gee the reason bush gave for invading iraq was because they had weapons of mass destruction that they were planning on using against america.

but since the was started and ended in less then 30 days the us government has not found any weapons of mass destruction.

now the us is sending 1,000 people to iraq to look for WMD. I bet if our guys dont find any WMD they will make some up just to justify the invading Iraq.

from: http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/04/17/sprj.irq.war.main/index.html

U.S. steps up WMD hunt in Iraq
U.S.: Another Saddam half-brother captured
Thursday, April 17, 2003 Posted: 5:46 PM EDT (2146 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The United States is sending a 1,000-man team to Iraq to hunt for weapons of mass destruction, Pentagon officials said Thursday.

The group, probably to be led by a general, will consist of military personnel, government intelligence analysts, civilian scientists and private contractors.

U.S. personnel have yet to find any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The Bush administration has long contended that the possession of WMD by Saddam Hussein's regime, in breach of U.N. resolutions, posed a threat to U.S. security.

Initial elements of the "Iraq Survey Group" are already in Iraq and the full organization should be operational within a couple of weeks, a defense official said.

The survey team will focus on putting a larger number of people into the country to undertake a more organized search based on intelligence leads.

The latest effort underscores the growing Pentagon view that the United States no longer expects to find weapons of mass destruction on its own, but will have to offer rewards to Iraqis to elicit information as to where to look.

Meanwhile, U.S. special operations troops, supported by Marines, captured one of Saddam's half-brothers in an overnight raid in Baghdad, Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks of the U.S. Central Command said Thursday.

Barzan Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti is No. 52 on the U.S. list of the most-wanted figures from the former regime and the five of clubs on the Central Command's deck of cards of most-wanted Iraqis issued to troops.

"We believe that he is an insider" to Saddam's regime, having served as an adviser to the former Iraqi president, Brooks said.

Information provided by Iraqis facilitated the capture, Brooks said. Hasan was captured alone and there were no casualties, he said.

Last weekend, Watban Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti, another Saddam half-brother, was taken into U.S. custody trying to cross into Syria. Syria said it has sealed its border with Iraq.

Coalition forces were working Thursday with local leaders to try to maintain order and restore services around Iraq, while diplomats debated the future of the region.

The United States was moving hundreds of troops to an air base on the outskirts of the northern city of Mosul, where tensions have been high following clashes this week between Marines and residents that killed at least 10 people, U.S. military officials told a CNN reporter on the scene.

U.S. forces plan to increase patrols in the western sector of the city, but they have not yet begun, officials said.

Kurdish troops originally occupied the area following the surrender of Iraqi forces a week ago, but the Kurds pulled out due to tension with the Arab population. The remaining 500 to 600 Kurdish troops are in the eastern part, where about 30 percent of Mosul's population lives.

The only buildings U.S. forces control are on an air base at the city's edge and the governor's office in the city center.

In Baghdad, Mohammad Al Zubiedi, an Iraqi opposition figure who until recently lived in exile in Britain, told CNN that voters have elected him as chief of Baghdad's executive council.

About 300 community leaders elected Zubiedi as part of a meeting to set up a civil administration in the city, according to Zubiedi and others in his circle.

"We are coordinating with U.S. military to meet and discuss issues in Baghdad ... to provide security, hospitals, the medical supplies, food, other issues," Zubiedi said.

Zubiedi is part of the Iraqi exile movement supported by the U.S. military in its attempts to set up a local administration in Baghdad.

Historically, however, Iraqis have been hostile to the idea of being led by exiles who have avoided many of the hardships under Saddam and U.N. sanctions. (Full story)

U.S. military officials said they were familiar with Zubiedi, but the agency in charge of helping establish an interim government in Iraq said it had not been in contact with him.

Ahmed Chalabi, leader of the once-exiled Iraqi National Congress, was in Baghdad Thursday to meet with family, members of the Iraqi National Congress, residents, military officials, university professors and community leaders, according to a spokesman.

Meanwhile, European Union leaders said Thursday they were committed to playing a "significant role" in Iraq's reconstruction.

At a meeting in Athens, Greece, the European Union called on the U.S.-led coalition to provide a "secure environment" in the aftermath of the conflict that removed Saddam's regime in less than a month's time.

In a statement, the group said the United Nations should play a central role in the process of leading Iraqis toward self-government and called on Iraq's neighbors to support security and stability in the country.


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