Politically, the discovery of sarin, and, separately, of mustard
gas, would seem to bolster the President, though our esteemed press
corps has already begun its spinning.
An MSNBC report yesterday, noted by Glenn Reynolds, implied that the discovery
does not vindicate the Bush administration because it doesn’t prove
“that Saddam was secretly producing weapons of mass destruction
after the Gulf War.” The Washington Post embeds the news
of the sarin discovery in the subtitle of a front-page story today,
headlined “Iraqi Council’s Leader Is Slain.” The New York
Times also notes the sarin discovery within a report on this piece of bad news, and does the
Post one better with the note that “Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld reacted cautiously to the discovery, saying more extensive
tests were necessary” and directions to find more details on page
A11.
Politics aside, the discovery, and its announcement, raises
disquieting questions about what happened to all the rest of
Saddam’s unaccounted-for chemical weapons. The mustard gas shell,
rendered ineffective by improper storage, is probably one of 550
projectiles. Together with 450 aerial bombs, that represents 80
tons of mustard gas. What happened to it? We don’t know. We can
only hope those shells, too, were not stored properly.
Gazi George, a former Iraqi nuclear scientist, told Fox News he
believes that many weapons stockpiles were either buried
underground or shipped to Syria. And last week Canadian Prime
Minister Paul Martin — perhaps as part of his ongoing effort to
repair the damage his predecessor, Jean Chretien, did to
Canadian-American relations for no good reason — broke with the
Franco-German line that Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction were
entirely a figment of British and American intelligence-fudging,
and suggested that Saddam had WMDs, that they may have fallen into
terrorist hands, and that this represents a profound threat.
The sarin-filled roadside bomb is, obviously, consistent with
Martin’s theory. That it isn’t clear whether the terrorists knew
that the shell they used for their bomb was rigged with sarin, and
did not rig it to spread effectively, might provide some comfort.
And it isn’t clear that whether the shell came from a large hidden
stockpile or was an overlooked stray. Former chief weapons
inspector David Kay told the AP that he suspects the latter but
can’t rule out either.
But now that the discovery has been announced publicly, will
terrorists become better at using any chemical weapons that they
might have access to? Some top officials at the Pentagon were
apparently caught off guard when Brig. Gen. Kimmitt made his
announcement regarding the sarin-filled bomb; they’d thought the
information was classified. Perhaps it should have been.