QUOTE(Dontreadonme @ Sep 17 2007, 06:57 PM)

QUOTE(Ted @ Sep 18 2007, 02:43 AM)

How many damn times do I have to answer this. Did you ever bother to read my posts? There was thousands of pages of proof Saddam produced the WMD and lots of what he produced (and ADMITTED to having produced) was unaccounted for – THUS UN 1441.
Please read the history before making silly statements sir.
QUOTE
The point is, you haven't answered the question. Your posts in response have sidestepped the question to which you are referring. Does it not bother you to stand by the statement that Hussein had the stockpiles of WMD used to justify the invasion, yet 0 storage, manufacturing, processing or transit facilities have been uncovered, or any employees, pay stubs, training manuals or company picnic flyers have come forward?
We know that he produced and used them in the past. Got it. Point driven home. Where is the proof that drove the invasion train?
I have answered the question numerous times. It is well documented that Iraq had thousands of people working in Chem, Bio, and nuclear WMD programs. He had a massive infrastructure and this is why the man who headed the inspections and was there longer than any other said this – which I posted for you
:
"As you listen to Iraq's propaganda keep your eye on the ball: what is
at issue here is disarmament," he said.
"The fact is that
Iraq created a quantity and quality of weapons of
mass destruction that,
when one thinks of the size of the industrial
base, etc., was virtually unique, breathtaking in its scope and its
danger to its region and population beyond," Butler said.
"The Security Council was right in recognizing that fact and setting
up a mechanism to deal with that problem," said Butler, who is an
Australian disarmament expert.
"Is Iraq being singled out? Yes; because, after all, it was unique,"
Butler said.
Is this not self explanatory? All we were looking for could have fit in a good sized 3 car garage – yet it could have killed millions. So the questions are where did the missing WMD go to and how did they get there or did Saddam inexplicably destroy them. And if he did he did it, as you say without “any employees, pay stubs, training manuals or company picnic flyers have come forward”.
If fact Blix asked this very question when Saddam said he destroyed the WMD – and got no answer.
If you want more
DON”T read Bush – read Butler, Blix, and the testimony of Ritter to Congress after he was tossed in 1998. Then tell me he had no WMD – Oh and then convince Clinton who was confident enough that he had plenty to bomb Iraq.
More here.
Butler noted that it has been eight years since UN inspections
programs for Iraq began. "In practical terms," he said, "this has
meant that the job of disarming Iraq, which should have taken a year,
is still not complete."
After the Gulf War in 1991, Iraq was to disclose fully all nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons programs and the means of
manufacturing them. Baghdad was also prohibited from holding,
acquiring or manufacturing missiles that could fly more that 150
kilometers.
Instead of complying, Iraq embarked on a policy of making false
declarations about its weapons and materials. It divided its illegal
weapons in two, Butler said, one portion it revealed to the U.N.
inspectors and the other it concealed.And here is some of the testimony of Blix to the UN:
On 7th of December, 2002, Iraq submitted a declaration of some 12,000 pages in response to paragraph 3 of Resolution 1441………….
Regrettably, the 12,000-page declaration, most of which is a reprint of earlier documents,
does not seem to contain any new evidence that will eliminate the questions or reduce their numberI shall only give some examples of issues and questions that need to be answered, and I turn first to the sector of chemical weapons.
The nerve agent VX is one of the most toxic ever developed. Iraq has declared that it only produced VX on a pilot scale, just a few tons, and that the quality was poor and the product unstable. Consequently, it was said that the agent was never weaponized.
Iraq said that the small quantity of agent remaining after the Gulf War was unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991.
UNMOVIC, however, has information that conflicts with this account. There are indications that Iraq had worked on the problem of purity and stabilization and that more had been achieved than has been declared. Indeed, even one of the documents provided by Iraq indicates that the purity of the agent, at least in laboratory production, was higher than declared.
There are also indications that the agent was weaponized.I turn to biological weapons. I mention the issue of
anthrax to the council on previous occasions, and I come back to it as it is an important one.
Iraq has declared that it produced about 8,500 liters of this biological warfare agent, which it states it unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991.
Iraq has provided little evidence for this production and
no convincing evidence for its destruction. There are strong indications that Iraq produced more anthrax than it declared and that at least some of this was retained over the declared destruction date. It might still exist. Either it should be found and be destroyed under UNMOVIC supervision or else convincing evidence should be produced to show that it was indeed destroyed in 1991The Iraqi side suggested that the problem of verifying the quantities of anthrax and two VX-precursors, which had been declared unilaterally destroyed, might be tackled through certain technical and analytical methods. Although our experts are still assessing the suggestions, they are not very hopeful that it could prove possible to assess the quantities of material poured into the ground years ago. Documentary evidence and testimony by staff that dealt with the items still appears to be needed.
Not least against this background, a letter of 12 February from Iraq's National Monitoring Directorate may be of relevance. It presents a list of 83 names of participants "in the unilateral destruction in the chemical field, which took place in the summer of 1991." As the absence of adequate evidence of that destruction has been and remains an important reason why quantities of chemicals have been deemed "unaccounted for," the presentation of a list of persons who can be interviewed about the actions appears useful and pertains to cooperation on substance. I trust that the Iraqi side will put together a similar list of names of persons who participated in the unilateral destruction of other proscribed items, notably icy the biological field.