BeAChooser
Banned
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- Jun 20, 2007
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...465721991599994.html?mod=WSJ_newsreel_opinion
I think the answer is an obvious no, since we would have already squandered the one opportunity to stop him. By 2004 UN sanctions would have ended (afterall, the inspectors were giving him a clean bill of health) and by 2005 and 2006, he'd have rearmed with chemical weapons and biological weapons. And then what could we have done?
By 2006 or 2007, he'd also have of had operational intermediate range ballistic missiles. And his nuclear program would have been well under way … perhaps based on his joint program with Libya that we only learned about after our soldiers dug Saddam out of that hole in the ground and Libya got cold feet.
No, I think it's almost a virtual certainty that Saddam would have been testing nuclear weapons in his deserts by now. Given that, I think Obama should have offered more thanks than he did to Bush during his recent Iraq address. The last thing the world needed was one more nuclear armed lunatic.
I think it is a profound mistake to confine the war's significance to the borders of Iraq. Mr. Obama himself raised the central question about Iraq in that 2002 speech: Did Saddam Hussein pose a danger beyond his borders, or not?
"Let me be clear," State Senator Obama told the Federal Plaza crowd, "I suffer no illusions about Saddam Hussein. . . . He has repeatedly thwarted U.N. inspection teams, developed chemical and biological weapons and coveted nuclear capacity. . . . But I also know that Saddam poses no imminent and direct threat to the United States. . . [H]e can be contained."
… snip …
Let us assume that Mr. Obama's "smarter" view had prevailed, that we had left Saddam in power in Iraq. What would the world look like today?
… snip …
At the time of Mr. Obama's 2002 antiwar speech, three other significant, non-Iraqi events were occurring: Iran and North Korea were commencing toward a nuclear break-out, and A.Q. Khan was on the move.
In March 2002, Mr. Khan, the notorious Pakistani nuclear materials dealer, moved his production facilities from Pakistan to Malaysia.
In August, an Iranian exile group revealed the existence of a centrifuge factory in Natanz, Iran.
A month later, U.S. intelligence concluded that North Korea had almost completed a "production-scale" centrifuge facility.
It was also believed in 2002 that al Qaeda was shopping for nuclear materials. In The Wall Street Journal this week, Jay Solomon described how two North Korean operatives through this period developed a network to acquire nuclear technologies.
In short, the nuclear bad boys club was on the move in 2002. Can anyone seriously believe that amidst all this Saddam Hussein would have contented himself with administering his torture chambers? This is fanciful.
… snip …
The definitive account of Saddam's WMD ambitions is the Duelfer Report, issued by the Iraq Survey Group in 2005. Yes, the Duelfer Report concluded that Saddam didn't have active WMD. But at numerous points in the 1,000-page document, it asserted (with quotes from Iraqi politicians and scientists) that Saddam's goal was to free himself of U.N. sanctions and restart his efforts to acquire nuclear weapons and other WMD.
… snip …
Imagine the effect on the jolly Iraqi's thinking come 2005 and the rise to stardom of Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, publicly mocking the West's efforts to shut his nuclear program and threatening enemies with annihilation. … snip … In North Korea, Kim Jong Il was flouting the civilized world, conducting nuclear-weapon tests and test-firing missiles into the Sea of Japan. In such a world, Saddam would have aspired to play in the same league as Iran and NoKo. Would we have "contained" him?
I think the answer is an obvious no, since we would have already squandered the one opportunity to stop him. By 2004 UN sanctions would have ended (afterall, the inspectors were giving him a clean bill of health) and by 2005 and 2006, he'd have rearmed with chemical weapons and biological weapons. And then what could we have done?
By 2006 or 2007, he'd also have of had operational intermediate range ballistic missiles. And his nuclear program would have been well under way … perhaps based on his joint program with Libya that we only learned about after our soldiers dug Saddam out of that hole in the ground and Libya got cold feet.
No, I think it's almost a virtual certainty that Saddam would have been testing nuclear weapons in his deserts by now. Given that, I think Obama should have offered more thanks than he did to Bush during his recent Iraq address. The last thing the world needed was one more nuclear armed lunatic.