USA Today ignores prewar evidence in claiming that Saddam's lack of WMD was "learned too late"Media MattersJan. 02, 2007 |
U.S. Must Prep to 'Welcome Large Numbers of Jewish Refugees,' Pro-War Lobbyist Mark Dubowitz Says
Israel Lobby Seeking to Revamp U.S. Aid as 'Partnership' Immune to Political Shifts
Israel Lobby Ousts Thomas Massie From Congress in Most Expensive Primary Race in History
Thomas Massie vs. The Israel Lobby
Ben Shapiro: The Israel Lobby Didn't Target Massie Because Of His Opposition to Israel
![]() Summary: A USA Today editorial asserted that the U.S. "learned too late" that the first Gulf War had "limited" Saddam Hussein's "ability to develop weapons of mass destruction." But this assertion ignores prewar evidence that contradicted the Bush administration's claims that Iraq had WMD or was reconstituting its WMD programs. A January 2 USA Today editorial about the execution of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein said that he "was less a threat to the USA than was thought, particularly after the Persian Gulf War shattered his army and, as was learned too late, limited his ability to develop weapons of mass destruction [WMD]." The editorial's assertion that Saddam's inability to develop weapons of mass destruction "was learned too late" ignores prewar evidence that contradicted the Bush administration's claims that Iraq had WMD or was reconstituting its WMD programs. As Media Matters for America has noted, former high-ranking CIA official Tyler Drumheller stated on the April 23, 2006, edition of CBS' 60 Minutes that the CIA told the Bush administration in the fall of 2002 that according to a high-level source within the Iraqi government (whom 60 Minutes identified as then-foreign minister Naji Sabri), Iraq "had no active weapons of mass destruction program" -- an assessment of Iraq's WMD capabilities that proved to be accurate, based on the subsequent findings of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG). Drumheller said the Bush administration "stopped being interested in the intelligence" when it received this report from the Iraqi source, and he further stated that "[t]he war in Iraq was coming and they [the Bush administration] were looking for intelligence to fit into that policy, to justify the policy." Media Matters has also repeatedly shown (here, here, here, and here) that members of the intelligence community challenged the accuracy of the intelligence indicating Iraq had WMD or was reconstituting its WMD programs. From the January 2 USA Today editorial titled "Saddam's Demise": Saddam was rushed to the gallows by an Iraqi government that has been unable or unwilling to control Shiite death squads that capture, torture and kill Sunni civilians, just as Saddam, a Sunni, tormented Shiites and Kurds during three decades of murderous rule. A clandestine video of his hanging captured a taunting mob chanting the name of Muqtada al-Sadr, the powerful anti-American Shiite cleric whose militias are believed to be responsible for many of the killings. —B.J.L. |