that was one of the rationales to attack the building, cut electricity and let patients die.

Have tunnels been found?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Iraq produced various chemical weapons and had production warheads in various configurations including for their Short Range Ballistic Missile platform… Production was suspended in the 90’s. Many of these warheads are still present in Iraq today within sealed vaults which ISIS attempted to gain access to within the last five years.

    Also… Yes they absolutely did pursue enrichment of uranium per their IAEA announced plans for a nuclear power program…

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-secretly-takes-yellowcake-from-iraq/

    • @Varyk
      link
      16 months ago

      That article is all about unenriched uranium , and it’s one of the articles I’m referencing.

      There’s no evidence of enrichment or enrichment operations going on, that announcement you talk about is the only “step” iraq ever took to enrich uranium, and they never made it further than bluster.

      I’m talking about the evidence of WMDs in Iraq leading to the invasion by the US in 2003, of which there was none, and as you confirm in the article you’ve linked that I referenced, there was never any enriched uranium before, during or after that invasion.

        • @Varyk
          link
          1
          edit-2
          6 months ago

          This just repeatedly says that if Iraq ever was able to enrich uranium, it could be bad down the line, being the first step, not the final step, into the production of wmds

          Nobody is denying that.

          What there is zero evidence for is that there was ever enriched uranium or operations to enrich uranium happening before, during or after the 2003 Iraq invasion.

          The latest article you reference agrees with every other credibly sourced article about Iraqi WMDs, including every investigative team from the UN and the US that went into Iraq following the 2003 invasion and confirmed that there is no or was no enriched uranium in iraq or any method by which Iraq could produce enriched uranium, entirely lacking the necessary infrastructure, resources, and most importantly, technical expertise and scientific personnel.