On tonight's episode of Hannity & Colmes (Thursday February
16, 2006), co-host
Alan Colmes repeated the false suggestion that Iraq's WMD "were
destroyed in 1998 when Bill Clinton did pinpoint bombing." This is
the second time that
Newsbusters has addressed such a statement by Colmes.
One of tonight's guests was
Bill Tierney, a former military intelligence officer and an
UNSCOM inspector in Iraq from 1996-1998. As you'll see below, Tierney
claims intimate knowledge of the 1998 Desert Fox strikes (to which
Colmes refers).
From tonight's Hannity & Colmes (emphasis mine) (audiotape on
file):
COLMES: The WMDs did not exist as far as we know when we went to
war with Iraq, and David Kay said they were destroyed in 1998
when Bill Clinton did pinpoint bombing.
TIERNEY: I'm so happy you said that. I was on the targeting
shop at CENTCOM. Alright? I'm gonna tell you something: Before
we went in there, the Iraqis moved all their equipment out, except
for a few massive machines that they couldn't move. That four
days of bombing was a joke. They rebuilt everything.
COLMES: So David Kay?
TIERNEY: Well, David Kay doesn't know -- Actually, I know more
about this than David Kay does.
(By the way, Tierney is also the translator of
the 12 hours of audiotape of Saddam Hussein that ABC News has
recently acquired.
ABC News reports that they received the tapes from Tierney.)
In addition, check out what Tierney said in
an eye-opening November 2005 interview for FrontPageMag:
"Operation Desert Fox was a perfect example of the uselessness
of strike operations. Iraqis have told me that the WMD
destruction and movement started just after Operation Desert Fox,
since after all, who would be so stupid as to start a bombing
campaign and just stop.
"... It was only after Saddam realized that President Clinton lacked
the nerve for anything more than a temper-tantrum demonstration that
he knew the doors were wide open for him to continue his weapons
program. We didn’t break his will, we didn’t destroy his weapons
making capability (The Iraqis simply moved most of the precision
machinery out prior to the strikes, then rebuilt the buildings), but
we did kill some Iraqi bystanders, just so President Clinton could
say 'something must be done, so I did something'."
Finally, there was no claim by David Kay in his reports about
Bill Clinton eliminating Iraq's WMD [link
to Kay text]. Although Kay has stated that he believes that the 1998
Desert Fox strikes may have played a contributing role in
dismantling Saddam's chemical weapons ("Information found
to date suggests that Iraq's large-scale capability to develop, produce,
and fill new CW munitions was reduced -- if not entirely destroyed --
during Operations Desert Storm and Desert Fox, 13 years of UN sanctions
and UN inspections." [link
to Kay text]), biological and
nuclear weapons are an entirely different matter. In Kay's 2003
text, he mentions no such elimination of biological or nuclear
weapons as the result of Desert Fox. (In fact, "We have discovered
dozens of WMD-related program activities and significant amounts of
equipment that Iraq concealed from the United Nations during the
inspections that began in late 2002.")
Bottom line: Colmes' claim is baseless.