Laelia wrote:
Absence of evidence may not be evidence of absence, but if you look hard enough and in the right places, you can place a high probability on the belief of absence. Similarly, we can't prove that the dodo is extinct, but given the absence of sightings on a small island in over 300 years, it's very unlikely that it's still around.
That's a fairly eloquent way of saying what I meant. In hindsight, with the benefit of 8-10 years in Iraq and no shipping invoices or other evidence, it's easy to point fingers and say "see?" However, at the time we entered Iraq, our knowledge indicated there was a good possibility we'd find WMDs, which we didn't want Saddam handing over or selling to people like Al Qaeda. That is leaving aside the umpteen other reasons that were given for entering Iraq, like the various violations of the cease-fire agreement, but even if it were the only reason, it's pretty easy to sit back with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight and play Monday morning quarterback.
Laelia wrote:
In the case of the Iraqi WMDs, there is evidence that suggests that Saddam shut down his WMD programs after the 1991 invasion and sanctions (eg. reports from weapons inspectors, other intelligence sources, documents found in Iraq, statements from Iraqi officials) and no physical evidence to contradict that. None of this proves that there weren't any WMDs in Iraq (aside from the small amount of decayed remnants found), but the weight of evidence suggests it is most likely that there weren't. Thus it falls on the people making unsubstantiated allegations against the weight of evidence to support them, and so shipping invoices would be useful indeed.
There was also evidence, such as the testimony of an Iraqi defector (who later admitted he lied) that Saddam had such weapons hidden and the British secret service report. You may also remember Saddam's stubborn "cooperation" with weapon's inspectors, and how he'd bar or delay inspectors at many sites. That definitely put the questions in doubt, at least at the time, and action against Iraq based on WMDs may have been in error, but it was erring on the side of caution.
Your Pal,
Jubber