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Claims and Facts: Rhetoric, Reality and the War in
Iraq
Claims and Facts: Iraq-Al Qaeda
Connections
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SADDAM-AL
QAEDA CONNECTION |
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CLAIM: There's overwhelming evidence there was a connection between al Qaeda and the Iraqi government. I am very confident that there was an established relationship there." - Vice President Cheney, 1/22/04
CLAIM: “The regime of Saddam Hussein cultivated ties to terror while it
built weapons of mass destruction.” – President Bush's UN speech, 9/23/03
CLAIM:
“Iraq [is] the central front in the war on terror.” –
President Bush's UN speech, 9/23/03
CLAIM:
“You can't distinguish between al-Qaida and Saddam.” – President
Bush, 9/25/02
CLAIM:
“There's no question that Saddam Hussein had al Qaeda ties.” –
President Bush, 9/17/03
CLAIM:
“There was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda.” – Vice
President Cheney, 9/14/03 |
FACT: According to documents, "Saddam Hussein warned his Iraqi supporters to be wary of joining forces with foreign Arab fighters entering Iraq to battle U.S. troops. The document provides another piece of evidence challenging the Bush administration contention of close cooperation between Saddam's regime and al Qaeda terrorists." [NY Times, 1/15/04]
FACT: "CIA interrogators have already elicited from the top Qaeda officials in custody that, before the American-led invasion, Osama bin Laden had rejected entreaties from some of his lieutenants to work jointly with Saddam." [NY Times, 1/15/04]
FACT: "Sec. of State Colin Powell conceded Thursday that despite his assertions to the United Nations last year, he had no 'smoking gun' proof of a link between the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and terrorists of al-Qaeda.'I have not seen smoking-gun, concrete evidence about the connection,' Powell said." [NY Times, 1/9/04]
FACT: “Three former Bush Administration officials who worked on intelligence and national security issues said the prewar evidence tying Al Qaeda was tenuous, exaggerated and often at odds with the conclusions of key intelligence agencies.” [National Journal, 8/9/03]
FACT: Declassified documents “undercut Bush administration claims before the war that Hussein had links to Al Qaeda.” [LA Times, 7/19/03].
FACT: “The chairman of the monitoring group appointed by the United Nations Security Council to track Al Qaeda told reporters that his team had found no evidence linking Al Qaeda to Saddam Hussein.” [NY Times, 6/27/03]
FACT: "U.S. allies have found no links between Iraq and Al Qaeda. 'We have found no evidence of links between Iraq and Al Qaeda,' said Europe's top investigator. 'If there were such links, we would have found them. But we have found no serious connections whatsoever.'" [LA Times, 11/4/02] |
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SADDAM-9/11
CONNECTION |
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CLAIM:
“We have never claimed that Saddam Hussein ... had either direction
or control of 9/11.” – National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice,
9/16/03
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FACT:
President Bush sent a letter to Congress on 3/19/03
saying that the Iraq war was permitted specifically under
legislation that authorized force against “nations, organizations,
or persons who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the
terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.”
FACT:
Vice President Cheney said on 9/14/03 “I think
it's not surprising that people make that connection” between Saddam
and 9/11- with no evidence to back up his claim.
FACT:
Two days after Cheney made that statement, Reuters reported on 9/18/03
that “President Bush distanced himself from the comments.”
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Claims and Facts: Terror
'Threats' and Responses
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WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION |
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CLAIM:
“We found the weapons of mass destruction.”
–
President Bush, 5/29/03
CLAIM:
"We know where the WMDs are.”
–
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 3/30/03
CLAIM:
“The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not
live at the mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with
weapons of mass murder.”
–
President Bush, 3/19/03
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FACT:
No WMD have been found. According to Reuters on 9/15/03
, the Administration's hand picked weapons inspector has come up
with no WMD on his visit to Iraq. “A draft report on the search for
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq provides no solid evidence that
Iraq had such arms when the United States invaded the country in
March.” (Note: the chemical weapons Bush was referring to at the
time never materialized.)
FACT:
Despite the claim that Iraq's supposed WMD posed an imminent threat
to the U.S., Secretary of State Colin Powell said on 2/24/01
that Saddam Hussein “has not developed any significant capability
with respect to weapons of mass destruction.” |
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THE
IRAQI 'THREAT' |
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CLAIM:
“The president knew that [Iraq] was a threat.”
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National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, 9/24/03
CLAIM:
On 10/7/02
, Bush gave a speech entitled “President Bush Outlines Iraqi
Threat.” He said, “Tonight I want to take a few minutes to discuss a
grave threat to peace, and America's determination to lead the world
in confronting that threat. The threat comes from Iraq. America must
not ignore the threat gathering against us.”
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FACT:
Vice President Cheney said on 9/16/01
that Saddam Hussein was not a threat. He said, “Saddam Hussein is
bottled up.”
FACT:
Powell said on 2/23/012/24/01e
threatens not the United States.” , “I think we ought to declare
[the containment policy] a success. We have kept him contained, kept
him in his box.” He then said on , “[Saddam] is unable to project
conventional power against his neighbors” and that “h |
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IRAQ
NUCLEAR WEAPONS |
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CLAIM:
“The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently
sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” – President
Bush, 1/28/03
CLAIM:
“We believe Saddam has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons.” –
Vice President Cheney, 3/16/03 |
FACT:
On 7/8/03, the W. Post reported the Administration admitted the
Iraq-Nuclear allegation was false. “Revelations by officials at the
CIA, the State Department, the UN, in Congress and elsewhere” made
clear that the White House knew the claim was false before making
the allegation [7/20/03]. In fact, “CIA Director George Tenet
successfully intervened with White House officials to have the
reference” removed from a Bush speech in Oct. of 2002. [W. Post,
7/13/03]
FACT:
The UN reported on 9/8/03
that Iraq was not capable of pursuing an active nuclear weapons
program after 1991. The report said “"No indication of post-1991
weaponization activities was uncovered in Iraq.”
FACT:
Voice of America reported on 9/16/03
that, “A senior official in Iraq's new science ministry says the
country never revived its nuclear program after inspectors
dismantled it in the 1990's.” The scientist, now a member of the
U.S.-backed administration in Iraq, “says Iraqi scientists had no
way to re-start the program because the inspectors took away all the
necessary resources.” |
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WAR
ON TERROR/BUSH DOCTRINE |
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CLAIM:
“All governments that support terror are complicit in a war against
civilization.” – President Bush's UN speech, 9/23/03
CLAIM:
“We have made clear the doctrine which says, if you harbor a
terrorist, if you feed a terrorist, if you hide a terrorist you're
just as guilty as the terrorist. We're holding regimes accountable
for harboring and supporting terror.” – President Bush, 9/10/03
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FACT:
The Administration continues its close ties with the Saudis. But the
LA Times reported on 8/2/03
that the bipartisan commission investigating 9/11 found the Saudi
government “not only provided significant money and aid to the
suicide hijackers but also allowed potentially hundreds of millions
of dollars to flow to Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups through
suspect charities and other fronts.” |
Claims and
Facts: Pre-War Assertions vs David Kay's Report
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NUCLEAR
WEAPONS |
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CLAIM:
“Evidence indicates that Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons
program…Iraq could have a nuclear weapon in less than a year.” -
President Bush, 10/7/02
CLAIM:
“[Saddam] is actively pursuing nuclear weapons at this time.”- VP
Cheney, 3/24/02
CLAIM:
“We believe Saddam has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons.” -
VP Cheney, 3/16/03
CLAIM:
“We do know that [Saddam] is actively pursuing a nuclear weapon.”-
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, 9/10/02
CLAIM:
“Iraqis were actively trying to pursue a nuclear weapons program.” -
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, 7/11/03
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“We
have not uncovered evidence that Iraq undertook significant
post-1998 steps to actually build nuclear weapons or produce fissile
material.”
-
Bush Administration Weapons Inspector David Kay, 10/2/03
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MOBILE
BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS LAB |
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CLAIM:
“We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological
laboratories.”
-President
Bush, on locating the mobile biological weapons labs, 5/29/03
CLAIM:
“We know where the [WMD] are.” - Don Rumsfeld, 3/30/03
CLAIM:
“Iraq has at least seven mobile factories for the production of
biological agents - equipment mounted on trucks and rails to evade
discovery.” –President Bush, 2/8/03
CLAIM:
“I'm absolutely sure that there are weapons of mass destruction
there and the evidence will be forthcoming. We're just getting it
now.” - Colin Powell, 5/4/03
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“We
have not yet been able to corroborate the existence of a mobile
biological weapons production effort…Technical limitations would
prevent any of these processes from being ideally suited to these
trailers.”
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Bush Administration Weapons Inspector David Kay, 10/2/03
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CHEMICAL
AND BIOLOGICAL CAPABILITY |
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CLAIM:
“There can be no doubt that Saddam Hussein has biological weapons
and the capability to rapidly produce more, many more…Our
conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between
100 and 500 tons of chemical weapons agent. That is enough agent to
fill 16,000 battlefield rockets.” – Colin Powell, 2/5/03
CLAIM:
“[Saddam has] amassed large, clandestine stockpiles of biological
weapons, including Anthrax, botulism, toxins and possibly smallpox.
He's amassed large, clandestine stockpiles of chemical weapons,
including VX, Sarin and mustard gas.” --Don Rumsfeld, 9/19/02
CLAIM:
“Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has
weapons of mass destruction. There is no doubt that he is amassing
them to use against our friends, against our allies, and against
us.” –Vice President Cheney, 8/26/02
CLAIM:
“The Iraqi regime possesses biological and chemical weapons…And
according to the British government, the Iraqi regime could launch a
biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes.”
–President Bush, 9/26/02
CLAIM:
“Our intelligence officials estimate that Saddam Hussein had the
materials to produce as much as 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX
nerve agent.” –President Bush, 1/28/03
CLAIM:
“His regime has large, unaccounted-for stockpiles of chemical and
biological weapons -- including VX, sarin, cyclosarin and mustard
gas; anthrax, botulism, and possibly smallpox -- and he has an
active program to acquire and develop nuclear weapons.” – Don
Rumsfeld, 1/20/03
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“Iraq
did not have a large, ongoing, centrally controlled chemical weapons
program after 1991… Iraq's large-scale capability to develop,
produce, and fill new chemical weapon munitions was reduced - if not
entirely destroyed - during Operations Desert Storm and Desert Fox,
13 years of UN sanctions and UN inspections.”
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Bush Administration Weapons Inspector David Kay, 10/2/03
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Claims and Facts: War Costs &
Post-War Planning
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PRE-WAR
COST ESTIMATES |
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CLAIM:
Iraq will be “
an affordable endeavor ” that “
will not require sustained aid ” and will “be in the range of $50
billion to $60 billion .” – Budget Director Mitch Daniels
[Forbes 4/11/03, W. Post 3/28/03, NY Times 1/2/03, respectively]
CLAIM:
“Costs of any such intervention would be very small.” - Top White
House Economist Glen Hubbard [CNBC, 10/4/02]
CLAIM:
Paul Wolfowitz “dismissed articles in several newspapers this week
asserting that Pentagon budget specialists put the cost of war and
reconstruction at $60 billion to $95 billion in this fiscal year.”
[NY Times, 2/28/03
]
CLAIM:
“In terms of the American taxpayers contribution, [$1.7 billion] is
it for the US. The rest of the rebuilding of Iraq will be done by
other countries and Iraqi oil revenues…The American part of this
will be 1.7 billion. We have no plans for any further-on funding for
this.” – USAID Director Andrew Natsios, 4/23/03
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FACT:
The Bush Administration has requested approximately $166B –
including $87B in Sept. 2003 - for operations in Iraq, despite
firing top economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey for suggesting
(accurately) before the war that a war in Iraq would cost at least
$100 to $200 billion of dollars.
FACT:
The Bush Administration has requested $20 billion for reconstruction
in Iraq – despite the pledge that the U.S. would only fund $1.7
billion.
FACT:
Wolfowitz contradicted his 2/28/03 statement on 9/10/03 ,
saying “No one said we would know anything other than this would be
very bloody, it could be very long and by implication, it could be
very expensive.”
FACT:
Only on 9/22/03 – months after the war - did the Administration
acknowledge that, under international law, the U.S. will inherit
“roughly $200 billion in debt” from Iraq. [CongressDaily] |
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PRE-WAR
OIL REVENUE ESTIMATES |
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CLAIM:
“The oil revenues of Iraq could bring between $50 and $100 billion
over the course of the next two or three years…We're dealing with a
country that can really finance its own reconstruction, and
relatively soon.” – Paul Wolfowitz, [Congressional Testimony,
3/27/03]
CLAIM:
“Iraq, unlike Afghanistan, is a rather wealthy country. Iraq has
tremendous resources that belong to the Iraqi people. And so there
are a variety of means that Iraq has to be able to shoulder much of
the burden for their own reconstruction.” – White House Spokesman
Ari Fleischer, 2/18/03
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FACT:
International Oil Daily reported on 9/23/03
that Paul Bremer said that current and future oil revenues will be
insufficient for rebuilding Iraq – despite the Administration's
pre-war promises.
FACT:
The WSJ reported on 9/5/03 that the Administration's oil estimates
were “predicated on aggressively optimistic assumptions.”
FACT:
While Bremer told Oil Daily that “Iraqi oil infrastructure was much
worse than we thought,” a March
2000 report by the U.N. clearly said Iraq oil would be
insufficient. The report said the Iraqi oil industry was
“lamentable” and that the decline was “accelerating.” Roger Dowan of
PFC Energy told NPR on 9/11/03 that the U.N. study the “made very
clear that actually the facilities and the capacity to produce oil
in Iraq” were far less than the Administration was portraying.
FACT:
The NY Times reported on 10/5/03
“The Bush administration's optimistic statements earlier this year
that Iraq's oil wealth, not American taxpayers, would cover most of
the cost of rebuilding Iraq were at odds with a bleaker assessment
of a government task force secretly established last fall to study
Iraq's oil industry.” |
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POST-WAR
PLANNING |
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CLAIM:
“I think has been fairly significant success in terms of putting
Iraq back together again…and certainly wouldn't lead me to suggest
or think that the strategy is flawed or needs to be changed.” – Vice
President Cheney, [
9/14/03 ] |
FACT:
The Wash Times White House officials “acknowledge that their
post-Saddam plan for rebuilding Iraq has been substantially flawed
on the security front. Some officials said privately that the plan
for security after Baghdad's fall has been an utter failure.”
[8/28/03]
FACT:
“A secret report for the Joint Chiefs of Staff blames setbacks in
Iraq on a flawed and rushed war-planning process” in which
“officials, , conceded in recent weeks that the Bush administration
failed to predict the guerrilla war against American troops in
Iraq.” [W. Times, 9/3/03
] |
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RECONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTS |
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CLAIM:
In response to questions about whether his tenure as CEO of
Halliburton had to do with the company winning billions worth of
no-bid contracts, VP Cheney said “I have no financial interest in
Halliburton of any kind and haven't had now for over three years.”
[ 9/14/03 ]
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FACT:
Cheney receives up to $1
million a year from Halliburton and a $20
million retirement package from Halliburton. [UK Guardian, NY
Times] |
Claims and Facts: War
Predictions
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LENGTH
OF MILITARY OPERATIONS |
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CLAIM:
“Major combat operations in Iraq have ended.” – President Bush,
5/1/03
CLAIM:
The war “could last six days, six weeks. I doubt six months.” –
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
[2/7/03]
CLAIM
“We will, in fact, be greeted as liberators. . . . I think it will
go relatively quickly... (in) weeks rather than months.” – Vice
President Cheney [3/16/03] |
FACT:
The war in Iraq is still going on, and more American troops have
been killed after “major combat operations” supposedly ended than
before. |
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TROOP
DEPLOYMENT NEEDS |
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CLAIM:
“What is, I think, reasonably certain is the idea that it would take
several hundred thousand U.S. forces I think is far from the mark.”
– Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld 2/27/03
CLAIM:
“The notion that it would take several hundred thousand American
troops just seems outlandish.” Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz,
3/4/03
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FACT:
The nonpartisan CBO reported on 9/3/03
that “The Army does not have enough active-duty component forces” to
do what is required in Iraq – meaning the U.S. needs to increase its
deployment above the 150,000 currently in Iraq. That confirms General
Erik Shinseki's estimate that it would take “several hundred
thousand troops.” [2/25/03]
FACT:
The Administration is trying to stretch the current deployment too
thin. As reported on 8/24/03
, for the first time since Vietnam, the military will “have to start
serving back-to-back overseas tours of up to a year.”
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Produced by the Center for American
Progress |