At a certain point, one starts to wonder if anything Bush has said about Iraq is true. The latest:
On May 29, 2003, 50 days after the fall of Baghdad, President Bush proclaimed a fresh victory for his administration in Iraq: Two small trailers captured by U.S. and Kurdish troops had turned out to be long-sought mobile “biological laboratories.” He declared, “We have found the weapons of mass destruction.”
The claim, repeated by top administration officials for months afterward, was hailed at the time as a vindication of the decision to go to war. But even as Bush spoke, U.S. intelligence officials possessed powerful evidence that it was not true.
As the WaPo explained, the Pentagon launched a secret fact-finding mission to Iraq to investigate the trailers and — surprise, surprise — found that they had nothing to do with biological weapons. Apparently, it wasn’t a particularly tough call. “Within the first four hours,” said one team member, “it was clear to everyone that these were not biological labs.”
The team completed a unanimous report and sent their findings to Washington on May 27, 2003 — two days before the president’s statement. The field report with the facts was then shelved while the president and other administration officials — for nearly a year — routinely pointed to these trailers as weapons factories.
So, were the trailers related to weapons at all? Not so much.
“There was no connection to anything biological,” said one expert who studied the trailers. Another recalled an epithet that came to be associated with the trailers: “the biggest sand toilets in the world.”
They lied. They knew they were lying. They lied anyway.