Sunday, January 12, 2020

U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix faults Bush Administration for lack of "critical thinking" in Iraq

Why I don't think we have a right to be in Iraq. 
Blix was, if anything, too kind in this videotaped interview on the first anniversary of our 2003 invasion of Iraq.
I remember things like the war hysteria puffed up by the smallpox vaccine campaign - on which hundred millions were spent - stirring up fear of biological warfare on NO evidence.  A subject I wrote about as it was happening in this essay in the Fordham Environmental Law Journal.
U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix faults Bush Administration for lack of "critical thinking" in Iraq
 – Speaking on the anniversary of the United States' invasion of Iraq, originally declared as a pre-emptive strike against a madman ready to deploy weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), the man first charged with finding those weapons said that the U.S. government has "the same mind frame as the witch hunters of the past" — looking for evidence to support a foregone conclusion.
"There were about 700 inspections, and in no case did we find weapons of mass destruction," said Hans Blix, the Swedish diplomat called out of retirement to serve as the United Nations' chief weapons inspector from 2000 to 2003; from 1981 to 1997 he headed the International Atomic Energy Agency. "We went to sites [in Iraq] given to us by intelligence, and only in three cases did we find something" - a stash of nuclear documents, some Vulcan boosters, and several empty warheads for chemical weapons. More inspections were required to determine whether these findings were the "tip of the iceberg" or simply fragments remaining from that deadly iceberg's past destruction, Blix said he told the United Nations Security Council. However, his work in Iraq was cut short when the United States and the United Kingdom took disarmament into their own hands in March of last year.

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