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No uranium, no munitions, no missiles, no programmes
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October 7th 03, 11:22 PM
ZZBunker
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(Jack Linthicum) wrote in message . com...
(ZZBunker) wrote in message . com...
"Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ...
"Fred J. McCall" wrote in message
...
(Michael Petukhov) wrote:
:First, there is the allegation that a biologist had a "collection of
:reference strains" at his home, including "a vial of live C botulinum
:Okra B from which a biological agent can be produced".
:Botulinum type B could also be used for making an antidote to common
:botulinum poisoning. That is one of the reasons why many military
:laboratories around the world keep reference strains of C botulinum
:Okra B. The UK keeps such substances, for example, and calls them
:"seed banks".
But when the US CDC sends such things to Iraq, your ilk trumpet the
claim that we're sending them biological weapons stocks....
There's an interesting article the BBC published yesterday
about David Kay The man spearheading the US hunt for
banned weapons in Iraq. He said he is surprised attention
has focused on what his Iraq Survey Group has not found,
rather than on the things it has uncovered.
He says his Iraq Survey Group has uncovered evidence of
banned activities which the United Nations and pre-war
intelligence had not known about, including 24 clandestine
laboratories and four unreported missile programmes.
He also insisted his report last week to US Congress was interim.
"I know we're going to find remarkable things about Iraq's
weapons programmes," he said.
We're not going to find out anything about Iraq's missle
programs. Since we don't even find out anything about
the US's missle program. UN employees need to be reminded
that weekly, since not only are most of them
unemployed CIA, many are just everyday morons.
Spend 10 minutes a week with Aviation Week and Space Technology, you
will know more about the US missile programs than you ought to know.
Back in the 70s I was visited by a Soviet engineer-diplomat who picked
up Av Week read it carefully and then said "In my country this would
be a classified document."
That's redundent. Since in Russia, *every* printed document is a
classified document. Since Russia is not a country.
It's a clerk with an AK-47.
I beg to differ. The Air Force needs to be reminded weekly
that Aviation Week and Space Technology is an
*Air Force* Missle Review. The US Army Missles are nothing
like US Air Force Missles. Since the Army missles shoot
to kill, rather than shoot to shoot.
ZZBunker