Posted on 09/17/2002 4:23:30 PM PDT by vannrox
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U.S. State Department Information on Iraq: http://www.state.gov/p/nea/ci/c3212.htm Hiding Arms Is Easy New York Times [op-ed] All Nuclear and Biological Roads Lead to Iraq's Hussein L.A. Times (Dec. 11) Each Day We Wait, Saddam Grows More Powerful Wall Street Journal (Dec. 10) Overview of IAEA Nuclear Inspections in Iraq (June 14, 2001) Saddam builds new atom bomb London Sunday Times (Dec. 24, 2000) |
New Iraq Inspection Regime Must Answer All Unresolved Questions About Saddam's Nuclear Weapons Program
Paul Leventhal, NCI President, Testimony before the Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, March 22, 2000
Patrick Clausen, Washington Institute for Near-East Studies,
Washington Post, February 27, 2000, p. B3
IAEA Inspection of Iraq's Uranium is Welcome, But Won't Answer Urgent Questions About Saddam's Nuclear-Bomb Program
NCI Press Release, January 12, 2000
New Inspection Plan for Iraq Leaves Loopholes Big Enough to Drive an Atomic Bomb Through
NCI Press Release, December 17, 1999
New UN Inspection Regime for Iraq Falls Short on the Nuclear Front
NCI Press Release, December 10, 1999
Congressional Leaders Tell Clinton: Iraq WMD Threat Persists With Little Notice, US Planes Have Been Striking Iraq All Year Steven Myers, New York Times, August 13, 1999
State Department: "No Reason to Believe" Iraq Reconstituting Weapons of Mass Destruction
Excerpt from press briefing by Jamie Rubin, Department of State, July 15, 1999
State Department Discloses It is Pursuing Reports of Iraqi Nuclear-Bomb Components
NCI Press Release, May 3, 1999
NCI Letter to President Clinton, November 19, 1998
State Department Letter to NCI, April 6, 1999
NCI Response to State Department, April 30, 1999
NCI Warns U.N. Security Council of Iraq's Continuing Nuclear Weapons Program
Don't Let Iraq Off Nuclear Hook
Paul Leventhal and Steven Dolley, letter to the editor, New York Times,
December 23, 1998
Iraq Nuclear Inspections Easier
Associated Press, December 17, 1998
NCI Warns of Iraqi Nuclear Threat and Weak UN Nuclear Inspections
NCI Press Release, December 16, 1998
Iraq's Inspector Games
Paul Leventhal and Steven Dolley, NCI, Washington Post "Outlook" section, November 29, 1998
NCI to President Clinton: It's Not Time to Close the Iraq "Nuclear File"
NCI Letter to President Clinton, November 19, 1998
State Department Letter to NCI, April 6, 1999 NCI Response to State Department, April 30, 1999
NCI Press Release, May 3, 1999
Recent Iraq Articles of Interest Youssef Ibrahim, "U.N. Cajoles Iraq to Cooperate on Weapons," New York Times, October 14, 1998 "Council Sees Possible Ease on Iraq," UPI, October 13, 1998 Barton Gellman, "A Futile Game of Hide and Seek," Washington Post, October 11, 1998 Barton Gellman, "Arms Inspectors 'Shake the Tree,'" Washington Post, October 12, 1998
'Schizophrenic' IAEA Report Ignores Evidence of Iraqi A-Bomb Components Mohammed ElBaradei, IAEA Director General, Statement to the U.N. Security Council, October 13, 1998
AP Wire Story, October 8, 1998 Iraqi Work Toward A-Bomb Reported; U.S. was told of 'implosion devices' Excerpts from IAEA Inspection Reports Bearing on the Nuclear Weapons Component Issue Ex-UN Inspector Warns Iraq Could Produce Nuclear Weapons in 'Days or Weeks' with Smuggled Nuclear Material Ritter Testimony Confirms NCI's Warnings that Iraq has Active Nuclear Weapons Program Iraqi Move to Block Nuclear Inspectors Raises Threat of Crash A-Bomb Program IAEA Confirms Unresolved Questions About Iraq's Nuclear-Bomb Capability IAEA Report to the UN Security Council, July 27, 1998 NCI Letter to Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General, IAEA, June 24, 1998 Unanswered Questions in Iraq What is the Administration's Position on Iraq's Nuclear Weapons Program? Iraq's Nuclear File: Still Open Iraq's Nuclear Weapons Program: Unresolved Issues Letter to UN Ambassador Bill Richardson U.S. Must Fight for Monitoring of Iraq's Continued Atom Threat Paul Leventhal and Steven Dolley, IAEA's Clean Bill of Health for Iraq is Flawed; Nuclear Inspections, Economic Sanctions Should Continue Saddam's Nuclear Capability Paul Leventhal and Steven Dolley, NCI Report: Iraq and the Bomb: The Nuclear Threat Continues NCI Warns that Saddam May Have Active Nuclear Weapons Program Recent IAEA Reports on Could Iraq Build an Atomic Bomb Today If It Were Able to Buy Fissile Material? Transcript of Q&A with Ambassador Rolf Ekeus, then-Executive Chairman of UN Special Commission on Iraq, Carnegie Endowment "Iraq: How Close to a Nuclear Weapon?" "Who Says Iraq Isn't Making a Bomb?" Paul Leventhal and Edwin Lyman, International Iraq's Crash Program to Build A-Bomb Should Come as No Surprise, NCI Finds Present Assessments Understate Iraq's Nuclear Weapons Potential Paul Leventhal, NCI President, Presented to A selection of web sites on the Iraq crisis
NCI Press Release, September 3, 1998
NCI Press Release, August 7, 1998NCI Press Release, July 28, 1998
Steven Dolley & Paul Leventhal, Letter to the editor, Washington Post, June 22, 1998Image (63kb JPEG file)
State: It's Been "Eliminated ... by the IAEA"
James Rubin, State Dept. press briefing, June 1, 1998
Mohamed ElBaradei, Director-General, IAEA, Washington Post op-ed, June 1, 1998
Steven Dolley, NCI Research Director, May 12, 1998
Paul Leventhal, President, and Steven Dolley, Research Director, May 12, 1998
NCI Op-Ed in Newsday, April 27, 1998
NCI Press Release, April 15, 1998
International Herald Tribune, March 5, 1998
Steven Dolley, NCI Research Director, February 19, 1998
NCI Press Release, February 19, 1998
Iraq's Nuclear Weapons Program
for International Peace, Washington, DC, June 10, 1997
Edwin S. Lyman, November 14, 1995
Herald Tribune, November 2, 1995
NCI press release, August 26, 1995
the Senate Armed Services Committee, November 30, 1990
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No, we will know where to place the responsibility, squarely in the lap of the democrat party. Those people who put their party loyalty above their oath to the United States Constitution.
How do the Demoncrats and other Lieberals think they're going to "spin" their current position if Hussein pops a nuke on us while they're successfully delaying Bush's war efforts?
(And, as you imply, what do they think the Americans' reaction to them is going to be?)
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