Would we have gone into Iraq had we known what he know today
about the state of Saddam Hussein's programs for the production of
weapons of mass destruction? The Bush White House has been
unapologetic about its policy, and according to National Security
Adviser Condoleeza Rice, speaking on Fox News Channel on Sunday,
the answer is "yes." But the point is of course that we didn't
know. Saddam Hussein's truly moronic game of deception made it very
hard to think otherwise than that he had all sorts of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).
Last week saw the publication of the report from the Iraq Survey
Group on Saddam Hussein's WMDs, and the group's finding was that
Saddam did not have a functional program for the production of
WMDs, nor any known stockpiles of the same. In the context of a
heated election campaign, the news was played as a devastating blow
to President Bush's case for the war in Iraq.
But this represents a serious distortion.Thereis news in the
report, to be sure, but it lies in the detailed disclosure and
documentation of how France, Russia and China had benefited from
the corrupt Oil for Food program. These, of course, were the three
countries most supportive of Iraq on the U.N. Security Council.
That's what the headlines should have been all about.
The group, headed by chief U.S. weapons inspector Charles A.
Duelfer, only confirmed what weapons inspector David Kay had
previously stated before Congress at the interim publication of the
report -- that Saddam Hussein did not at the time of the invasion
have a major program for the production of WMDs. If this is news,
it is only because of the countdown towards the presidential
election.
What has been played down in the news coverage -- but shouldn't
be, as it is of crucial importance -- is that Saddam retained the
capacity and the intent to restart his production of WMDs once the
U.N. sanctions regime had finally crumbled. In this he was clearly
in breach of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441.
The Iraqi Intelligence Service maintained a set of undeclared
laboratories to research and test chemical and biological weapons
-- including through human tests. Saddam had the capacity to
produce within six months sulfur mustard and within two years nerve
agents. The Iraq Survey Group also concluded that Saddam still had
dreams of acquiring nuclear weapons and that he intended to resume
his missile programs, potentially for the delivery of WMDs.
Amazingly, opponents of the war always seem to assume that had we
not invaded Iraq, Saddam would have been content with the status
quo -- sitting in his box, as former Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright liked to put it. That, however, would have been totally
out of character. This is the Iraqi dictator who started wars
against Iran and Kuwait, threatened Saudi Arabia and constantly
tested U.S. and British fighter planes that were enforcing the
no-fly zones over Iraq. Nor let us forget that he gassed his own
Kurdish population. Saddam was as restless as he was
ruthless.
Nor were the U.N. sanctions doing the job of denying him weapons.
Throughout the 1990s, Saddam was able to amass an estimated $11
billion in revenue outside U.N.- approved methods. Furthermore, as
has been amply documented in the work of Heritage analysts Nile
Gardiner and James Phillips, the U.N. Oil for Food programs was
fraudulent and horribly corrupt in itself.
As confirmed in the Duelfer report, Saddam bought support,
particularly among French, Russian and Chinese officials to whom he
would donate oil "vouchers" that could be resold for large profits.
Recipients even included Benon Sevan, the head of the Oil for Food
program, and other officials in charge of humanitarian relief. The
scandal has gone all the way to the top, to U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's son himself. Needless to say, the countries that
benefited most from these vouchers were also the countries that
were most adamantly opposed to the Iraq invasion.
Those who criticize the military action taken by President Bush
and his team should say what they would have done in the face of
the outrageous bluff attempted by Saddam Hussein. In the
post-September 11 world, the stakes in the game Saddam was playing
were simply too high.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at
the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected].
First appeared in The Washington Times