-Caveat Lector-

I pass along this article from the New York post with comment by the person
who first presented it to another list, which in turn was forwarded to me,
-- in order to finish off once and for all appeals to Butler and Amscum -
or whatever its called -- to justify the "necessity" of the timing of the
Impeachment-Eve attack on Iraq.

-----Original Message-----
From:   MOBrien [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Thursday, December 17, 1998 6:47 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        ARmail - Bombing set up by Richard Butler


Driving home tonight, I heard on talk radio that Clinton's decision to bomb
Iraq was based on a report by Richard Butler.  The host quoted from the
article below and also linked Butler with the bombing of the aspirin
factor.

MOB

WHISTLEBL0W INSPECT0R: IT'S 'WAG THE D0G'
By CHRISTOPHER FRANCESCANI

Former chief U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter says U.S. officials
prodded inspection teams to return to Iraq last month to provoke a crisis
to justify bombing.

"What [chief U.N. weapons inspector] Richard Butler did last week with the
inspections was a setup," Ritter told The Post yesterday. "This was
designed to generate a conflict that would justify a bombing."

Ritter said U.S. government sources told him three weeks ago when the
inspections resumed that
"the two considerations on the horizon were Ramadan [the monthlong Muslim
holiday beginning this weekend] and impeachment.  "You have no choice but
to interpret this as 'Wag the Dog.' You have no choice," he said.  "If you
start assessing what's happened since November 19 [when inspectors resumed
their work in Iraq], you have to wonder if the U.S. isn't perverting a good
cause."

Ritter's comments  and his reference to the movie about a president who
created a phony war
to divert attention from his domestic problems  came hours before U.S.
military forces struck in
the Persian Gulf, destroying suspected biological and chemical weapons
sites in Iraq.

In midNovember, U.S. and British forces were on the verge of massive
bombing attacks on Iraq. The attacks were called off at the last minute
after Saddam Hussein reversed Baghdad's Oct. 31
refusal to cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors.  After Saddam
capitulated, inspectors were rushed back in to resume their duties.

"UNSCOM [the U.N. Special Commission] knew there were no weapons at the
sites they were
sending their inspectors to. We've been doing this for seven years. We know
that when the
inspectors leave, Iraq shuffles up the deck, moves the weapons."

"Why then did the U.S. urge these inspectors to carry out immediate
inspections?"

Ritter assailed Butler's report, released late Tuesday night, that said
Iraq was not complying
with the inspections. That report was in contrast with one released by the
International Atomic
Energy Agency which said Iraq was complying.  Ritter insists Butler's
report  while necessary  was politically motivated.

"If you dig around, you'll find out why Richard Butler yesterday ran to the
phone four times. He
was talking to his [U.S.] National Security adviser.  They were telling him
to sharpen the language in his report to justify the bombing."

Ritter quit the inspections team in August, saying the Clinton
administration and the United Nations had stymied the efforts of inspectors
to uncover Saddam's weapons of mass destruction.
He said that before he quit, inspectors had acquired detailed information
about where weapons were hidden  but the Iraqis have since had time to move
them and probers will have to begin the process all over again.

Yesterday, Ritter charged that the only way to achieve the objective of
disarming Iraq is to demand  under threat of a crippling, largescale
military attack  that they not only turn over their weapons, but detail for
inspectors exactly how and where they diverted the weaponry to avoid
detection.

A limited air attack on Iraq will achieve very little, Ritter said, though
he said it would be in keeping with the Clinton administration's latest
policy of containment with Iraq.

"No inspector should go back until Iraq admits it has lied and details how
they hid their weapons.  "Instead, we send inspectors back in to continue
the failed process of inspections. There are still weapons in Iraq. There's
no doubt about that.  "But we've been doing this since 1991 and its not
working."

New York Post, December 17, 1998

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