| Date: | Sunday December 28, @07:17AM |
|---|---|
| Author: | ewing2001 |
| Topic: | Bush |
| from the Independent dept. | |
Independent UK -28 December 2003
Claims by Tony Blair and George Bush that the threat of weapons of mass destruction justified the war in Iraq were looking increasingly threadbare last night.
The Prime Minister's allegation that British and American weapons hunters had unearthed "massive evidence of a huge system of clandestine laboratories" in Iraq was dismissed by Paul Bremer, America's most senior official in Baghdad.
And as he left for Libya yesterday at the head of a team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), its director general, Mohamed ElBaradei, said the country did not appear to have been close to building a nuclear weapon, as London and Washington claimed.
The supposed danger from Saddam Hussein's WMD was central to the Government's case for war in Iraq, but despite months of work, the Iraq Survey Group, headed by David Kay, has all but given up hope of finding them. Mr Blair has remained undaunted, insisting that the evidence would eventually turn up, and told British troops in his Christmas message that the information on laboratories showed Saddam had attempted to "conceal weapons".
But when the claim was put to Mr Bremer, head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, he said it was not true. Unaware that it had been made by Mr Blair, the American proconsul said it sounded like a "red herring" put about by someone opposed to military action to undermine the coalition.
"I don't know where those words come from, but that is not what David Kay has said," Mr Bremer told ITV1's Jonathan Dimbleby programme. "I have read his report, so I don't know who said that ... It sounds like someone who doesn't agree with the policy sets up a red herring, then knocks it down."
Mr Bremer changed tack when told the statement was by America's staunchest ally. "There is actually a lot of evidence that had been made public," he said, adding that the group had found "clear evidence of biological and chemical programmes ongoing ... and clear evidence of violation of UN Security Council resolutions relating to rockets".
Mr Bremer rejected the conclusion by the former chief UN weapons inspector, Hans Blix, that there were no WMD left for Saddam to give up, calling Dr Blix "out of touch". War was justified "historically" regardless of the issue of WMD, he said, pointing to the mass graves of victims of the former regime.
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies.
printed from Bremer dismissed WMD Claim on 2004-05-25 23:31:53