Guest
lucasea@sbcglobal.net wrote:
whilst chemicals that had very obvious military applications were being
exported.
They finally closed down the loophole only when plausible deniability
was no longer an option. To this extent I agree with the CW guy once
the issue was publically drawn to their attention the US authorities
acted to prevent any further exports. I already pointed out earlier on
they siezed some 22000lbs of PF5 ready to ship.
instance.
And yes the Iraqis *could* have synthesised them from scratch but when
they could buy bulk high purity intermediates cost effectively off the
shelf why would they bother?
that terrorists would need could sneak under the radar. Aum Shinroku
managed to make Sarin in mainland Japan.
writing PGP which they classed as "Munitions" and then attempted to go
for a show trial.
of his spokesmen slipped up this weekend on Al Jazeera TV and actually
told the truth for once:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/21/iraq/main2112800.shtml
I understand Fernandez has since recanted, but his interview still
exists on tape.
discuss here...
position where it could no longer deny that it knew what was going on
it acted to halt these exports.
point for making organophosphorus nerve agents as you can possibly get.
briefly told the truth in a recent TV interview. And even Bush admits
that Iraq is now a total shambles although I think comparing it to
Vietnam was certainly a collossal blunder on his part.
It is unfortunate that the world is saddled with the dumbest US
president in history. And it is time for "cakewalk" Rumsfeld to do the
plank walk - his strategy is now totally discredited.
The BBC Today program presenter John Humphreys is in Basra this week
and the interviews are about as unbiassed a description of life over
there as you can get.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/today/
Incidentally it has recently come out in the UK that the "Known
Shipper" codes for Fedex have been compromised by a drugs cartel and
anyone with the right contacts can now get cargo consignments unchecked
by X-rays onto US airliners. Not good
http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2006/10_october/18/cargo.shtml
Regards,
Martin Brown
I think it is a thankless task. Dittoheads cannot be educated.jmfbahciv@aol.com> wrote in message
news:ehab1j$8qk_001@s949.apx1.sbo.ma.dialup.rcn.com...
The following paragraph contains several strawment that are the hallmark of
BAH's style of "learning" from other people, and I will debunk each in turn.
It was more that the US government was prepared to look the other wayThe people I've been talking to appear to believe that only
the US government knows how to make these things.
Uh.....no, nobody has said that, implied that, or even said anything that
can remotely be interpreted to imply that. This is you reading into
peoples' words.
whilst chemicals that had very obvious military applications were being
exported.
They finally closed down the loophole only when plausible deniability
was no longer an option. To this extent I agree with the CW guy once
the issue was publically drawn to their attention the US authorities
acted to prevent any further exports. I already pointed out earlier on
they siezed some 22000lbs of PF5 ready to ship.
Only for certain high risk chemicals - known CW precursors forseem to believe that only the US government can OK
all chemical invoices.
Uh....no, nobody has said or implied that. However, the chemical suppliers
must report sales of certain chemicals to the federal government--perhaps
even all chemicals, maybe that's why the DoC is involved in the CWC.
instance.
And yes the Iraqis *could* have synthesised them from scratch but when
they could buy bulk high purity intermediates cost effectively off the
shelf why would they bother?
I wish I believed that. I fear that the relatively small quantitiesWhenever chemicals that have been identified as CW precursors are sold, in
combinations that are consistent with what would be used to make CW,
serious-looking men in dark sunglasses start knocking on doors.
that terrorists would need could sneak under the radar. Aum Shinroku
managed to make Sarin in mainland Japan.
It hasn't been like that in the UK for more than 2 decades.Our business and politics do not
work that way. I think a lot Europeans are confused by
this because their businesses are generally government
controlled and/or union controlled espeically in the
manufacturing and mining areas.
You *really, really* need to learn whereof you speak, before you speak.
Or more relevant here the persecution in the USA of Phil Zimmermann forIn the US, the federal government isn't allowed to do anything.
BS. Ever heard of the DoT, DoC, FTC, SEC, etc., etc. They have a *lot* to
say about how companies conduct their business.
writing PGP which they classed as "Munitions" and then attempted to go
for a show trial.
She is paranoid and delusional (but then so is the US President). OneIOW, they
want the US to become, not socialist, but communist.
Um....citation, please. This sounds just like another paranoid conspiracy
theory.
of his spokesmen slipped up this weekend on Al Jazeera TV and actually
told the truth for once:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/21/iraq/main2112800.shtml
I understand Fernandez has since recanted, but his interview still
exists on tape.
And there are other practical issues that it isn't appropriate toSo why am I an idiot when I stated that anybody, with a recipe
book, can make these chemicals.
Because not everybody with a "recipe book" as you call it, can make these
chemicals. Getting large amounts of the required reagents in the right
combination to make CW *will* garner you a rather rude knock on your door.
discuss here...
I agree mostly with what he said. Once the US government was put in aIn the end because the UN was kicking up a fuss about Iraqs use of CW
against the human wave tactics of the Iranian forces and the US
government didn't much like the idea of how it would play at home if US
companies were caught red-handed selling CW precursors to Iraq.
Somebody posted what happened. Are you still saying that this
is true? Warning: this is a test of your thinking ability.
Sounds about right to me. Maybe it's you who needs to consider your
thinking ability.
position where it could no longer deny that it knew what was going on
it acted to halt these exports.
If you mean phosphates then they are about as inconvenient a startingDefine what "nuclear technology" is. I don't know what people
mean by this. I know what they want me to think.
Dual use nuclear technology...
Including fertilizer?
point for making organophosphorus nerve agents as you can possibly get.
Although they do occassionally have moments of lucidity. FernandezOh, just make your point and stop fiddle-farting around. By the time you
get around to making it, our Alzheimer's will have advanced to the point
where nobody will know what the heck you're talking about.
Preventing Iraq from losing was high on
the agenda. US foreign policy didn't get much beyond "My enemy's enemy
is my friend".
Sad that such black-and-white thinking still pervades the State department
and White House, isn't it?
briefly told the truth in a recent TV interview. And even Bush admits
that Iraq is now a total shambles although I think comparing it to
Vietnam was certainly a collossal blunder on his part.
It is unfortunate that the world is saddled with the dumbest US
president in history. And it is time for "cakewalk" Rumsfeld to do the
plank walk - his strategy is now totally discredited.
The BBC Today program presenter John Humphreys is in Basra this week
and the interviews are about as unbiassed a description of life over
there as you can get.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/today/
Incidentally it has recently come out in the UK that the "Known
Shipper" codes for Fedex have been compromised by a drugs cartel and
anyone with the right contacts can now get cargo consignments unchecked
by X-rays onto US airliners. Not good
http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2006/10_october/18/cargo.shtml
Regards,
Martin Brown