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Political Debate Board
Posted On: 02/04/2016 8:38:21 PM
Post# of 65629
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Posted By: OMO
Re: goarmy123 #688
No...that was part of the fear we all had...exploited as such. The reason is because we were deployed already.....and it made complete sense to combine such. If you would have reviewed the PDF...you would have seen how the already deployed were moved over to Afghanistan....

Hussein gassed the Kurds in 1988....there were many unknowns after that...here's a bit;
Quote:

At the end of the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein and his elite military units were still in power and in possession of huge stockpiles of deadly weapons. In April 1991, the U.N. Security Council created UNSCOM, a special commission to find and dismantle this arsenal. The U.N. imposed economic sanctions on Iraq that would be enforced until the country eliminated all nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons capability.

Two agencies were charged with the task. UNSCOM would uncover and destroy Iraq's biological- and chemical-weapons and ballistic-missile programs; the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was charged with uncovering and dismantling Iraq's clandestine nuclear program.

From 1991 to 1998 UNSCOM and IAEA carried out numerous inspections in Iraq, but with varying degrees of success.

For the first few years, Iraqi officials failed to disclose much of their special weapons programs to the inspectors. In 1995, Saddam Hussein's son-in-law Kamel Hussein defected. He had been in charge of the bioweapons program and revealed to UNSCOM that there was a vast arsenal of weapons they had failed to uncover, including biological weapons, and described how the Iraqis were hiding them. This was a breakthrough for the inspection teams, and they continued their work until 1998, when Iraq blocked further access and expelled UNSCOM.

What follows is a summary of what IAEA and UNSCOM had found in Iraq, up until 1998.



Here's the summary .. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows...senal.html

Bottom line....they are probably still there .. or somewhere.

Quote:
Iraq claimed that it unilaterally destroyed 29,000 special munitions; UNSCOM found that of these, 100 filled munitions remain unaccounted for.


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