६ सप्टेंबर, २००६

"Around 75 top professors and leading scientists believe the attacks were puppeteered by war mongers in the White House..."

Writes the Daily Mail, which doesn't seem to have much of a grasp of the meaning of the words "top" and "leading." I wasn't going to link to this stupid article -- which also calls UW part-time teacher Kevin Barrett an "assistant professor" -- but people keep emailing it to me.

IN THE COMMENTS: I love the way the people who hate Bush the most provide the most devastating refutation of the inside job theory:
It's amazing that people could believe a skyscraper would NOT collapse when a plane weighing 100 tons flies into it at 500 miles per hour.

And I love the conspiracy theory. We'll plant bombs in the building to make it collapse - and then - just to make it look real - we'll hijack planes and fly them into the building just to make it look convincing. And then, to make it look REALLY convincing - we'll have the President of the United States sit there like a moron for ten minutes saying nothing - after reading a book to schoolchildren.

Why do they same people who think Bush is a moron with an IQ or 80, also think he is capable of pulling off the biggest conspiracy of all time

५२ टिप्पण्या:

The Drill SGT म्हणाले...

LOL,

We thought it might light your fire. or at least fire you up.

MadisonMan म्हणाले...

From the article:

But University of Wisconsin assistant professor, Kevin Barrett, said experts are unwilling to believe theories which don't fit into their belief systems.

Pot, meet Kettle. Except Barrett is not an expert.

Anthony म्हणाले...

"What men?"

"Top. Men."

Anthony म्हणाले...

Crap. Beaten to the punch.

SippicanCottage म्हणाले...
ही टिप्पणी लेखकाना हलविली आहे.
JohnF म्हणाले...

The guy most relied on in the Daily Mail article is Steve Jones, a physics professor at Brigham Young. He has an article on the collapse here:

http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7.html

It is pretty readable and raises the usual questions about all the molten metal and thermite induced "controlled" destruction.

What all this stuff leaves out, among many other elephants in the room, is (a) how our governmental conspirators got all those Muslims to coordinate their plane hijackings as a cover for the controlled demolition, and (b) how this conspiracy, which required the efforts of scores of people at the least, and the implantation of hundreds of pounds of explosives without anyone knowing about it, could remaing unexposed by at least one participant--this is the U.S. government here, after all.

Gaius Arbo म्हणाले...

I found out the truth about "Super Thermite" but nobody is listening to me.....

http://bluecrabboulevard.com/2006/09/06/grade-inflation/

(Please forgive the egregious linkage, Ms. Althouse.)

I'm Full of Soup म्हणाले...

Come on Ann, one of the top men is a "philospher of science". Whatever the hell that is?

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

That Philosopher of Science, James Fetzer, is actually retired from the philosophy department at the U of Mn-Duluth. He also firmly believes that Wellstone's plane was shot down or otherwise sabotaged. I think he may talk about some kind of electromagenetic pulse.

Jake म्हणाले...

Funny:

Business people are not say this.
Engineers are not saying this
Pilots are not saying this.
Plumbers are not saying this.
Factory workers are not saying this.
Only university professors are saying this.

as PJ O Rourke said

"Universities give you bad ideas for fours years. And you come away with the skill of being able to recognize bad ideas the rest of your life."

hdhouse म्हणाले...

this is classic....between those who find something that they want to believe and what is just plain old truth.

even the overnight radio shows shut the conspiracy people up after a sentence. heck, there were even reports of flying saucers outside Tower I.

these folks are harmless in a very offensive sorta way.

I think JOE got it best and if there was a way to just bing a few of these people right square on the nose I would do it.

MadisonMan म्हणाले...

From the local paper

Palladian म्हणाले...

Sad to say, but this conspiracy "theory" is accepted by a lot more people than I care to think about, at least here in New York. If you haven't been to New York lately, almost every lamp post, bus stop and unattended surface in the city, especially downtown, has professionally printed stickers pasted on it that read "9/11 is a lie" or "9/11 was an inside job". They function sort of like the omnipresent posters of Big Brother in "1984", constantly slipping into your brain as you go through the day, reminding you, implanting the thought on a semi-conscious level, spreading malicious little seeds in the hope that they will sprout in fertile minds. I've personally heard people express their belief (of course it's about belief rather than evidence) that 9/11 was perpetrated by the government and by Israel or by Bush, or by some nebulous confluence of all of the above. All it takes is a basic ignorance of science and engineering (and New York is one of the few places that supports that sort of ignorance) and the right basic set of political feelings and you have subject ripe for conversion.

I was at a cookout last weekend in the back yard of a friend's building in Brooklyn and one of the guests, an early middle aged musician, jokingly mentioned that Bush had the WTC blown up and that there were "questions" about it among "experts", and said it in that annoying way that is supposed to suggest that everyone present agrees. My friend, an architect and no friend of the Bush administration, quickly and cooly said that there were no questions among engineers, and that there never were any questions about it except by people ignorant of how modern buildings are constructed. He then explained that most buildings today are not solid; they're mostly air and are built within a narrow range of tolerance to structural disruption. The buildings did what everyone who knew anything about buildings knew they would do after getting slammed by speeding 767 planes full of fuel. He then took a bite of his hot dog stood there silently. The musician changed the subject.

What amazes me is that you can scientifically explain what really happened (another phrase from the stickers) to the WTC to a layperson in about 5 minutes, but you have to labor many months to contrive the most baroque scenarios to support the 9/11 conspiracy rubbish. Yet people are still willing to accept the latter at the expense of their common sense, all in the service of what? It's hard to imagine that political hatred could be that powerful but I suppose I shouldn't be surprised.

bearbee म्हणाले...

Who really blew up the twin towers?

"We're academics and we're rational, and we really believe Congress or someone should investigate this," says David Gabbard, an East Carolina education professor and 9/11 scholar. "But there are a lot of crazies out there who purport that UFOs were involved. We don't want to be lumped in with those folks."

We're academics and we're *giggle* rational.... *giggle*... and we don't want to be lumped with the crazies ,,,, *giggle* *giggle*

The Drill SGT म्हणाले...

Beyond the engineering reality that Palladian said...

It's amazing to me that people could actually believe that a Bush adminstration that can't keep a secret what happens inside the super secret NSA (no such agency), could plan (in 6 months after taking power) a monumental conspiracy in broad daylight in deepest blue state America among 70,000 office workers and nobody who lived noticed and none are talking yet today? Hundreds of pounds of demo, wired to beams that lay behind drywall.

amazing!

hdhouse म्हणाले...

honestly i don't think it is a political hatred issue by-in-large. certainly you are right with regard to a number of these people but i don't think its a bush hatred issue as much as it is a government hatred issue.

i agree with you though that there is a really concerted movement afoot to get this theory out and nyc is so full of angst now anyway it is fodder for the flames.

my year around home is on long island approx. 10 miles from where the TWA plane went down a decade ago. My son saw it and we had the fbi in our homes for a week. there are enough conspiracy theories about that to this day to make the gods sigh.

perhaps that is what happens after major scary events. the science is just too tough (simple as it is) for a lot of people and inventing yarns to explain it must be less horrifying than ferreting out the answers and accepting the science...but its always been that way...it must be something in our beings.

problem is now there are more graphic horrors and we can see them a million times because everyone carries a recording device or so it seems.

tiggeril म्हणाले...

So, the Bush Administration is a collection of drooling retards who couldn't tie their shoes without help and need to be reminded to zip their flies, but they were able to mastermind the biggest coverup in known history without a single leak? Is that right?

My head hurts.

hdhouse म्हणाले...

and as drill sgt. just posted...and this from an administration that has trouble planning an order out lunch?

what did bond say? "this has to be smersch...its out of our league".

Mom म्हणाले...

Funny, I was just wondering whether I should e-mail you to see if you knew about the article. I'm glad I didn't! I noticed the Barrett error (if it's an error) and posted a comment to the site pointing it out and asking for a correction maybe five or six hours ago. The comment hasn't yet appeared. I am wondering if it will.

Simon म्हणाले...

I can't help but smirk at the apparent fact that even HDHouse thinks the 9/11 conspiracy theorists are nutjobs. When your theory is so out there that even someone apparently ready and willing to believe anything bad about this administration thinks it's crazy, you know it's pretty far out there.

Maybe there's hope for you yet, HDH. ;)

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Jonathan said: "So all we have to do is email you stuff enough times to get it published? Hmm. What's the magic number? 100? 248? 513?"

It's just like everything else around here, for example, getting a personal response to a comment: you have to figure out how to push one of my buttons.

अनामित म्हणाले...

It's amazing that people could believe a skyscraper would NOT collapse when a plane weighing 100 tons flies into it at 500 miles per hour.

And I love the conspiracy theory. We'll plant bombs in the building to make it collapse - and then - just to make it look real - we'll hijack planes and fly them into the building just to make it look convincing. And then, to make it look REALLY convincing - we'll have the President of the United States sit there like a moron for ten minutes saying nothing - after reading a book to schoolchildren.

Why do they same people who think Bush is a moron with an IQ or 80, also think he is capable of pulling off the biggest conspiracy of all time?

Craig म्हणाले...

I hate to be condescending, but the wool is so thick over the eyes in here that I fear that a bit of that may creep into my commentary here.

As a leading top man (i.e., similar to a fellow wearing a tin foil cap, but poisonous like so-called snakes to Ivy League secret society recruits), I can tell you that there is clear and uncontrovertable evidence in the Google cache that this news story and these professors are all Bush White House plants.

What better foils for a crumbling administration than to put the plain but shocking truth into the hands of jasagers impersonating members of the discredited academic world!

I bet half an hour of detective work would reveal that each of these professors have spent passionate long-weekends in the Islands with the allegedly amorous Mssr. Gannon.

अनामित म्हणाले...

The comment was not toungue in cheek.

Ann got it exactly right. I hate Bush, but I hate the conspiracy theorists more.

We are dealing with facts here. There is such a thing as truth. As a New Yorker, I am disgusted by those who wish to DISTORT the truth for political means.

Simon म्हणाले...

DTL - that last point ("Why do they same people who think Bush is a moron with an IQ or 80, also think he is capable of pulling off the biggest conspiracy of all time?") is precisely the right question. There has always been a level of cognitive dissonance in the liberal view of Bush: that he is both a complete idiot ("the chimperator") and an evil genius who is plotting the imminent takeover of the world.

Revenant म्हणाले...

Why do they same people who think Bush is a moron with an IQ or 80, also think he is capable of pulling off the biggest conspiracy of all time

They usually mumble something about how the same faceless individuals who are the *real* power behind Bush came up with the plan.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Bush is not a moron and he is not a genius. He simply is willing to pander to the WORST in Americans to get elected - and that's what I don't like about him.

Same with Rove. You don't have to be a genius to win South Carolina by spreading rumors that McCain had a black daughter (she was Bangladeshi). But you do have to be unethical.

Bush did not want to be a war President. He was isolationist when he ran for President. But 9/11 forced him to act. You might not like the way he's acted since then, but that doesn't mean he planned 9/11. So silly. How soon until they start arguing that the Twin Towers never existed at all . . .

अनामित म्हणाले...

I love how they try to make World Trade Center 7 a conspiracy as well. That was the building that fell later that afternoon. Nobody got hurt, and honestly, no New Yorkers really cared about building #7 at that point. So the point of blowing it up as part of a "conspiracy" was what exactly?

Somehow it's ok to say that World Trade Center 3,4,5, and 6 can all be destroyed by the Twin Towers collapsing. But #7 was part of some dark sinister plot.

Maybe these people should take a look at the Deutsche Bank building across from the site. Or Fitterman Hall. Neither are in very good shape and they are both being deconstructed now. There was a randomness to it all. Some buildings got completely destroyed when the Twin Towers fell (#3,4,5, and 6, plus some hotels), some had major collateral damage and fell later (#7) and some got damaged but were still standing (Deutsche Bank, Fitterman Hall).

How utterly rational those silly facts can be.

Brian O'Connell म्हणाले...

The big mystery, as far as conspiracy theorists go, is why they think that the late collapse of WTC 7 supports their rantings.

OK, so the govt, secretly, and mind you they seem not to be able to keep many secrets judging by the NYT, planted explosives in WTC 1, 2, and 7, and as a cover, caused planes to crash into WTC 1 & 2.

But if the govt had such an interest in seeing WTC 7 go down why didn't they have something crash into it? Why leave this opening in the hijacked plane story?

(Ah, but that's the genius of it.)

hdhouse म्हणाले...

Errrr I cast my vote for moron but that isn't fair.

Ms. Althouse is quite correct in her observations regarding contempt for Bush's lack of brains and the complexity of the plot. But just like any "if/then" it is only half right and half again totally right.

I'm more than a little convinced that the ...not sure of the proper word...the creatures who conjecture up all the answers to make a conspiracy fly - some of the garbage is pretty original..like the flying saucers off loading the fuses and taking away the alien progeny so they won't perish in the collapse....have no real political axe to grind. some of course evoke the grand plan for wars without end, others want to save a political career, still others seek a financial ruin out of who's ashes rise new and flagrant fortunes.

Just my opinion but the entire issue of conspiracies may well be more complex and obscure than we can hope to imagine.

Robert Fovell म्हणाले...

WTC 7 is both a remarkable and amusing example of the desperate conspiracist who argues backwards from conclusions to facts.

According to news reports, WTC 7 housed offices of the CIA and other government agencies (Secret Service, SEC, whatever). If WTC 7 had survived intact, while other nearby buildings suffered irreparable damage, that would be sufficient proof to the conspiracist that the government was involved. Obviously, the plotters could save their own structure, since they planned the whole thing, right?

But wait, WTC 7 collapsed. Aha, this is obviously the CIA, Secret Service and SEC, et cetera, ad infinitum, trying to deflect suspicion. Damaging their own property -- including the Pentagon -- is merely a ruse! Or perhaps "They" were trying to destroy evidence of their own culpability that was stored in WTC 7. Yeah, that's it...

Um, but if "They" knew the plot in advance, why didn't they remove tell-tale evidence from WTC 7? Why would they take the chance that it could be recovered from the debris? No doubt, the facile mind of the conspiracist can come up with an explanation that forces the evidence to fit their preconceived notion. If they fail, the inconvenient truth will simply be ignored.

Harry Eagar म्हणाले...

Amusing to see all the rightwingers mount their high horses about those gullible conspiracy theorists.

None of them ever fell for the ones about the Trilateral Commission, Freemasons, gnomes of Zurich, pope giving orders to Kennedy etc.

Or the UN, Council on Foreign Relations.

Secret Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.

and so on

OhioAnne म्हणाले...

If the Bush administration had planned this one, one of his "top men" (Ted Olsen) would have also had to knowlingly allow his wife to board a plane that was going to later plow into the Pentagon.

So, as stated earlier not only do you have to believe people who have shown no evidence of the genius it would take to pull this off DID pull this off, but you have to believe that they either also kept part of the plan secret from Olsen or he is such a cold-blooded SOB that he was willing sacrificed his wife to this plan.

Telecomedian म्हणाले...

I asked the surviving members of the Warren Commission to investigate the Towers' collapse.

They came up with the "Magic Boeing Theory" that one plane hit both buildings, simply refuting ABC's, CBS's, CNN's, NBC's, Fox's and 1,758 eyewitnesses testimony of two planes as being false, and "a modern-day Zapruder film."

Now, where's MY book deal? Do I get tenure?

KCFleming म्हणाले...

So why exactly does Kevin Barrett remain employed as a University of Wisconsin "assistant professor"?

Because at UW Madison we support free academic inquiry, including wildly implausible and embarrassingly stupid crackpot theories outside our fields of expertise.

I said this in a thread long ago: this guy's gonna cause UW a long trail of regret. It's a great school; friends went there, their kids go there. But this is going to cause serious harm.

DaveG म्हणाले...

After the war, an extensive survey was conducted and the conclusion was that Saddam's existing stockpiles of WMD were destroyed shortly after the first Gulf War.

That's pretty much the entire point, isn't it? Pre-invasion, Hussein was not complying with the inspection requirements that were the agreement for stopping short of invasion of Iraq in 1991. Without compliance with the inspection requirement, we had no way of knowing whether those weapons had been destroyed or not. The argument was that the consequences of not knowing and possibly having those weapons used against us were far too high to adopt a wait and see policy.

The fact that the weapons haven't been found isn't the point - the point is that the burden of proof was on Hussein, and it was not met.

tjl म्हणाले...

Freder Frederson shrilly alleges, "When the president now claims that Saddam was not cooperating with the inspectors he is simply lying."

Not so! It was none other than Hans Blix who said that the Iraqis had been so uncooperative that "It would be surprising if they DID'NT have WMD."

Bruce Hayden म्हणाले...

Freder Frederson

I don't think that very many of those who keep pointing out that a bunch of pre-Desert Storm chemical munitions were found are really trying to suggest that serious amounts of WMD were found, but rather just rebutting the silly anti-war talking point that NO WMD were found.

As noted above though, we just didn't know, and that was what was so dangerous. Pre-Gulf War (I), Iraq had huge amounts of the stuff, and in retrospect, it looks like they managed to get rid of most of the stuff, and maybe shipped the rest out to probably Syria in the days before our invasion. But we didn't know, and Saddam Hussein was playing games, actively and blatently flaunting his non-compliance to the agreement he made to end Desert Storm.

Also, note that the point that these munitions are pre-GWI is also a red herring, as our worry was not primarily that Iraq was making new WMD, but that those huge pre-war stockpiles were still around.

On a similar note, you made the correct point that there is still no known connection between Saddam Hussein and 9/11, and by now, with all the Iraqi documents that have been translated, if there had been, we would probably know it by now.

Nevertheless, similar to to the NO WMD tallking point, we also hear the generalization of this later point - that there were no connections between al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein. In retrospect, it turns out that there were a number of them. The two weren't close, but they did share similar aims, and appeared to have often been exploring options of closer cooperation.

I just wish that those who oppose the war would get off the inaccurate talking points (No WMD and No al Qaeda ties), and use the accurate ones (insigificant WMD found and no 9/11 ties), and we wouldn't have to rehash this time after time.

DaveG म्हणाले...

People like you believe him.

You're right, of course. I have to make a judgement call to decide who to believe. I can believe the POTUS, the international intelligence community and google-cached staements from the Clinton Administration, or I can believe Michael Moore, Nancy Pelois, Dan Rather, Sandy Burger, and Harry Reid. Tough call, that.

Shrillness is the tie-breaker.

When the president now claims that Saddam was not cooperating with the inspectors he is simply lying.

Others have addressed that, so I'll save my breath. I was watching the games played by Hussein in the 90s, I have my perception of those events, and you have yours. How closely were you watching back then?

Bruce Hayden म्हणाले...

I work this backwards:

1. Bush is evil. Rove and Cheney are really evil.

2. The 9/11 towers collapsing was an excuse to go to war in Afghanistan and Iraq.

3. The evil NeoCons wanted to go to war all along, and this was their excuse.

4. If al Qaeda actually caused 9/11, then we really would be at war.

5. Therefore, it must have been a plot by the government orchestrated by those evil NeoCons, headed by Rove and Cheney (actually, I have seen no indication that Rove is a NeoCon in the first place).

6. And everything else in the plot falls out from there. The more the plot is debunked, the more elaborate and diabolical it becomes.

7. Also, to tie things back around, a lot of the original NeoCons were/are Jewish, and most, if not all, are/were very strongly pro-Isreal. Thus, the 9/11 plot was at its center obviously being orchestrated by the dreaded Mossad.

David McDougall म्हणाले...

these 9/11 myths - and they are 'myths' in the Joseph Campbell sense as well as the colloquial, 'falsehood' definition - let people make sense of events that don't make sense to them. societies and religions both ancient and modern have all sorts of stories to explain life, death, horrible events, human history.

as for Iraq, the only "conspiracy" there is that most of the current administration had been advocating invasion since the Clinton administration. not terribly secretively, either.

hdhouse म्हणाले...

of course some conveniently forget that Bush PULLED THE INSPECTORS OUT OF IRAQ.

I just don't get it. There have been plenty of "kiss and tell" books written by so many from the Bush administration (now on their enemies list) that address the undeniable fact that although we shot in Afghanistan there was immediate talk of Iraq. As much as some want to deny it, those are facts. You may not like the messenger but you can't rip up the message.

It is entirely dishonest, as dishonest as the conspiracy wackos.

DaveG म्हणाले...

most of the current administration had been advocating invasion since the Clinton administration.

I've always said Bush was going to do something about Iraq, and said so, even before 9/11. All 9/11 did was muddy the waters.

DaveG म्हणाले...

of course some conveniently forget that Bush PULLED THE INSPECTORS OUT OF IRAQ.

Are you referring to this?

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,81343,00.html

BAGHDAD, Iraq — U.N. weapons inspectors climbed aboard a plane and pulled out of Iraq on Tuesday after President Bush issued a final ultimatum for Saddam Hussein to step down or face war.

If so, that's not very surprising, is it? What good would they do once the bombs started falling?

If not, well then apparently they were there right up until the last minute. I'm afraid I'm missing your point.

I suppose, then, that you're referring to this:

U.N. weapons inspectors arrived in Baghdad for the first time in four years on Nov. 27, 2002, and resumed inspections two days later. During four months of inspections, arms experts traveled the length of the country hunting for banned weapons of mass destruction.

But who was President in 1998?

Oh wait, this is Fox News reporting, and that doesn't count.

tjl म्हणाले...

Freder insists, "To use the fact that Saddam had not cooperated in the past to imply he was not cooperating immediatly before the invasion is dishonest and simply a lie."

In Freder-land, a "lie" is any statement that he disagrees with.

Tibore म्हणाले...

Going back to the original topic:

Why do people keep considering the members of 9/11 Scholars for Truth experts at this field? I mean, first of all, what is this field? Conspiracy fantasy indulgence? On top of that, regarding the purely "scientific" evidence that they present, where's their expertise? They keep pushing theories as to why the physics of the towers collapsing are impossible, yet they only have one person on their team claiming any structural engineering expertise at all, and no one can verify his credentials!

By the "no one's" researching, I'm specifically thinking of contributors to the JREF (James Randi Educational Foundation) who've been trying to verify the credentials for a Joseph M. Phelps, the one listing credentials as a "Structural Dynamicist" in the American Society of Civil Engineers. They haven't been able to do so. But in trying, they discovered that there was an internal (to 9/11 Scholars for Truth) controversy about that person (source: link), and his credentials might be exaggerated (source: link).

At any rate, only one person claiming structural engineering credentials (unverified to date, possibly bogus), and two others claiming any engineering at all (an aeronatical engineer - Jean-Pierre Petit - who has published zero papers about or even given any indication at all that he's studied the WTC collapse, and a Clemson University Mechanical Engineer - Judy Wood - who studies dental stresses). But, according to Screw Loose Change the bulk of their "expertise" is comprised of the following:

"the most common academic discipline was philosophy, with 9 members, including a co-founder...

7 members did not even list an academic discipline...

English/literature and psychology came in next with 5 members each...

theology and "humanities" came in with 4 and 3 members respectively"


Contrast that to the NIST team studying the collapse:

3 structural engineers

6 fire or fire & structure researchers (the 9/11ST group has none)

1 Metallurgist (9/11ST group again has none)

... and one poor fellow who's only credential is that he's led research teams (http://wtc.nist.gov/pi/wtc_profiles.asp?lastname=cauffman). Teams with the Structures Division of the Building and Fire Research Laboratory of NITS, and teams with the Civil Engineering Research Foundation before that.

No disrespect in intended to the academic, non-engineering fields represented on the 9/11ST group's roster, but the expertise of the groups members in structural engineering or fire research is nil. Yet, they push forth "scientific" evidence regarding the towers' collapse that no engineering or scientific publication at all has ever published or even reviewed? (Yes, there are academic publications that deal strictly with structural failures; Engineering News-Record and The Structural Engineer are two that come to mind, but the point is they haven't even published in Scientific American or Discovery, let alone field-specific, peer reviewed publications.)

The "Truth" in their title is painfully ironic. And professor: Agreed. "Top" and "Leading" are empty adjectives in this context. The 9/11ST group is "Top" and "Leading" in nothing but the conspiracy fantasy. Nothing else.

Freeman Hunt म्हणाले...

There are reasons that people suppose WMD was moved to Syria. (Portion quoted at link--page contains link to full text.)

Revenant म्हणाले...

Personally, I think the academics just discovered the George Bush conspiracy theory generator and mistakenly thought it was real.

And whether or not a chemical artillery shell fits the definition of a WMD

They fit the definition the US government was using -- namely, chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons

the discovery of 700 odd degraded, pre-first Gulf War shells proves nothing

... except that Saddam Hussein had WMDs he was forbidden from having.

You can argue that Iraq didn't have enough WMDs of sufficient quality to make an invasion worthwhile. But don't try arguing that they didn't have WMDs, because it makes you look like an idiot.

Freeman Hunt म्हणाले...

Which is about as convincing as the evidence that the WTC was brought down by explosives.

Typing that does not make it so.

I would not argue that evidence is conclusive by any means. I would only argue that it is a possibility.

I have no means of guessing at diplomatic motives concerning Syria.

I think we will find out more as more documents and audio recordings are translated.

Freeman Hunt म्हणाले...

Why would you not trust this administration on anything, but on this particular issue use their declaration of insufficient evidence as ironclad proof that something is impossible? Insufficient evidence is not the same as impossible, and fingering Syria has broad diplomatic consequences not to be taken lightly.

There has been an addition to Duelfer report:

Prewar Movement of WMD Material Out of Iraq, stating "ISG judged that it was unlikely that an official transfer of WMD material from Iraq to Syria took place" but also acknowledging that "ISG was unable to complete its investigation and is unable to rule out the possibility that WMD was evacuated to Syria before the war."

If you would like more reasons that people believe a transfer to Syria was possible, just Google wmd syria.

It remains an unresolved issue. Perhaps future translation work will put the issue to rest.

Hayek म्हणाले...

To suggest there was no relationship between Al Queda and the bathists before the Iraqui invasion is to ignore all the available evidence.Zawahiri(sp?),who became their man in Iraq until his untimely demise had gone to Iraq together with two dozen of his henchmen nine months before we invaded. We learned this from the Jordanian secret service who were tracking him for the purpose of getting the Jordanian citizen back for killings which occurred in Jordan. When advised by Jordan of their presence in Bagdad and the desire that he be

Hayek म्हणाले...

...for prosecution,the Sadam regime made no response. Do you seriously believe a police state such as Iraq,which had harboured Abu Abbas and Abu Nidal,was not aware of Zawahiri's presence or that they were not protecting Al Quiada's "man in Iraq"?