Ignoring evidence, Bozell claimed the "hardened historical narrative" on Iraq WMDs "needs to be amended"

SUMMARY: In his syndicated column, Media Research Center president L. Brent Bozell III claimed that "[t]he hardened historical narrative" on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq "needs to be amended" because of the assertion by Sen. Rick Santorum and Rep. Peter Hoekstra that a recently declassified report found there were WMDs in Iraq prior to the U.S.-led invasion. Bozell ignored conclusive declarations by intelligence officials that the degraded chemical munitions hyped by Santorum and Hoekstra were not, in fact, in the category of "weapons of mass destruction."
In his June 28 nationally syndicated column, Media Research Center president L. Brent Bozell III claimed that "[t]he hardened historical narrative" on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq "needs to be amended" because of the June 21 assertion by Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) and House Intelligence Committee chairman Peter Hoekstra (R-MI) that a recently declassified report found there were WMDs in Iraq prior to the U.S.-led invasion. According to Bozell: "There were WMDs in Iraq that could have been used against our troops or acquired by terrorists." Bozell also faulted the "media" for not "correct[ing] the record," writing: "[T]he reception of this declassified memo shows we do not have an honest, nonpartisan news media."
Bozell, however, ignored conclusive declarations by intelligence officials that the degraded chemical munitions hyped by Santorum and Hoekstra were not, in fact, in the category of "weapons of mass destruction" that the United States was looking for at the time of the invasion in March 2003. Bozell also ignored the Iraq Survey Group's (ISG) September 2004 final report (known as the Duelfer report, for former ISG head Charles Duelfer), which noted that degraded chemical munitions had already been found in Iraq and that they were not proof of a chemical weapons stockpile or of a renewed Iraqi chemical weapons program. Indeed, Duelfer stated that the munitions referred to by Santorum and Hoekstra do not qualify as WMDs, though they may still pose a local hazard. David Kay, also a former ISG head, claimed that the degraded chemicals in the weapons were "less toxic than most things that Americans have under their kitchen sink at this point."
Bozell wrote:
So it was surprising to Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., and Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich., who were investigating whispers that weapons of mass destruction have actually been found by American troops in Iraq, to learn the rumors were true. After badgering administration officials for several months, the government gave the legislators a declassified memo stating that some 500 weapons of mass destruction have been found by coalition forces in Iraq, mostly sarin and mustard-gas agents, some of which "remain hazardous and potentially lethal."
But when the legislators released this information, some Bush administration officials poor-mouthed the findings, noting that these old WMDs were hardly evidence of an ongoing post-Gulf War WMD program by Saddam, the fearful scenario that dominated the pre-war debate. Others, like Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, emphatically declared that this was hard evidence. Regardless, this memo packs an important rhetorical punch. How many hundreds of times have our major media told us there were "no weapons of mass destruction" found? And how many thousands of times have leftists jumped off that springboard to an elaborate Bush-lied-people-died jeremiad?
This discovery should be a crucial, corrective turning point to the stuck-in-2003, pre-war obsessives. The hardened historical narrative needs to be amended. There were WMDs in Iraq that could have been used against our troops or acquired by terrorists.
An honest, nonpartisan news media that cared about the facts without political calculation would have taken care to correct the record, even if the findings were comparatively underwhelming to the pre-war scenarios. A fair and balanced story could be done. But the reception of this declassified memo shows we do not have an honest, nonpartisan news media, and political calculation is everything.
As Media Matters for America noted, the Duelfer report concluded that "old, abandoned chemical munitions" found in Iraq -- such as the ones hyped by Santorum and Hoekstra -- are not part of a "chemical weapons stockpile." According to the report [emphasis in original]:
While a small number of old, abandoned chemical munitions have been discovered, ISG judges that Iraq unilaterally destroyed its undeclared chemical weapons stockpile in 1991. There are no credible indications that Baghdad resumed production of chemical munitions thereafter, a policy ISG attributes to Baghdad's desire to see sanctions lifted, or rendered ineffectual, or its fear of force against it should WMD be discovered.
- The scale of the Iraqi conventional munitions stockpile, among other factors, precluded an examination of the entire stockpile; however, ISG inspected sites judged most likely associated with possible storage or deployment of chemical weapons.
Duelfer appeared on the June 22 broadcast of National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation, where he stated that these munitions are not weapons of mass destruction:
NEAL CONAN (host): The report says hundreds of WMDs were found in Iraq. Does this change any of the findings in your report?
DUELFER: No, the report -- the findings of the report were basically to describe the relationship of the regime with weapons of mass destruction generally. You know, at two different times, Saddam elected to have and then not to have weapons of mass destruction. We found, when we were investigating, some residual chemical munitions. And we said in the report that such chemical munitions would probably still be found. But the ones which have been found are left over from the Iran-Iraq War. They are all almost 20 years old, and they are in a decayed fashion. It is very interesting that there are so many that were unaccounted for, but they do not constitute a weapon of mass destruction, although they could be a local hazard.
CONAN: Mm-hmm. So these -- were these the weapons of mass destruction that the Bush administration said it was going into Iraq to find before the war?
DUELFER: No, these do not indicate an ongoing weapons of mass destruction program as had been thought to exist before the war. These are leftover rounds, which Iraq probably did not even know that it had. Certainly, the leadership was unaware of their existence, because they made very clear that they had gotten rid of their programs as a prelude to getting out of sanctions.
[...]
DUELFER: Sarin agent decays, you know, at a certain rate, as does mustard agent. What we found, both as U.N. and later when I was with the Iraq Survey Group, is that some of these rounds would have highly degraded agent, but it is still dangerous. You know, it can be a local hazard. If an insurgent got it and wanted to create a local hazard, it could be exploded. When I was running the ISG -- the Iraq Survey Group -- we had a couple of them that had been turned into these IEDs, the improvised explosive devices. But they are local hazards. They are not a major, you know, weapon of mass destruction.
Kay was quoted in a June 22 Associated Press article dismissing the danger of the degraded chemical munitions:
They probably would have been intended for chemical attacks during the Iran-Iraq War, said David Kay, who headed the U.S. weapons-hunting team in Iraq from 2003 until early 2004.
He said experts on Iraq's chemical weapons are in "almost 100 percent agreement" that sarin nerve agent produced from the 1980s would no longer be dangerous.
"It is less toxic than most things that Americans have under their kitchen sink at this point," Kay said.
And any of Iraq's 1980s-era mustard would produce burns, but it is unlikely to be lethal, Kay said.















Change the definitions. Typical. WMDs now include decaying 20-year-old canisters of chemicals. They forget that Bush not only said that Saddam was making and stockpiling WMD, but that he was a GRAVE and IMMEDIATE threat TO THE UNITED STATES. That was a LIE.
the facts aren't on your side...
Change the definitions. Typical. WMDs now include decaying 20-year-old canisters of chemicals. They forget that Bush not only said that Saddam was making and stockpiling WMD, but that he was a GRAVE and IMMEDIATE threat TO THE UNITED STATES. That was a LIE. - nerzog /
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And that's this week. Better seal the tupperware up tight. Psycho santorum and that lyin' loon weldon will be seizing the contents of your fridge, claiming a jug of spoiled milk is wmd and hauling your ass off to gitmo for possession of said milk.
They don't need no stinking badges, warrants, facts or evidence any more than they needed votes to win an election. They've got diebold, K Harris, K Blackwell and the fat schmuck little brother to fix things for him.
Even the military thinks this is a non-story.
"It is less toxic than most things that Americans have under their kitchen sink at this point," --David Kay
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I was wondering how long it would take until the righties try to rewrite history on the basis of this crap. They are desperate for something that can restore their sullied reputations. This is just about their last shot.
These old chemical weapons are the same ones that even peaceniks expected to find in Iraq. I remember reading articles about how weak and useless these weapons would have to be and how the administration was exaggerating the potency of the 10 year old chemical weapons before the war even started. We knew these duds existed. Big woop, we found some of them. We may find more.
There is still nothing that supports the wild claims made about Iraqi weapons programs before the war trying to drum up support for the war.
Bozell (oop's the III, imagine there were three of them....) is a GOP trooper. This guy should be in Cabinet. This administration is faultless in almost every regard to this whack job and his band of video taping storm troopers. He's one of the most clueless conservative commentators around.
The only way to really answer Brett honestly is to laugh. His claims that the narrative needs to be "amended" sounds like the delusional fantasy of a child.
It’s hard imagine that people like Bozell are not on the payroll of the Karl Rove Gang. Making such statements, which are clearly contrary to reality do nothing for Bozell’s credibility (if he has any left at this point). What Media Matters should do is keep a running tally of the various dishonest and inflammatory statements made by these right-wing “commentators” and make this list available for anyone who might want to hire people like this moron.
All they need to do is list the statement made, insert a link to the original source document in which it was made, and then provide a link to the information that discredits the statement. At the bottom they could keep a running total by year (“200 lies in 2003, 250 in 2004” etc).
Think of it as a public service.
These were not weapons of mass destruction. Who the hell could Saddam attack with degraded pre-1991 weapons?
WMD's in Iraq prior to the invasion. How much prior to the invasion would be a more accurate question, not the well parsed idiotic Bozell statement implying the WMD's were there immediately before the invasion. Why aren't the reporters savvy enough to question immediately after the statement was made ? A thousand years ago could be considered "prior to the invasion".
When the esteemed Mr. Hell-Bent Bozo reported that Little Ricky was "...investigating whispers ...", it probably just slipped his mind to mention just who was doin' the whisperin'.
While Bozell is a doofus and it's hilarious to watch these wingers get exercised over supposedly-found WMD, there is a story to be told about these remnants. Rightist columnist Kathleen Parker had a pretty interesting observation on this story: a ``real political battle...is being waged under the radar between the White House, the intelligence community and Congress'' over these documents that Santorum and Hoekstra got ahold of.
She's not that bright. She laments that ``theories'' about the documents ``have offered little comfort or clarity.'' She's puzzled about why the White House is not ``happy to spread the news'' and why the president is ``quiet''.
I think there are two reasons the WH is not cheering for these documents. One is obvious. They confirm Iraq had only degraded remnant chem arms (not ``mushroom cloud'' producing stuff), just like all the inspectors said, from the UN to Bush's hand-picked guys. That's all well-explained in the Media Matters posts. But what else lurks in these documents is the story about the how Saddam armed & fought Iran in the 1980s--with diplomatic cover from the Reagan & GHW Bush administrations, with US-supplied intel, with materials supplied by international corporations, with clandestine funding using fraudulent banking & ag. credit schemes.
Thomas Powers had a NYT piece on the Iraqi archives and post-war control of those ``documents'' just as the invasion started. Too bad the follow-up has been pretty much non-existent.
Well, I guess they could change the definition of the WMDs to conform with what they want the public to believe. They have sure as hell changed the reason since it started. Now it's "taking democracy to Iraq," never mentioned during the run up to the war. It was always those damned WMDs and the imminent threat. It was only after both were debunked that this take democracy to Iraq drum beat started....and they have repeated it so much, apparently the American public has swollowed it hook, line and sinker!
The president decides to attack... an Indian reservation! The real reason is that there's lots of oil to be found there, but the pretext is that they've got weapons of minimal destruction. Well, the Native Americans get pretty much wiped out, and our troops go digging around and find... arrowheads! Of course, they're leftovers from a century or so ago, but so what? They prove their owners' evil intent!
Think it will sell?
It's not much of a shock when shrub and his shills make some outrageous, totally unAmerican horsebrit claim that can't be substantiated or that boron's morons buy the crap, but they're just getting more and more desperate and pathetic by the second.
These people are total scum. There's just no getting around it and the sad thing is that the day's still young and there's always the Friday document dump where they go " Oh, by the way, we've shredded the Constitution except for the second amendment. Got to keep the nra trash in the base happy if they ever want to get out of the mid-30s.
." Bozell also faulted the "media" for not "correct[ing] the record," writing: "[T]he reception of this declassified memo shows we do not have an honest, nonpartisan news media."
He's got a point on that last one. The media has been covering for shrub and the repos for far too long.
Al bushira and the washtimes are clearly nothing more than shrub cheerleading operations. You expect nothing but lying-ass crap from them and they never fail to deliver, but the rest of them haven't been much better. If they'd done their job instead of running off on race horse politics and outright lies like Gore claiming he invented the internet we'd have an informed populace and a legitimate President.
Because, I don't LIKE the facts. Instead, I'll just make 'em up! Yeah, that's the ticket....