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No one seems to be writing opinion pieces quite the way I would, so I decided to do it myself. The name? Taverns are places where one goes to discuss the interesting events and things in the world, so this is my tavern. I will offer my views on politics, economics, and whatever else strikes my fancy.
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Sunday, April 27, 2003
If we invaded Iraq over WMDs, why aren't we looking for nukes yet?This recent Washington Post Article really bothers me. So the Republican Philistines at Defense didn't consider the Baghdad Museum important enough to divert US troops from their primary mission to prevent looting. I don't like it, but I can understand it. But we were supposed to be going after Iraq over weapons of mass destruction - like nukes. Now the Washington Post reports that we haven't done anything to protect the Iraqi nuclear facilities, either. Before the war began last month, the vast Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Center held 3,896 pounds of partially enriched uranium, more than 94 tons of natural uranium and smaller quantities of cesium, cobalt and strontium, according to reports compiled through the 1990s by inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency. Immensely valuable on the international black market, the uranium was in a form suitable for further enrichment to "weapons grade," the core of a nuclear device. The other substances, products of medical and industrial waste, emit intense radiation. They have been sought, officials said, by terrorists seeking to build a so-called dirty bomb, which uses conventional explosives to scatter dangerous radioactive particles. Defense officials acknowledge that the U.S. government has no idea whether any of Tuwaitha's potentially deadly contents have been stolen, because it has not dispatched investigators to appraise the site. What it does know, according to officials at the Pentagon and U.S. Central Command, is that the sprawling campus, 11 miles south of Baghdad, lay unguarded for days and that looters made their way inside. This I don't to understand! The underlining is mine. The rest is direct quote. |
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