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Why
Iraq’s WMD Matters
Paul
J. Saunders and Nikolas K. Gvosdev
Readers of In the
National Interest are well aware that its editors
and publishers endorsed all necessary methods, including
war, to eliminate what would be a major threat to
American national security—a hostile Iraqi regime with
known links to international terrorism that possessed
weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
Accordingly, we have been surprised and disturbed
to see frequent denunciations of anyone who raises
important questions about the evidence of
Iraq
’s WMD programs, a
central element of such a threat.
One of the more extreme examples of this approach
is William Safire’s characterization of those who
raise such issues as a "crowd that bitterly resents
America's mission to root out the sources of
terror" and “opponents of this genocidal
maniac’s removal” in The
New York Times on Monday, June 2.
An editorial in The Wall Street Journal on the same day implies that those who
believe that finding evidence of
Iraq
’s WMD is important
are "opponents of war" out "to damage the
credibility of Mr. Blair, President Bush and other war
supporters.”
Secretary
of State Colin Powell made a powerful case that
Iraq
indeed did possess
weapons of mass destruction (in violation of UN
resolutions) and that
Baghdad
had forged links with
terrorists in his February 2003 presentation to the
United Nations Security Council.
CIA Director George Tenet’s seated presence
behind Secretary Powell symbolically reinforced that
case. By the
time President Bush made the same case to the American
people in March, the Congress and the attentive public
(not to mention the policy community) had already
accepted many if not most of its details put forth by
the Bush Administration.
Taking
into account that Iraq’s WMD programs were a central
element of the administration’s argument for war, it
is troubling that so little evidence of such programs
has so far been unearthed (both literally and
figuratively). This
is a particular problem in view of the urgency with
which the administration insisted that it was necessary
to deal with the Iraqi threat.
It
is extraordinarily difficult to believe that President
Bush, Secretary Powell or Director Tenet would
deliberately mislead the Congress, the American people,
or the rest of the world about
Iraq
’s weapons programs. All
three are honorable men and our open society does not
facilitate such manipulations.
There are, however, a number of other possible
explanations for the failure to find
Baghdad
’s WMD arsenal.
It
is legitimate to argue that Saddam Hussein’s regime
was preoccupied with concealing its weapons programs and
that finding them (or translating documents or
identifying and interviewing relevant individuals) will
take time. This
may yet be proven true.
It is also legitimate to argue that the Iraqi
government or military or Baath loyalists may have
destroyed much of the evidence during the war.
This may also eventually be proven true.
It
would similarly be legitimate, if disappointing, to
admit that
U.S.
and British
intelligence agencies made an honest mistake, perhaps in
relying too heavily on information from defectors or
other opponents of
Iraq
’s tyrannical regime eager for a
U.S.
solution to their
problem. This
is always a possibility in dealing with intelligence
reports from closed societies.
It would even be acceptable, though more
distressing, to admit that a few overly enthusiastic
analysts may have slanted their interpretations of
invariably ambiguous data and to follow this disclosure
with a commitment to taking corrective action.
Worse has happened in
America
and elsewhere.
What
is not legitimate is to argue that the questions of
Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction do not matter or
worse, that asking such questions is somehow
anti-American or supportive of Saddam Hussein’s
tyrannical regime.
We
respectfully but vehemently disagree.
The failure to discover evidence of substantial
WMD programs (a standard not met by the two apparent
mobile laboratories) is a real credibility problem for
the administration.
It calls into question the imminence of the Iraqi
threat and, as a result, the need for immediate action
over the objection of important partners who could
otherwise have shared much more substantially the human,
financial and political costs of war and reconstruction.
With the former costs surpassing 100 lives and
100 billion dollars, respectively—and still
growing—this is not an inconsequential point.
The
evil nature of
Iraq
’s former government
is not a substitute for demonstrating
Iraq
’s WMD capabilities. No
one denies the brutality of Saddam's regime, but there
are many other brutal tyrannies in the world.
The administration received a bipartisan mandate
from Congress and broad support from the American people
for military action because
Iraq
was said to be a real
and imminent danger to the
United States
.
There were (and still are) other candidates for
American attention—Kim Jong-il is no less tyrannical
than Saddam Hussein and, unlike Iraq, North Korea
already appears to have nuclear weapons that it has
threatened to share with others.
Secretary Powell and other
U.S.
officials went to the
United Nations and sought to build an international
coalition against
Iraq
not because Saddam
was a criminal butcher but because he was a menace to
America
, his neighbors, and
international peace.
Moving
forward, it could be very damaging to
U.S.
interests if a
continued failure to find
Iraq
’s WMD calls into
question the evidence the Bush Administration provides
in dealing with
North Korea
,
Iran
, and other
proliferators. It
also reinforces the worst instincts of those in the Arab
world and elsewhere who never really believed that the
war was about the weapons at all.
It
is fair to insist to America's critics that U.S. forces
be given the same eighteen months that others insisted
be extended to Hans Blix and his team of UN weapons
inspectors to search Iraq and to establish that it had
been disarmed. And
there remains a strong presumption that
Iraq
indeed had
clandestine programs to develop weapons of mass
destruction. But
looking again at American intelligence—which Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and CIA Director George Tenet
have already ordered—is a worthwhile endeavor to
assess our effectiveness in determining Iraq’s
capabilities.
The
bottom line is that arguing that the evidence of
Iraq’s weapons of destruction is insignificant because
Saddam Hussein was an evil dictator—and that those who
question the intelligence supporting an immediate Iraqi
WMD threat are somehow supporters of mass killings and
repression—is preposterous and irresponsible.
It is just plain wrong to insist that the
question of Iraqi WMD simply doesn't matter and to
attack the loyalty, motives and morality of those who
do.
Paul
J. Saunders is director of the Nixon Center. Nikolas K.
Gvosdev is editor of ITNI.
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