Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Bush FINALLY vindicated on WMD in Iraq ...

A national defense analyst says President Bush should be commended for keeping quiet about a discovery that could have blown his critics out of the water.



Retired Major General Jerry Curry is a decorated combat veteran who served as an Army aviator, paratrooper, and Ranger during a military career that began during the Korean conflict. He recently wrote about a very under reported story by the Associated Press According to the report, a large stockpile of concentrated natural Uranium, known as "yellowcake," reached a Canadian port to complete a top secret U.S. Operation that included a two-week airlift from Baghdad , and a ship voyage crossing two oceans. The Uranium material had been housed at a former Iraqi nuclear complex 12 miles from Baghdad .



Curry says the president kept mum about the discovery in order to keep terrorists in the dark. "He made a very brave stand, a resolute stand..., in which he decided that he wasn't going to blab everything to the press," Curry commends. "...And in the meantime while he kept it quiet, he was buying time from the terrorists to get all that stuff out of the country. So that's what was done -- he just very quietly kept his mouth shut."



"The press beat him to death for the last several years," he continues, "and now it turns out that, yes, there were weapons of mass destruction....." Curry also maintains that Saddam Hussein had an active nuclear program and the material could have been made into a nuclear weapon.



President Bush's actions took courage, he notes, and all Americans should be thankful to have a president who puts the welfare of the American people above personal considerations.

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On July 5, 2008 , the Associated Press (AP) released a story titled: Secret U.S. mission hauls uranium from Iraq . The opening paragraph is as follows: The last major remnant of Saddam Hussein's nuclear program (a huge stockpile of concentrated natural uranium) reached a Canadian port Saturday to complete a secret U.S. operation that included a two-week airlift from Baghdad and a ship voyage crossing two oceans.



See anything wrong with this picture?



We have been hearing for more than five years how Bush lied. Somehow, that slogan loses its credibility now that 550 metric tons of Saddam's yellowcake, used for nuclear weapon enrichment, has been discovered and shipped to Canada for its new use as nuclear energy.



It appears that American troops found the 550 metric tons of uranium in 2003 after invading Iraq. They had to sit on this information and the uranium itself for fear of terrorists attempting to steal it. It was guarded and kept safe by our military in a 23,000-acre site with large sand berms surrounding the site.



This is vindication for the Bush administration, having been attacked mercilessly by the media and the pundits on the blogo- sphere. Now that it is proven that President Bush did not lie about Saddam's nuclear ambitions, one would think that the mainstream media would report the true story. Once the AP released the story, the mainstream media should have picked it up and broadcast it worldwide.



That never happened, due in large part, I believe, to the fact that the mainstream media would have to admit they were wrong about Bush all along. Thankfully, the AP got it right when it said, "The removal of 550 metric tons of yellowcake, the seed material for higher-grade nuclear enrichment, was a significant step toward closing the books on Saddam's nuclear legacy."



Closing the book on Saddam's nuclear legacy? Did Saddam have a nuclear legacy after all? I thought Bush lied? As it turns out, the people who lied were Joe Wilson and his wife.



Valerie Plame engaged in a clear case of nepotism and convinced the CIA to send her husband on a fact finding mission in February 2002, seeking to determine if Saddam Hussein attempted to buy yellowcake from Niger. The CIA and British intelligence believed Saddam contacted Niger for that purpose but needed proof.



During his trip to Niger, Wilson actually interviewed the former prime minister of Niger, Ibrahim Assane Mayaki. Mayaki told Wilson that in June of 1999, an Iraqi delegation expressed interest in "expanding commercial relations" for the purposes of purchasing yellowcake.



Wilson chose to overlook Mahaki's remarks and reported to the CIA that there was no evidence of Hussein wanting to purchase yellow cake from Niger.



However, with British intelligence insisting the claim was true, President Bush used that same claim in his State of the Union address in January of 2003. Outraged by Bush's insistence that the claim was true, Wilson wrote an op-ed in the New York Times in the summer of 2003 slamming Bush.



Wilson did this in spite of the fact that Mayaki said Saddam did try to buy the yellowcake from Niger. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence disagreed with Wilson and supported Mayaki's claim. This meant nothing to Wilson who was opposed to the Iraq war and thus had ulterior motives in covering up the prime minister's statements.



It was a simple tactic, really. If the media could prove Bush lied about Hussein wanting to purchase yellowcake from Niger, it would undermine President Bush's credibility and give them more cause for asking what other lies he may have told.



Yet the real lie came from Wilson, who interpreted his own meaning from the prime minister's statements and concluded all by himself that the claim of Saddam attempting to purchase yellowcake was "unequivocally wrong.." Curiously the CIA sat on this information and did not inform the CIA Director, who sided with Bush on the yellowcake claim. This was made public in a bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report in July 2004.



The truth is, due to their opposition to the war, Joe Wilson, Valerie Plame, the mainstream media, and their friends on the blogo-sphere engaged in a propaganda campaign to undermine the administration. Now that Saddam's uranium has been made public and is no longer a threat to the world, do you think these aforementioned parties will admit they were wrong? Don't count on it.



The American people should hear the truth about Saddam's uranium.



For verification of this information, click on these links:



http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25546334



http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/u/uraniumyellowcake.htm


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Read the whole MSNBC piece. The uranium pre-dated the First Gulf War and was already secured by weapons inspectors. It was well known in the world and so is quite a separate issue from the Wilson/Plame issue.

GS Don Morris, Ph.D./Chana Givon said...

With due respect,this was not the only "evidence" we had but no matter what is presented, your side refutes all claims. As far as the Wilson/Plame issue, we laid this to rest some time ago-but, hey, we are do not know your "truth". doc