff was readily obtainable in numerous other ways.
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