A Comment About

The High School Valedictorian Presidency

July 9, 2009 - 12:45 am - by T.K. Farrow
Peter the Bubblehead
2009-07-09 17:40:03

To Mike W @ #36:

I didn’t have access to some of my sources earlier, so here’s some more info for you.

From the LA Times, one of the most recognized liberal papers in the country:
Bush never lied to us about Iraq
The administration simply got bad intelligence. Critics are wrong to assert deception.
By James Kirchick
June 16, 2008

In its May 22, 2004 edition, the New York Times confirmed “The repository, at Tuwaitha, a centerpiece of Saddam Hussein’s nuclear weapons program, . . . . holds more than 500 tons of uranium . . . . Some 1.8 tons is classified as low-enriched uranium.” The paper conceded that Saddam’s nearly 2 tons of partially enriched uranium was “a more potent form” of the nuclear fuel. …the 1.8 tons could be used to produce enough highly enriched uranium to make a single nuclear bomb.

The physicist tapped by Saddam to run his centrifuge program says that after the first Gulf War, the program was largely dismantled. But it wasn’t destroyed.

In fact, according to what he wrote in his 2004 book, “The Bomb in My Garden,” Dr. Mahdi Obeidi told U.S. interrogators: “Saddam kept funding the IAEC [Iraq Atomic Energy Commission] from 1991 … until the war in 2003.”

“I was developing the centrifuge for the weapons” right through 1997, he revealed.
And after that, Dr. Obeidi said, Saddam ordered him under penalty of death to keep the technology available to resume Iraq’s nuke program at a moment’s notice.

Dr. Obeidi said he buried “the full set of blueprints, designs – everything to restart the centrifuge program – along with some critical components of the centrifuge” under the garden of his Baghdad home.

“I had to maintain the program to the bitter end,” he explained. All the while the Iraqi physicist was aware that he held the key to Saddam’s continuing nuclear ambitions.

“The centrifuge is the single most dangerous piece of nuclear technology,” Dr. Obeidi said in his book. “With advances in centrifuge technology, it is now possible to conceal a uranium enrichment program inside a single warehouse.”

Consider: 500 tons of yellowcake stored at Saddam’s old nuclear weapons plant, where he’d managed to partially enrich 1.8 tons. And the equipment and blueprints that could enrich enough uranium to make a bomb stored away for safekeeping. And all of it at the Iraqi dictator’s disposal.