"I told the troops that. I also told people in the other coalition forces, but I was a lone voice," Hill told The Age.
A former SAS officer, Hill spent eight years as a senior weapons inspector with the U.N. and headed the 1998 inspection team in Iraq. He said he believed that war and inspections had made deployment of any remaining WMD almost impossible.
Hill to The Age: "It is all very well having weapons of mass destruction, like a chemical round, but you still have to have the ability to deliver them. … They had not been able to bring the systems out of storage, to practice with them or to transport them. … Not one of these sorts of things were functioning."
To date, WMD have not been found in Iraq.
YellowTimes.org correspondent Lisa Ashkenaz Croke drafted this report.
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Gleiwitz
14.02.2004 13:24
It's like the Gleiwitz incident in 1939, when Nazi Germany faked a Polish attack near its border with Poland as a pretext to start the September 1 invasion. They wanted a war and they were determined to get it, one way or another.
A Historian