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| Saturday, December 27 | | · | GAZA TODAY IN PICTURES |
| Thursday, May 15 | | · | In Speech Before Israeli Parliament, Bush Compares Democrats To Nazi-Appeasers |
| Wednesday, March 19 | | · | Bush Continues To Link Iraq With 9-11 |
| · | Lynndie England blames media for photos |
| Tuesday, March 18 | | · | IRAQ war's cost: Loss of U.S. power, prestige, influence |
| Saturday, March 01 | | · | Gaza |
| Tuesday, February 19 | | · | Castro quits as Cuba's president |
| Thursday, February 07 | | · | Egypt football team qualified to final Africa cup of Nations |
| Wednesday, January 30 | | · | ISRAELI HIGH COURT SAYS SIEGE OF GAZA WITHIN THEIR RIGHTS |
| Thursday, January 24 | | · | In Gaza, It?s Darkness At Noon |
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So, what are Americans going to do?
 The "USA's Most Wanted" playing cards You cannot avoid it any longer. You cannot pretend it did not happen. You cannot wish it away. It's real. The President of the United States lied to start a war. Under American system of laws, only Congress has... Full text
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Politics: U.S. Blocks Questions About VX Gas Posted on Monday, February 03, 2003 @ Eastern Standard Time by MSM
 | The United States on Thursday blocked China and France from asking U.N.
weapons inspectors to prove that VX nerve gas left in a Baghdad laboratory
wasn't used improperly to contaminate Iraqi missile warheads.
Hasmy Agam, Security Council president and Malaysia's U.N. ambassador, had
circulated a letter to Secretary-General Kofi Annan with questions to the U.N.
inspectors from France and China.
But the United States objected to France's questions, added late Wednesday,
which U.S. officials felt trivialized the serious issue of disarming Iraq and
focused unfairly on U.N. weapons inspectors from the U.N. Special Commission, or
UNSCOM. So the letter has not been sent.
The issue of VX became a flashpoint for the Security Council last year when the
United States found traces of the nerve agent on fragments of Iraqi missile
warheads. Iraq has admitted producing 3.9 tons of VX agent, but has denied
loading the deadly agent into missile warheads.
Seven vials containing tiny quantities of VX were among the chemical and
biological material left in UNSCOM's Baghdad laboratory when inspectors pulled
out of Iraq in mid-December on the eve of U.S. and British airstrikes. Iraq
barred them from returning.
France, China and Russia - Iraq's closest allies on the Security Council - urged
the council to have the samples analyzed, intimating inspectors may have laced
Iraqi warheads with the agent.
But the majority of the 15-member council agreed with the weapons inspectors who
said the VX could only be used to calibrate equipment used to test for the nerve
agent, posed no danger, and should be destroyed.
A team of independent chemical experts sent to Baghdad to make the laboratory
safe went ahead and destroyed the VX samples on Tuesday. But China and France
wanted UNSCOM to answer questions about why VX was in the lab and why most of it
wasn't destroyed if it degrades after about a year.
One question proposed by France asked whether equipment in the Baghdad
laboratory was used to analyze the Iraqi warheads before they were sent to the
American lab which found the VX traces. ``If that is not the case, for what
reason?''
Another French question asked ``why the entry code of the chemical lab and the
biological room happened to be not operational.''
A U.S. official retorted: ``While most of the council is concerned about more
than three tons of one of the most toxic substances known to man, they're
worried about the front door key.''
Iraq's Vice-President Taha Yassin accused the Security Council of ordering the
destruction because it knew that UNSCOM inspectors had used the VX to
contaminate the warheads. And an unnamed Iraqi weapons official was quoted by
the official Iraqi News Agency as saying the VX was destroyed under U.S.
pressure ``to erase evidence'' of UNSCOM involvement.
The issue of UNSCOM's lab in Baghdad comes as the Security Council is debating a
new policy toward Iraq. By drawing out the debate over a seemingly clear-cut
technical issue for several days, France, Russia and China put the council on
notice that they will closely scrutinize Iraq's outstanding disarmament
obligations - and that reaching consensus will not be easy.
Source: AP
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