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Iraq
Saddam’s "Just-in-Time" WMD Program
2003-10-10
By Charles "the Hammer" Krauthammer, Washington Post
EFL
Rolf Ekeus, living proof that not all Swedish arms inspectors are fools, may have been right.

Ekeus headed the U.N. inspection team that from 1991 to 1997 uncovered not just tons of chemical and biological weapons in Iraq but a massive secret nuclear weapons program as well. . . .

Ekeus theorizes that Hussein decided years ago that it was unwise to store mustard gas and other unstable and corrosive poisons in barrels, and also difficult to conceal them. Therefore, rather than store large stocks of weapons of mass destruction, he would adapt the program to retain an infrastructure (laboratories, equipment, trained scientists, detailed plans) that could "break out" and ramp up production when needed. The model is Japanese "just in time" manufacturing, where you save on inventory by making and delivering stuff in immediate response to orders. Except that Hussein’s business was toxins, not Toyotas.

The interim report of chief U.S. weapons inspector David Kay seems to support the Ekeus hypothesis. He found infrastructure, but as yet no finished product.

As yet, mind you. "We are not yet at the point where we can say definitively either that such weapons stocks do not exist or that they existed before the war and our only task is to find where they have gone," Kay testified last week.

This is fact, not fudging. How do we know? Because Hussein’s practice was to store his chemical weapons unmarked amid his conventional munitions, and we have just begun to understand the staggering scale of Hussein’s stocks of conventional munitions. Hussein left behind 130 known ammunition caches, many of which are more than twice the size of Manhattan. Imagine looking through "600,000 tons of artillery shells, rockets, aviation bombs and other ordnance" -- rows and rows stretched over an area the size of even one Manhattan -- looking for barrels of unmarked chemical weapons.

And there are 130 of these depots. Kay’s team has so far inspected only 10. The question of whether Hussein actually retained finished product is still open.

. . .

The fact that Hussein may have decided to go from building up stocks to maintaining clandestine production facilities (may have: remember, Kay still has 120 depots to go through) does not mean that he got out of the WMD business. Otherwise, by that logic, one would have to say that until the very moment at which the plutonium from its 8,000 processed fuel rods is wedded to waiting nuclear devices, North Korea does not have a nuclear program.

Hussein was simply making his WMD program more efficient and concealable. His intent and capacity were unchanged.

Moreover, for those who care about the United Nations (I do not, but many administration critics have a weakness for legal niceties), Resolution 1441, unanimously passed by the Security Council, ordered Hussein to make a full accounting of his WMD program and to cooperate with inspectors, and warned that there would be no more tolerance for concealment or obstruction. Kay’s finding of "dozens of WMD-related program activities" concealed from U.N. inspectors constitutes an irrefutable material breach of 1441 -- and an open-and-shut justification for the U.S. decision to disarm Saddam Hussein by force.

One might, therefore, reasonably expect that there are many more WMD revalations to come.

Posted by:Mike

#8  Ok naysayers....you now have the floor. Hello.....Hello.......anybody out there???
Posted by: Bond, James Bond   2003-10-23 1:56:58 PM  

#7  Hussein left behind 130 known ammunition caches, many of which are more than twice the size of Manhattan.
OK--as usual my bullshit detector is going off when reading Mr Krauthammer. Any Ex-military here seen a weapons cache, not a base containing one over 45 square miles?
http://www.fedfleet.org/nycinformation.asp
(corrected site address)
Posted by: Not Mike Moore   2003-10-11 12:18:49 PM  

#6  Hussein left behind 130 known ammunition caches, many of which are more than twice the size of Manhattan.
OK--as usual my bullshit detector is going off when reading Mr Krauthammer. Any Ex-military here seen a weapons cache, not a base containing one over 45 square miles?
http://www.fedfleet.org/nyinformation.asp
Posted by: Not Mike Moore   2003-10-11 12:16:29 PM  

#5  Liberal Hawk,
I subscribed as a Midshipman. We called it Pravda West. Many other Mids chose the USA today, but I liked to get the comics on Sunday.
Posted by: Super Hose   2003-10-10 10:24:23 PM  

#4  uh. guys, it was on the op-ed page of the Wash. Post. Thats who Krauthammer works for (well hes sydicated and all) WaPo is actually pretty balanced, both on news and oped page. You really outta take a look.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-10-10 8:38:11 PM  

#3  I don't suppose this little tidbit will make the front page of the NY Times, Washpost or LALATimes??

-I wouldn't hold my breath bro. They're still carrying on about who Governor Arnold fondled back in '75.
Posted by: Jarhead   2003-10-10 12:52:27 PM  

#2  Sadaam's creation of more WMD was inevitable. He would nnot have stood by and watched Russia had Iran WMD when he had no defense.
Posted by: Super Hose   2003-10-10 12:48:59 PM  

#1  I don't suppose this little tidbit will make the front page of the NY Times, Washpost or LALATimes??
Posted by: SOG475   2003-10-10 10:51:53 AM  

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