Topics in the News: WMD
Pete Buttigieg on War & Peace
: Feb 12, 2019
2002: opposed Iraq War because believed WMDs would be used
It turns out that most of us, for and against the war, were wrong about the Saddam's WMDs. He didn't have any--and so they were not there to be used against American troops.Iraq fell quickly, and for a moment it seemed that the invasion was a
vindication of American intervention abroad. Protesters like me looked foolish. Sure, the pretext for war was actually false, but who could quibble over that, as a brutal dictatorship was being turned into a model democracy at relatively little cost to
America?
Then the suicide bombings began. We were not, as the administration had promised, "greeted as liberators." A well-functioning democracy did not emerge. And the ensuing chaos made it clear that the administration had not planned
for the aftermath of the invasion, as Iraqi cities became a kill zone for our troops. We who were against the invasion had been wrong about the weapons, but right about the war. The administration had been wrong about both.
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Source: Shortest Way Home, by Pete Buttigieg, p. 52
Marianne Williamson on Homeland Security
: Jul 24, 2018
Remove pathological romanization of the military
During the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, I was one of many Americans saying, "This is Vietnam all over again." At the time, we were described by officialdom as facile thinkers who simply didn't understand the severity of the situation. What we did
understand was that Iraq had absolutely nothing to do with 9/11; there was no Al Qaeda in Iraq; and even if Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, let us be adult enough to remember we do business with countries that have WMD every day. Oh, and
Saddam Hussein killed his own people? So have the Chinese, and we did not invade them.We need a miracle of God to remove from us what has become an almost pathological romanization of the military. I have a great respect for the men and women of the
U.S. Armed Forces, but their idealization as ultimate and exclusive saviors in times of national distress is a disservice to them and to us all. If America spent more time and resources waging peace, we would find ourselves waging far less war.
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Source: Healing the Soul of America, by Marianne Williamson, p.105-6
Mike Pence on War & Peace
: Jul 15, 2016
Supported Iraq war and sending more US troops there in 2007
Pence, near the beginning of his 12-year tenure in the U.S. House, voted for the resolution authorizing the 2003 Iraq invasion. Pence, who chaired the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the Middle East, was also a prominent backer of the
2007 "surge" strategy sending more U.S. troops to the faltering effort in Iraq, telling CNN's Wolf Blitzer at the time that "the surge is working" while also defending the original decision to invade despite the absence of weapons of mass destruction.
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Source: CNN.com 2016 Veepstakes, "Pence foreign policy"
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Oct 5, 2010
2002: Saddam gave sanctuary to terrorists including Al Qaeda
Bill Clinton saw Iraq as a major threat. His secretary of state called the ability of states like Iraq to use their weapons "the greatest security threat we face." Clinton's national security adviser stated with certainty that "Saddam will use those
weapons of mass destruction again, as he has ten times since 1983." In 2002, Hillary Clinton also warned the Saddam was working to rebuild his nuclear program and had "given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including al Qaeda members."
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Source: The Last Best Hope, by Joe Scarborough, p. 36-7
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Oct 1, 2008
2002: Saddam gave aid to Al Qaeda terrorists
"Almost no one disagrees with these basic facts. That he has weapons of mass destruction and that he is doing everything in his power to get nuclear weapons."
--Sen. John Edwards, Sept. 12, 2002"In the four years since the inspectors left,
intelligence reports show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability, and his nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including
al-Qaeda members."
--Sen. Hillary Clinton, Oct. 10, 2002
"Saddam Hussein certainly has chemical and biological weapons. There's no question about that."
--Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Nov. 17, 2002
"We have known for many years that Saddam
Hussein is seeking and developing weapons of mass destruction."
--Sen. Edward Kennedy, Sept. 27, 2003
"If we wait for the danger to become clear, it could be too late."
--Sen. Joseph Biden, Sept. 4, 2002
Click for Hillary Clinton on other issues.
Source: The War in Quotes, by G.B. Trudeau, p. 28-29
Joe Biden on War & Peace
: Oct 1, 2008
2002: Waiting to be sure of Saddam danger could be too late
"Almost no one disagrees with these basic facts. That he has weapons of mass destruction and that he is doing everything in his power to get nuclear weapons."
--Sen. John Edwards, Sept. 12, 2002"In the four years since the inspectors left,
intelligence reports show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability, and his nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including
al-Qaeda members."
--Sen. Hillary Clinton, Oct. 10, 2002
"Saddam Hussein certainly has chemical and biological weapons. There's no question about that."
--Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Nov. 17, 2002
"We have known for many years that Saddam
Hussein is seeking and developing weapons of mass destruction."
--Sen. Edward Kennedy, Sept. 27, 2003
"If we wait for the danger to become clear, it could be too late."
--Sen. Joseph Biden, Sept. 4, 2002
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Source: The War in Quotes, by G.B. Trudeau, p. 28-29
Mike Gravel on Government Reform
: May 2, 2008
Senators can & should reveal secret war plans with impunity
The significance today of my 1972 Supreme Court case could not be greater. In April 2007, Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip, said about Iraq WMD evidence, “In the Intelligence Committee we were sworn to secrecy. We can’t walk out the
door and say, ‘The statement made yesterday by the White House is in direct contradiction to classified information that’s being given to this Congress.’ We can’t do that.”Durbin is dead wrong. If his staff had only researched my case he could have
indeed walked out that door and onto the Senate floor and spoke his mind about the lies the administration were weaving about Iraq. Had he and other senators done so, a catastrophe may have been averted. Instead, as
Durbin said: “I listened to this heated debate about invading Iraq, thinking the American people are being misled. I didn’t feel at the time that the American people knew the real facts.” If only Durbin had recognized his rights and dared to act.
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Source: A Political Odyssey, by Mike Gravel, p. 64-65
Mike Gravel on War & Peace
: May 2, 2008
2001: Should have made deal with Saddam to fight extremists
You did not need to be a Middle East expert to know then that Saddam held the country together in a brutal police state. Once he was removed, old tribal and religious scores would be settled in a long-running bloodbath. Even if the threat of
Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction had been real--and I never believed it--after September 11, 2001, Saddam and the US suddenly had a common enemy: Islamic extremism.
Instead of negotiating a deal to fight that mutual threat, perhaps using the leverage of lifting sanctions, Bush removed Saddam and let extremism flourish in a land where it hadn’t been tolerated. Saddam had been America’s ally against Iran.
It would not have been the first time the US made a deal with the devil. We all wanted to see a democratic and prosperous Iraq at peace with its neighbors. But the Bush administration foolishly thought invasion and occupation would bring it about.
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Source: A Political Odyssey, by Mike Gravel, p. 16
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Jan 31, 2008
Iraq war vote was meant to be used as coercive diplomacy
Q: Why can’t you just say right now that vote was a mistake?A: I did an enormous amount of investigation and due diligence to try to determine what if any threat could flow from the history of Saddam being both an owner of and a seeker of WMD. The ide
of putting inspectors back in was a credible idea. I believe in coercive diplomacy. You try to figure out how to move bad actors in a direction that you prefer in order to avoid more dire consequences. If you took it on the face of it and if you took it
on the basis of what we hoped would happen with the inspectors going in, that in and of itself was a policy that we’ve used before. We have used the threat of force to try to make somebody change their behavior. What no one could have fully appreciated
is how obsessed Bush was with this particular mission. Unfortunately, I and others who warned at the time, let the inspectors finish their work do not wage a preemptive war, use diplomacy, were just talking to a brick wall.
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Source: 2008 Democratic debate in Los Angeles before Super Tuesday
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Jun 3, 2007
Iraq war wouldn’t have happened had the inspectors been sent
Q: Do you regret not reading the National Intelligence Estimate before the Iraq war vote? A: I feel like I was totally briefed, I knew all of the arguments that were being made by everyone from all directions. I thought the best way to find out who was
right in the intelligence community was to send in the inspectors. If Bush had allowed the inspectors to finish the job they started, we would have known that Saddam Hussein did not have WMD and we would not have gone and invaded Iraq.
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Source: 2007 Dem. debate at Saint Anselm College
Joe Biden on War & Peace
: Apr 29, 2007
In 2002 Saddam posed a threat of purchasing a nuclear bomb
Q: In 2002 you said about Saddam: “He must be dislodged from his weapons or dislodged from power.” A: I was correct about that. I also said at the time that I did not think he had weaponized his material, but he did have these stockpiles everywhere.
A: It turned out they didn’t, but everyone in the world thought he had them. The weapons inspectors said he had them. What he did with them, who knows?
Q: Gen. Zinni, when he heard the discussion about WMD that
Saddam had, said, “I’ve never heard that” in any of the briefings he had as head of the Central Command. How could you as a US Senator be so wrong?
A: I wasn’t wrong. When asked about aluminum tubes, I said they’re for artillery. I don’t believe
they’re for cascading.
Q: But you said Saddam was a threat.
A: He was a threat.
Q: In what way?
A: If Saddam was left unfettered, with sanctions lifted and billions in his coffers, then he had the ability to purchase a tactical nuclear weapon.
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Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Joe Biden on War & Peace
: Apr 29, 2007
Vote for war allowed war only after all else failed
Q: Should you have sought out people who had a dissenting view on WMD?A: Oh, I did. I called every intelligence agency before the Foreign Relations Committee, had them all sit there at once. I pointed out to all my colleagues who came that there was
vast disagreement among the intelligence community.
Q: But despite the doubts you heard, you voted for the war.
A: I voted to give the president the authority to avoid a war. We had a more constrictive amendment, but he had 55 votes no matter what.
A: It allowed the president to go to war. It did not authorize him to go to it. You make it sound like it said, “Mr. President, go to war.” It said, “Mr
President, don’t go to war.” It said “go to the United Nations. Try to get a deal. Get the inspectors back in. Tell us that that’s what you’re about to do. And, Mr. President, if all else fails, you have authority to use force.” That’s what it said.
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Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Hillary Clinton on Principles & Values
: Apr 26, 2007
Biggest mistakes: mishandling healthcare; believing in WMDs
Q What is the most significant political or professional mistake you have made in the past four years? A: Well, I don’t have enough time to tell you all the mistakes I’ve made in the last many years. Certainly, the mistakes I made around
health care were deeply troubling to me and interfered with our ability to get our message out. And, you know, believing the president when he said he would go to the United Nations and put inspectors into Iraq to determine whether they had WMD.
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Source: 2007 South Carolina Democratic primary debate, on MSNBC
Barack Obama on Homeland Security
: Mar 27, 2007
Protecting nuclear power plants is of utmost importance
We have utterly failed to deal with what may be one of the most significant potential terror threats to this country, and that is how we protect our chemical plants across the nation.
These plants are stationary weapons of mass destruction spread across the country. Their security is light, their facilities are easily entered, and their contents are deadly.
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Source: In His Own Words, edited by Lisa Rogak, p.160
Mike Gravel on War & Peace
: Dec 25, 2006
Commence an immediate and orderly withdrawal from Iraq
The Gravel Agenda: When elected President by the American people, I will:- Commence an immediate and orderly withdrawal from Iraq;
- Broker a cease fire in Gaza and the West Bank and promote diplomacy;
- Establish diplomatic relations with
Iran and N. Korea to stop the proliferation of WMD;
- Launch and leading a massive global scientific effort to end energy dependence on oil and integrating the world’s scientific community to this task.
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Source: 2008 Presidential campaign website, gravel2008.us, “Issues”
Howie Hawkins on War & Peace
: Nov 1, 2006
Immediate and unconditional withdrawal from Iraq
Q: Should the US support the creation of a Palestinian state?A: Yes.
Q: Should the US withdraw its troops from Iraq?
A: Yes.
Q: Discuss your proposals for an exit strategy in Iraq.
A: Immediate and unconditional withdrawal. The real US military mission was to establish military bases and control the oil, not WMDs, terrorism, and democracy as the politicians spun it. The mission was imperialistic. It was wrong and it should stop.
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Source: 2006 Congressional National Political Awareness
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Oct 22, 2006
Regrets Bush’s handling of war, but not her war vote
Q: You’ve been critical of Pres. Bush’s handling of the war. But you have not apologized for your vote to authorize that action.CLINTON: I regret the way the president used the authority that Congress gave him. I thought it made sense to get inspector
back into Iraq, and backing it up with coercive diplomacy. I was worried that there were residual WMD, and that Saddam could have done something quite irrational. We know now that this administration never intended to let the inspectors do their job and
contain Saddam. I take responsibility for my vote. I regret that we’ve had strategic blunders and misjudgments. But if we knew then what we know now, there never would have been a vote, and there never would have been a war. This president chose that war
and unfortunately, was ill-prepared for what was needed to be done to be successful.
Q: Do you regret voting that way at the time?
CLINTON: I regret the way he used it. I don’t believe in do-overs in life. I made the best judgment at the time.
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Source: NY 2006 Senate Debate, moderated by Bill Ritter
Amy Klobuchar on War & Peace
: Aug 15, 2006
Supported invading Afghanistan, but not Iraq
While I support the invasion of Afghanistan, I disagreed with the decision to invade Iraq. After 3 years, it has become obvious to those who favored the war & to those who opposed it that the Bush-Cheney administration was not truthful about the reasons
they gave for invading Iraq, nor were they truthful about having a plan to secure the peace & protect our troops once we invaded.Whether it was their categorical (but false) assertions about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, or their repeated (but
unsupported) claims of Iraq’s ties to Al Qaeda, or their frequent (but untrue) assurances that America would go to war only with broad international support, or their constant (but divisive) attempts to “spin” the war by going after those who disagreed
with them, the Bush-Cheney administration did not give honest information to the American people. This conduct has not only damaged America’s credibility throughout the world, but also undermined the American people’s confidence in our own government.
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Source: 2006 Senate campaign website, www.amyklobuchar.com, “Issues”
Barack Obama on War & Peace
: Oct 26, 2004
Saddam did not own and was not providing WMD to terrorists
It’s simply not true that Saddam was providing weapons of mass destruction to terrorists. This incursion into Iraq has resulted in a situation in which terrorist recruits are up. It’s been acknowledged, now, by the Pentagon, that the insurgents active in
Iraq are far higher. Terrorist attacks worldwide are the highest in 20 years. The notion that somehow we’re less vulnerable in the US as a consequence of spending 200 billion dollars and sacrificing thousands of lives is simply not borne out by the facts
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Source: IL Senate Debate
Barack Obama on War & Peace
: Oct 12, 2004
Terrorists are in Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Iran
OBAMA: The Bush administration could not find a connection between Saddam and Al Qaeda. WMD are not found in Iraq. And so, it is absolutely true that we have a network of terrorists, but it takes a huge leap of logic to suddenly suggest that that means
that we invade Iraq. Saudi Arabia has a whole bunch of terrorists, so have Syria and Iran, and all across the globe. To mount full-scale invasions as a consequence is a bad strategy. It makes more sense for us to focus on those terrorists who are active
to try to roll them up where we have evidence that in fact these countries are being used as staging grounds that would potentially cause us eminent harm, and then we go in. The US has to reserve all military options in facing such an imminent threat-
but we have to do it wisely.KEYES: That’s the fallacy, because you did make an argument just then from the wisdom of hindsight, based on conclusions reached now which were not in Bush’s hands several months ago when he had to make this decision.
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Source: [Xref Obama] IL Senate Debate, Illinois Radio Network
Barack Obama on Homeland Security
: Jul 12, 2004
Increase funding to decommission Russian nukes
More than a decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Russia still has more nearly 20,000 nuclear weapons and enough nuclear material to produce 50,000 more. At the current rate of spending, it will take 13 years to secure all the potential bomb
material from the old Soviet Republic. We should increase funding to do it in four years. We must also strengthen the existing Non-Proliferation Treaty, and lead in the efforts to prevent countries with the proven capability to build WMDs from doing so.
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Source: Press Release, “Renewal of American Leadership ”
Hillary Clinton on War & Peace
: Feb 25, 2004
2002 Iraq speech criticized both Saddam and U.N.
[On the 2002 Iraq war vote], she managed to sound vehemently anti Saddam without sounding pro Bush. In a floor speech on the measure to authorize the use of force in Iraq, Hillary managed quite a juggling act. She criticized the United Nations for puttin
limits on inspection sites. She warned of Saddam Hussein’s ambitions for weapons of mass destruction. she concluded that going to war against Iraq ‘on the present facts is not a good option’ but voted to enable George W. Bush to lead the nation into war.
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Source: Madame Hillary, by R. Emmett Tyrell, p. 48-49
Page last updated: Jun 12, 2019