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To: Enchante

"I would hope that Valerie Plame is ashamed to show her face anywhere in the CIA, maybe that's why she took a year off, because any of her colleagues who are not themselves left-wing moonbats should thoroughly despise her and Joe"

Well said! Well said indeed. I think the term "left-wing moonbats" fits the Wilson pair exactly. It's clear they've long been liberal Democrats (ref. support of Gore, Kerry, and American Coming Together), but when the Dems held sway, they supported the WMD theory. Only when Wilson came under the charm of Kerry did it seem he performed a triple double back flip on this. And the NY Slimes and the rest of the MSM fawned all over him, egging him on. As you say, I think they will both regret their perfidy for a long time to come.


5 posted on 08/06/2005 8:39:27 AM PDT by Cautor
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To: Cautor

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6 posted on 08/06/2005 8:58:12 AM PDT by Bernard Marx (Don't make the mistake of interpreting my Civility as Servility)
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To: Cautor

"And the NY Slimes and the rest of the MSM fawned all over him, egging him on. As you say, I think they will both regret their perfidy for a long time to come."




Let's also remember the NY Times role in perpetuating the WMD story. Besides Judith Miller, there was an entire team of reporters detailing this story. The story below appeared just days after Bush's Inauguration...and if you read between the lines, they are challenging Bush to do something about this threat.

One of the worst hypocrises that should be noted is that Carnegie was one of the groups that had the nerve to later come out with another report claiming Bush exaggerated the WMD threat:

Carnegie - Jan. 22, 2001]
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace [left-wing think tank], NY Times, William Cohen| Jan. 22, 2001
Posted on 06/06/2003 6:20:51 PM EDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
 
Iraq Resumes WMD Activities, New York Times Reports Monday, January 22, 2001
Press reports that Iraq has rebuilt chemical and biological weapons plants bombed by the United States in late 1998 present newly-inaugurated President George W. Bush with a serious non-proliferation challenge. A New York Times report that Iraq has rebuilt chemical and biological weapons-capable plants at Falluja demonstrates the continued threat posed to regional stability by Saddam Hussein.

A recently released Department of Defense report "Proliferation: Threat and Response: 2001" stated that Iraq "may have begun program reconstitution" of its chemical and biological weapons capabilities. The news story focuses on alleged development of these weapons at Falluja, an industrial complex west of Baghdad, and specifically mentions production of chlorine and ricin.

Chlorine is a dual-use chemical that, if weaponized, is a choking agent that destroys lung tissue. Ricin is a protein toxin produced from castor beans (ricin constitutes approximately 5% of the waste from castor oil production) that causes a variety of symptoms culminating in circulatory and respiratory failure in victims.

The reports and allegations highlight the fact that Iraq continues to block U.N. inspections of its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs, as required by the Gulf War cease-fire. Created by the U.N. Security Council in the aftermath of Iraq's defeat, the U.N. Special Commission on Iraq (UNSCOM) inspected and dismantled much of Iraq's infrastructure for building WMD. However, its activities took place against a background of increasing Iraqi hostility towards the inspections that culminated with UNSCOM being kicked out of Iraq in December 1998.

In December 1999 the Security Council voted to establish a new U.N. presence in Iraq, the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC). By September 2000 UNMOVIC, led by former International Atomic Energy Agency Director Hans Blix, was assembled and prepared to begin inspections.

Iraq continues to prevent any inspectors from entering the country, and insists that it has disarmed to the extent called for by U.N. resolutions. With the will of the Security Council to continue sanctions and inspections wavering, UNMOVIC remains in limbo.

In his inaugural address, Bush pledged to do more to confront the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction.
Bush's foreign policy advisors have stated both publicly and privately that they wish to shore up flagging international support for economic sanctions on Iraq. Even as the Bush administration forms its Iraq policy, U.S. and British fighters remain on patrol in the no-fly zone, periodically drawing the fire of Iraqi air defense installations as the battle of wills between Washington and Baghdad continues.

~~~

Iraq Rebuilt Weapons Factories, Officials Say 
Source: New York Times
Published: 1/22/01
 
By STEVEN LEE MYERS and ERIC SCHMITT
ASHINGTON, Jan. 21 — Iraq has rebuilt a series of factories that the United States has long suspected of producing chemical and biological weapons, according to senior government officials. The new intelligence estimate could confront President Bush with an early test of his pledge to take a tougher stance against President Saddam Hussein than the Clinton administration did.

The factories — in an industrial complex in Falluja, west of Baghdad — include two that were bombed and badly damaged by American and British air raids in December 1998 to punish Mr. Hussein for his refusal to cooperate with United Nations weapons inspectors, the government officials said.

The new intelligence estimates were mentioned, but without any such specific details, in a report on weapons threats released on Jan. 10 by the outgoing secretary of defense, William S. Cohen. It warned that Iraq had rebuilt at least its weapons infrastructure and may have begun covertly producing some chemical or biological agents. Last week, the officials provided details on what they said was the reconstruction of the two factories, and the resumption of the production of chlorine at a third in the same complex.

The factories have ostensibly commercial purposes, but all three were previously involved in producing chemical or biological agents and were among those closely monitored by the United Nations inspectors, the officials said. One of the rebuilt factories, for example, is making castor oil used in brake fluid, the Iraqis say, but the mash from castor beans contains a deadly biological toxin called ricin, the officials said.

~~~~

While officials have previously disclosed that Iraq had rebuilt missile plants destroyed in the 1998 strikes, the Jan. 10 report released by Mr. Cohen was the first public acknowledgment of the resumption of work at suspected chemical and biological plants.

"Some of Iraq's facilities could be converted fairly quickly to production of chemical weapons," the report said at one point. It went on to warn, "Iraq retains the expertise, once a decision is made, to resume chemical agent production within a few weeks or months, depending on the type of agent."


19 posted on 08/06/2005 12:47:42 PM PDT by cwb (Islam is the opiate of the *asses.)
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