Why is Ahmadinejad
endorsing the invasion of Iraq, that resulted in at least 625,000
dead Iraqi's, many of them innocent children, not to mention
countless
wounded and destroyed lives and that number is increasing every
day???How
could Ahmadinejad congratulate a phony government, (that's just a
puppet on a string) for doing such a fine job?
Is he following in
the footsteps of GW, "Your doing a fine job Brownie"
Why is Ahmadinejad
praising the efforts made by the Iraqi nation to cleanse the earth
of this ruthless criminal, when he already knows who was behind the
Iraq-Iran war?
This
information is public, but was provided by "Iranian's for Peace"
September 1980.
Iraq invades Iran. The beginning of the Iraq-Iran war.
February 1982. Despite objections from Congress, President
Reagan removes
Iraq from its list of known terrorist countries.
December 1982.
Hughes Aircraft ships 60 Defender helicopters to Iraq.
1982-1988. Defense Intelligence Agency provides detailed
information for Iraq on Iranian deployments, tactical planning for
battles, plans for air strikes and bomb damage assessments.
November 1983. A National Security Directive states that the
U.S would do
"whatever was necessary and legal" to prevent Iraq from losing its
war with Iran.
November 1983. Banca Nazionale del Lavoro of Italy and its
Branch in Atlanta
begin to funnel $5 billion in unreported loans to Iraq. Iraq, with
the blessing and official approval of the U.S. government, purchased
computer controlled machine tools, computers, scientific
instruments, special alloy steel and aluminum, chemicals, and other
industrial goods for Iraq's missile, chemical, biological and
nuclear weapons programs.
October 1983. The Reagan Administration begins secretly
allowing Jordan,

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Egypt to transfer United States weapons,
including Howitzers, Huey helicopters, and bombs to Iraq. These
shipments violated the Arms Export Control Act.
November 1983. George Schultz, the Secretary of State, is
given intelligence reports showing that Iraqi troops are daily using
chemical weapons against the Iranians.
December 20 1983. Donald Rumsfeld, then a civilian and now
Defense Secretary, meets with Saddam Hussein to assure him of US
friendship and materials support.

July 1984. CIA begins giving Iraq intelligence necessary to
calibrate its mustard gas attacks on Iranian troops.
January 14 1984. State Department memo acknowledges United
States shipment of "dual-use" export hardware and technology. Dual
use items are civilian items such as heavy trucks, armored
ambulances and communications gear as well as industrial technology
that can have a military application.
March 1986. The United States with Great Britain block all
Security Council
resolutions condemning Iraq's use of chemical weapons, and on March
21 the
U.S.
becomes the only country refusing to sign a Security Council
statement condemning Iraq's use of these weapons.
May 1986. The U.S. Department of Commerce licenses 70
biological exports to Iraq between May of 1985 and 1989, including
at least 21 batches of lethal strains of anthrax.
May 1986. US
Department of Commerce approves shipment of weapons grade
botulin poison to Iraq.

March 1987. President Reagan bows to the findings of the
Tower Commission admitting the sale of arms to Iran in exchange for
hostages. Oliver North uses the profits from the sale to fund an
illegal war in Nicaragua.
Late 1987. The Iraqi Air Force begins using chemical agents
against Kurdish resistance forces in northern Iraq.
February 1988. Saddam Hussein begins the "Anfal" campaign
against the Kurds of northern Iraq. The Iraq regime used chemical
weapons against the Kurds killing over 100,000 civilians and
destroying over 1,200 Kurdish villages.
April
1988. US Department of Commerce approves shipment of chemicals
used in
manufacture of mustard gas.
August 1988. Four major battles were fought from April to
August 1988, in which the Iraqis massively and effectively used
chemical weapons to defeat
the Iranians. Nerve gas and blister agents such as mustard gas are
used.
By this time the U.S.
Defense Intelligence Agency is heavily involved with Saddam Hussein
in battle plan assistance, intelligence gathering and post battle
debriefing. In the last major battle with of the war, 65,000
Iranians are killed, many with poison gas. Use of chemical weapons
in war is in violation of the Geneva accords of 1925.
August 1988. Iraq and Iran declare a cease fire. (8)
August 1988. Five days after the cease fire Saddam Hussein
sends his planes
and helicopters to northern Iraq to begin massive chemical attacks
against
the Kurds. (8)
September 1988. U.S. Department of Commerce approves shipment
of weapons
grade
anthrax and botulinum to Iraq.
September 1988. Richard Murphy, Assistant Secretary of State:
"The US-Iraqi relationship is... important to our long-term
political and economic objectives."
December 1988. Dow chemical sells $1.5 million in pesticides
to Iraq despite knowledge that these would be used in chemical
weapons.
July 25, 1990. U.S. Ambassador to Baghdad meets with Hussein
to assure him
that President Bush "wanted better and deeper relations." Many
believe this
visit was a trap set for Hussein. A month later Hussein invaded
Kuwait
thinking the U.S. would not respond.
August 1990. Iraq invades Kuwait. The precursor to the Gulf
War.
July 1991. The Financial Times of London reveals that a
Florida chemical
company
had produced and shipped
cyanide
to Iraq during the
80's using a special CIA courier. Cyanide was used extensively
against the Iranians.
August 1991. Christopher Droguol of Atlanta's branch of Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro is arrested for his role in supplying loans to
Iraq for the purchase of military supplies. He is charged with 347
counts of felony. Droguol is found guilty, but U.S. officials plead
innocent of any knowledge of his crime.
June
1992. Ted Koppel of ABC Nightline reports: "It is becoming
increasingly clear that George Bush, Sr., operating largely behind
the scenes throughout
the 1980s, initiated and supported much of the financing,
intelligence, and military help that built Saddam's Iraq into [an
aggressive power]."
July 1992. "The Bush administration deliberately, not
inadvertently,
helped to arm Iraq by allowing U.S. technology to be shipped to
Iraqi military and to Iraqi defense factories... Throughout the
course of the Bush
administration, U.S. and foreign firms were granted export licenses
to ship U.S. technology directly to Iraqi weapons facilities despite
ample evidence showing that these factories were producing weapons."
Representative Henry Gonzalez, Texas, testimony before the House.
February 1994. Senator Riegle from Michigan, chairman of the
Senate Banking
Committee, testifies before the senate revealing large U.S.
shipments of
dual-use biological and chemical agents to Iraq that may have been
used
against U.S. troops in the Gulf War and probably was the cause of
the
illness known as Gulf War Syndrome. (7)
August 2002. "The use of gas [during the Iran-Iraq war] on
the battle field
by the Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic concern... We were
desperate to make sure that Iraq did not lose." Colonel Walter Lang,
former
senior U.S. Defense Intelligence officer tells the New York Times.
(4)
This chronology of the United States' sordid involvement in the
arming of
Iraq can be summarized in this way: the United States used methods
both
legal and illegal to help build Saddam's army into the most powerful
army in
the Mideast outside of Israel. The U.S. supplied chemical and
biological
agents and technology to Iraq when it knew Iraq was using chemical
weapons
against the Iranians.
The U.S. supplied the
materials and technology for these weapons of mass destruction to
Iraq at a time when it was known that Saddam was using this
technology to kill his Kurdish citizens. The United States supplied
intelligence and battle planning information to Iraq when those
battle plans included the use of cyanide, mustard gas and nerve
agents.
The United States
blocked U.N. censure of Iraq's use of chemical weapons. The United
States did not act alone in this effort. The Soviet Union was the
largest weapons supplier, but England, France and Germany were also
involved in the shipment of arms and technology.
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