This Was Not Looting (Hitchens/Slate)

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How did Saddam’s best weapons plants get plundered?
By Christopher Hitchens

Once again, a major story gets top billing in a mainstream paper—and is printed upside down. “Looting at Weapons Plants Was Systematic, Iraqi Says.” This was how the New York Times led its front page on Sunday. According to the supporting story, Dr. Sami al-Araji, the deputy minister of industry, says that after the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, “looters systematically dismantled and removed tons of machinery from Saddam Hussein’s most important weapons installations, including some with high-precision equipment capable of making parts for nuclear arms.”

As printed, the implication of the story was not dissimilar from the Al-Qaqaa disclosures, which featured so much in the closing days of the presidential election last fall. In that case, a huge stock of conventional high-explosives had been allowed to go missing and was presumably in the hands of those who were massacring Iraqi civilians and killing coalition troops. At least one comment from the Bush campaign surrogate appeared to blame this negligence on the troops themselves. Followed to one possible conclusion, the implication was clear: The invasion of Iraq had made the world a more dangerous place by randomly scattering all sorts of weaponry, including mass-destruction weaponry, to destinations unknown.

It was eye-rubbing to read of the scale of this potential new nightmare. There in cold print was the Al Hatteen “munitions production plant that international inspectors called a complete potential nuclear weapons laboratory.” And what of the Al Adwan facility, which “produced equipment used for uranium enrichment, necessary to make some kinds of nuclear weapons”? The overall pattern of the plundered sites was summarized thus, by reporters James Glanz and William J. Broad:

The kinds of machinery at the various sites included equipment that could be used to make missile parts, chemical weapons or centrifuges essential for enriching uranium for atom bombs.

My first question is this: How can it be that, on every page of every other edition for months now, the New York Times has been stating categorically that Iraq harbored no weapons of mass destruction? And there can hardly be a comedy-club third-rater or MoveOn.org activist in the entire country who hasn’t stated with sarcastic certainty that the whole WMD fuss was a way of lying the American people into war. So now what? Maybe we should have taken Saddam’s propaganda seriously, when his newspaper proudly described Iraq’s physicists as “our nuclear mujahideen.”

My second question is:* What’s all this about “looting”*? The word is used throughout the long report, but here’s what it’s used to describe. "In four weeks from mid-April to mid-May of 2003 … teams with flatbed trucks and other heavy equipment moved systematically from site to site. … ‘The first wave came for the machines,’ Dr Araji said. ‘The second wave, cables and cranes.’ " Perhaps hedging the bet, the Times authors at this point refer to “organized looting.”

But obviously, what we are reading about is a carefully planned military operation. The participants were not panicked or greedy civilians helping themselves—which is the customary definition of a “looter,” especially in wartime. They were mechanized and mobile and under orders, and acting in a concerted fashion. Thus, if the story is factually correct—which we have no reason at all to doubt—then Saddam’s Iraq was a fairly highly-evolved WMD state, with a contingency plan for further concealment and distribution of the weaponry in case of attack or discovery.

The rest of the article is here
 
Looting at Iraqi Weapons Plants Was Systematic, Official Says

BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 12 - In the weeks after Baghdad fell in April 2003, looters systematically dismantled and removed tons of machinery from Saddam Hussein’s most important weapons installations, including some with high-precision equipment capable of making parts for nuclear arms, a senior Iraqi official said this week in the government’s first extensive comments on the looting.

The Iraqi official, Sami al-Araji, the deputy minister of industry, said it appeared that a highly organized operation had p(name removed by moderator)ointed specific plants in search of valuable equipment, some of which could be used for both military and civilian applications, and carted the machinery away.

Dr. Araji said his account was based largely on observations by government employees and officials who either worked at the sites or lived near them.

“They came in with the cranes and the lorries, and they depleted the whole sites,” Dr. Araji said. “They knew what they were doing; they knew what they want. This was sophisticated looting.”

The threat posed by these types of facilities was cited by the Bush administration as a reason for invading Iraq, but the installations were left largely unguarded by allied forces in the chaotic months after the invasion.

Dr. Araji’s statements came just a week after a United Nations agency disclosed that approximately 90 important sites in Iraq had been looted or razed in that period. Satellite imagery analyzed by two United Nations groups - the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, or Unmovic - confirms that some of the sites identified by Dr. Araji appear to be totally or partly stripped, senior officials at those agencies said.

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com
 
Nice pull quote:

“the administration’s critics … [have] dissolved into one long taunt and jeer: ‘There were no WMD in Iraq. Liar, liar, pants on fire.’”

I think I would have used the word “sneer” instead. 😛
 
Melanie Phillips has spoken…as war supporter & Republican I have to hang my head over this. Please someone buck me up–who can we blame? 😦

"The Americans have come up with some lame excuse about not having had enough troops to guard these sites. The fact is, however, that the looting of this material was one of the gravest and most disastrous errors made by the US throughout the whole Iraq episode. Spectacularly failing to anticipate the likely chaos and ferment in the wake of the fall of Saddam – a lesson which was surely obvious from the conclusion of major conflicts in the past – the Americans were utterly negligent in failing to guard the likely sites of Saddam’s proscribed weapons programme. As a result, by the time the Iraq survey group inspectors got to these places, there was nothing to be found.

As I reported at the time, this was one of the main reasons why Dr David Kay, the head of the ISG, blew a fuse and stormed off the scene – because his task of finding WMD had been rendered impossible by the incompetence of the administration that had dispatched him on this fool’s errand. The outcome of this incompetence has been a political and military disaster. The material has disappeared, fuelling fears that it has fallen into the hands of rogue states and terrorists and thus vastly increasing the risk of an unconventional strike against the west. And politically, of course, it has enabled the appeasenik crowd to proumulgate their logic-lite libel that since no WMD was found it never existed and that therefore Bush and Blair lied.

And of course, Bush and Blair cannot adequately defend themselves against this calumny because to do would mean admitting the very thing that Mr al-Araji is saying – that the coalition screwed up big-time in a post-war blunder that could well have put the world in the very peril it was trying to prevent."
 
The context:

On February 28th, National Review’s WH correpondent, Byron York, authored an article that pointed out that in the 8 days prior to the Nov 2 election, the NY Times “published 16 stories and columns about Al Qaqaa [NOTE: the site of weapons “looting”], plus seven letters to the editor (all of which were critical of the Bush administration). And then, abruptly, it stopped. In the four months since the election, the Times appears to have simply dropped the Al Qaqaa story, publishing nothing about the munitions dump and the supposedly critical issues it raised about the Bush administration’s handling of the war in Iraq.”

York raised the issue with the NYT’s “public editor” Daniel Okrent who conceded that the dates of the stories leaves the “impression” that the NYT was trying to affect the election.

After this issue was publicly raised by NRO, the NYT now publishes a follow-up of sorts. However, now the “impression” is that in their zeal to hammer the current administration, the NYT has, in effect, admitted that the Baathists had a sophisticated BCN weapons program with well-planned contingencies for concealing critical production equipment.
 
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