I'm not going to google the countless times Bush,Rumsfeld et al have made those
statements. 
But suffice it to say, I got my info from your President as well, and his staff.

"The stated reasons for war on Iraq can be boiled down to three phony
assertions, writes PNS contributor Michael Klare, who examines each in turn and
offers one real reason for the rush to war.
In his State of the Union Address and other speeches, President Bush has
attempted to articulate the reasons for going to war with Iraq and ousting
Saddam Hussein. Stripped of rhetoric, these can be boiled down to three main
objectives: (1) to eliminate Saddam's weapons of mass destruction (WMD); (2) to
diminish the threat of international terrorism; and (3) to promote democracy in
Iraq and surrounding areas.

To determine if these powerful motives are actually behind the rush to war, each
must be examined in turn.

(1) Eliminating WMD: The reason most often given by President Bush for going to
war with Iraq is to reduce the risk of a WMD attack on the United States. Such
an attack would be devastating, and vigorous action is appropriate to prevent
it.

If the threat of WMD attack is, in fact, Bush's primary concern, then he would
surely pay the greatest attention to the greatest threat of WMD usage against
the United States, and deploy available U.S. resources -- troops, dollars and
diplomacy -- accordingly. But this is not what the president is doing.

North Korea and Pakistan pose greater WMD threats to the United States than Iraq
for several reasons. Each possesses a much bigger WMD arsenal. Pakistan has
several dozen nuclear warheads along with missiles and planes capable of
delivering them hundreds of miles away; it is also suspected of having chemical
weapons. 

North Korea is thought to possess sufficient plutonium to produce one to two
nuclear devices along with the capacity to manufacture several more; it also has
a large chemical weapons stockpile and a formidable array of ballistic
missiles.Iraq, by contrast, possesses no nuclear weapons today and is thought to
be several years away from producing any, even under the best of circumstances.A
policy aimed at protecting the United States from WMD attacks would identify
Pakistan and North Korea as the leading perils, and put Iraq in a rather distant
third place.

(2) Combating terrorism: The administration has argued at great length that a
U.S. invasion and "regime change" in Iraq would mark the greatest success in the
war against terrorism so far. Why this is so has never been made entirely clear.
It is said that Saddam's hostility toward the United States somehow sustains and
invigorates the terrorist threat to America. Saddam's elimination would thus
greatly weaken international terrorism and its capacity to attack the United
States.There simply is no evidence that this is the case. If anything, the
opposite is true. From what we know of al Qaeda and other such organizations,
the objective of Islamic extremists is to overthrow any government in the
Islamic world that does not adhere to a fundamentalist version of Islam. The
Baathist regime in Iraq does not qualify; thus, under al Qaeda doctrine, it must
be swept away, along with the equally deficient governments in Egypt, Jordan and
Saudi Arabia.

It follows that a U.S. effort to oust Saddam Hussein and replace his regime with
another secular government -- this one kept in place by American military power
-- will not diminish the wrath of Islamic extremists, but rather fuel it.

(3) The promotion of democracy: The ouster of Saddam Hussein, the administration
claims, will allow the Iraqi people to establish a truly democratic government
and serve as a beacon and inspiration for the spread of democracy throughout the
Islamic world.But there is little reason to believe that the administration is
motivated by a desire to spread democracy in its rush to war with Iraq.

First of all, many of the top leaders of the current administration,
particularly Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, happily embraced Hussein's
dictatorship in the 1980s when Iraq was the enemy of our enemy (Iran), and thus
considered our de facto friend. Under the so-called "tilt" toward Iraq, the
Reagan-Bush administration decided to assist Iraq in its war against Iran during
the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88.

Under Reagan, Iraq was removed from the list of countries that support
terrorism, thus permitting the provision of billions of dollars' worth of
agricultural credits and other forms of assistance to Hussein. The bearer of
this good news was none other than Rumsfeld, who traveled to Baghdad and met
with Hussein in December 1983 as a special representative of President
Reagan.The Department of Defense provided Iraq with secret satellite data on
Iranian military positions. This information was provided to Saddam even though
U.S. leaders were informed by a senior State Department official on Nov. 1, 1983
that the Iraqis were using chemical weapons against the Iranians "almost daily,"
and could use U.S. satellite data to pinpoint chemical weapons attacks on
Iranian positions.Dick Cheney, who took over as Secretary of Defense in 1989,
continued the practice of supplying Iraq with secret intelligence data.Not once
did Rumsfeld and Cheney speak out against Iraqi use of these weapons or suggest
that the United States discontinue its support of the Hussein dictatorship
during this period. There is no reason whatsoever to believe that the current
leadership has a principled objection to dictatorial rule in Iraq.

Besides, the United States had developed close ties with the post-Soviet
dictatorships in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan -- all ruled by Stalinist
dictators who once served the Soviet empire. And there certainly is nothing even
remotely democratic about Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, two of America's other close
allies in the region."

Anything to say about those facts?

-Gel

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Sam Morris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Where did you get your list?

I got mine form the President.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030319-17.html

to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger. 
to undermine Saddam Hussein's ability to wage war. 
We have no ambition in Iraq, except to remove a threat and restore control of
that country to its own people.

The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the
mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder. 
We will pass through this time of peril and carry on the work of peace. We will
defend our freedom. We will bring freedom to others and we will prevail. 


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