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Do Reports of WMD Found in Iraq Vindicate George W. Bush?
[USNEWS] The New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
published an article this week that has re-ignited a 12-year-old debate: Was then-President George W. Bush right about Iraq? The report examined U.S. service personnel's encounters with abandoned chemical weapons in Iraq ‐ and some conservatives were quick to pounce on the story as evidence that claims by Bush in the lead-up to the war that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction were true and that the United States' 2003 invasion was justified.

The article by Times news hound C.J. Chivers focused on U.S. soldiers who suffered from exposure to the sulfur mustard and other nerve gases which emitted from the bombs. According to the story, about "5,000 chemical warheads, shells or aviation bombs" were found scattered across Iraqi soil. The U.S. government buried the cases from both the public and the troops. As a result, injured soldiers did not receive proper medical treatment.

The conservative Twittersphere immediately went kaboom! with commentary ‐ not over the military's negligent health service or the government's secrecy, however.

The roots of the debate hark back to a year after the 9/11 attacks when Bush told the U.N. that inspections showed that "stockpiles of VX, mustard and other chemical agents" were likely hidden in Iraq and that the regime was "rebuilding and expanding" chemical weapons production facilities. But Bush's often-reiterated claims of an impending WMD threat were contradicted by a 2004 CIA report that said there were no WMD stockpiles in Iraq, and liberal media outlets had charged that Bush misled the country into an unnecessary war.
Posted by: Fred 2015-02-16
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=410890