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Home Front
Andrew Sullivan on the misreporting of the Kay Report
2003-10-03
From the "Daily Dish." Emphasis added.
If you think that David Kay’s report on Iraqi WMDs can be adequately summarized by idiotic headlines such as: "No Illicit Arms Found in Iraq," then you need to read this report. If you believe the following "news analysis" by David Sanger in today’s New York Times summarizes the findings of David Kay, then you need to read this report. Sanger’s piece is, in fact, political propaganda disguised as analysis, presumably designed to obscure and distort the evidence that you can read with your own eyes. His opening paragraph culminates in a simple untruth:
The preliminary report delivered on Thursday by the chief arms inspector in Iraq forces the Bush administration to come face to face with this reality: that Saddam Hussein’s armory appears to have been stuffed with precursors, potential weapons and bluffs, but that nothing found so far backs up administration claims that Mr. Hussein posed an imminent threat to the world.
That is not what the administration claimed. (The Times has even had to run a correction recently correcting their attempt, retroactively, to distort and misrepresent the administration’s position.) The administration claimed that Saddam had used WMDs in the past, had hidden materials from the United Nations, was hiding a continued program for weapons of mass destruction, and that we should act before the threat was imminent. The argument was that it was impossible to restrain Saddam Hussein unless he were removed from power and disarmed. The war was legally based on the premise that Saddam had clearly violated U.N. resolutions, was in open breach of such resolutions and was continuing to conceal his programs with the intent of restarting them in earnest once sanctions were lifted. Having read the report carefully, I’d say that the administration is vindicated in every single respect of that argument. This war wasn’t just moral; it wasn’t just prudent; it was justified on the very terms the administration laid out. And we don’t know the half of it yet.
Next time someone starts giving you the "no WMD, no threat" line, remind them of the truths highlighted above.
Posted by:Mike

#2  I would go a step further. Imagine the Coalition had not taken action. I propose that there would be no braking of the Iranian and North Korean weapons programs.

Although Iran purports to be aiming its weopons at Israel, they would be certainly aimed directly at Sadaam's capital.

What is the answer then? I imagine that Sadaam's dormant programs would go into full swing. At that point, I don't even know that we would have the right to stop him from defending himself. Or do we invade Iraq at that point to protect the Iraqis from the Iranians?
Posted by: Super Hose   2003-10-3 10:36:25 PM  

#1   The New York Times and the BBC: "News" outlets that make The National Inquirer and The World Weekly News look legit.
Posted by: Paul   2003-10-3 5:43:51 PM  

00:00