Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
October 10, 2006
WB: Hitting the Trifecta
Comments

Did the “rape rooms” even exist? I got the impression it was just the obligatory pre-war claim that the enemy were rapists.

Posted by: Carl Nyberg | Oct 10 2006 19:50 utc | 1

Did the “rape rooms” even exist?
They do now.

Posted by: billmon | Oct 10 2006 20:08 utc | 2

Bush can still say nobody’s used chemical weapons on the Iraqi people since we invaded, right?
Or is there such a thing as a tetrafecta?

Posted by: &y | Oct 10 2006 20:49 utc | 3

Tetrafecta? Would DU be considered a chemical weapon?
DoD insists that it isn’t a weapon at all, only a useful material in arms manufacture. But they seem to have gone to some trouble to suppress preliminary studies and discourage investigations that might say otherwise.
The U.S. uses DU and other uranium alloys in its most powerful artillery and bombs. The danger from these elements appears to arise when the explosions turn the uranium derivatives to dust, which may then be inhaled or ingested by anyone in the area.

In 2003, the Christian Science Monitor sent reporters to Iraq to investigate long-term effects of depleted uranium. Staff writer Scott Peterson saw children playing on top of a burnt-out tank near a vegetable stand on the outskirts of Baghdad, a tank that had been destroyed by armor-piercing shells coated with depleted uranium. Wearing his mask and protective clothing, he pointed his Geiger counter toward the tank. It registered 1,000 times the normal background radiation. If the troops were on a mission of mercy to bring democracy to Iraq, wouldn”t keeping children away from such dangers be the top priority?
The laws of war prohibit the use of weapons that have deadly and inhumane effects beyond the field of battle. Nor can weapons be legally deployed in war when they are known to remain active, or cause harm after the war concludes. . . .
Dr. Alim Yacoub of Basra University conducted an epidemiological study into incidences of malignancies in children under fifteen years old, in the Basra area (an area bombed with DU during the first Gulf War). They found over the 1990 to 1999 period, there was a 242% rise. That was before the recent invasion.
. . .
In the fall of 2002, the UMRC field team went back to Afghanistan for a broader survey, and revealed a potentially larger exposure than initially anticipated. Approximately 30% of those interviewed in the affected areas displayed symptoms of radiation sickness. New born babies were among those displaying symptoms, with village elders reporting that over 25% of the infants were inexplicably ill.
How widespread and extensive is the exposure? A quote from the UMRC field report reads:
“The UMRC field team was shocked by the breadth of public health impacts coincident with the bombing. Without exception, at every bombsite investigated, people are ill. A significant portion of the civilian population presents symptoms consistent with internal contamination by uranium.”
In Afghanistan, unlike Iraq, UMRC lab results indicated high concentrations of NON-DEPLETED URANIUM, with the concentrations being much higher than in DU victims from Iraq. Afghanistan was used as a testing ground for a new generation of “bunker buster” bombs containing high concentrations of other uranium alloys.

Posted by: small coke | Oct 10 2006 23:56 utc | 4

Quintifecta?
“Last month, the White House, under pressure, declassified a separate intelligence assessment — called a National Intelligence Estimate — that concluded the Iraq war was exacerbating the Islamic terrorist threat by fueling resentment toward the United States and providing a training ground for terrorist recruits.
The director of national intelligence, John D. Negroponte, has acknowledged that the intelligence community is working on a new National Intelligence Estimate on the Iraq war. Such assessments represent the consensus views of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies.”

Hmmmm…..
One can only wonder if that newly backdated NIE will be subtitled: Salvador And Order: Special Bagdhdad Victims Unit?
.

Posted by: RossK | Oct 11 2006 0:29 utc | 5