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Weapons of Mass Destruction

Mar 2006Number of farm implements that a rocket launcher yields: 5
Source:

APT Enterprise Development (Moreton-in-Marsh, England)

Oct 2005Number of sites in Iraq from which materials usable to make biological or chemical weapons are now “missing”: 118
Source:

U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (N.Y.C.)

Oct 2005Portion of all U.S. foreign aid that goes to helping the recipients buy U.S.-produced weapons, equipment, or services: 1/4
Source:

U.S. Department of State

Jul 2005Price, from a Florida company, for an RV that protects riders from biological and chemical attack: $1,200,000
Source:

Parliament Coach Corp. (Clearwater, Fla.)

Dec 2004Ratio of U.S. arms dealers' campaign contributions made since January 2001 to Democrats to those made to Republicans : 1:2
Source:

PoliticalMoneyLine (Washington)

Dec 2004Minimum number of countries with a greater capacity to produce nuclear weapons than Iraq at the time of the U.S. invasion : 35
Source:

International Atomic Energy Agency (Vienna)

Oct 2004Chance that a new light vehicle bought in the United States last year was a truck or SUV : 1 in 2
Source:

Environmental Protection Agency (Washington)

Sep 2004Secret access code to the computer controls of the U.S. nuclear-tipped missile arsenal between 1968 and 1976 : 00000000
Source:

Center for Defense Information (Washington)

Jun 2004Amount that next year's Defense Department budget proposal requests for researching low-yield nuclear weapons : $9,000,000
Source:

Arms Control Association (Washington)

Jun 2004Number of years that such research was illegal before Congress repealed the ban last November : 10
Source:

Arms Control Association (Washington)

Jun 2004Minimum amount, per kilogram, that the U.S. charges "high income" countries to return spent nuclear fuel : $3,500
Source:

U.S. Department of Energy

Mar 2004Minimum number of nuclear weapons in the oceans as a result of U.S. and Soviet accidents : 50
Source:

Nuclear Policy Research Institute (Washington)

Mar 2004Estimated cost to replace Lawrence Livermore weapons laboratory's locks after master keys were lost last year : $1,700,000
Source:

U.S. Department of Energy

Jul 2003Year in which Washington, D.C., neighbors of a WWI-era chemical-weapons test site were told it was cleaned up: 1995
Source:

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Baltimore)

Mar 2003Estimated number of applications that the U.N. received last year for its 302 weapons-inspector positions: 1,200
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UNMOVIC (N.Y.C.)

Jan 2003Ratio of kilotonnage of U.S. bombs dropped during the Gulf War to that of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima: 7:1
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Oct 2001Number of "weapons of mass destruction" allowed in space, according to a 1967 treaty ratified by the United States: 0
Source:

U.N. Office for Outer Space Affairs (Vienna)

Jan 2001Number of land mines per square mile left behind in southern Lebanon by Israeli forces when they withdrew last May: 376
Source:

International Campaign to Ban Landmines (Washington)

Dec 2000Pounds of ordnance that can be delivered by Boeing's new X-45A, the world's first unmanned fighter jet: 3,000
Source:

The Boeing Company (Seattle)

Aug 1999Tons of uranium from Russia's nuclear arsenal that the country will sell to a U.S. company over the next twenty years: 500
Source:

U.S. Department of Energy

Aug 1999Days after President Roosevelt's death in April 1945 that Vice President Truman was told the atomic bomb existed: 13
Source:

“Truman,” The American Experience, WGBH (Boston)

Jul 1999Number of NATO bombs that have fallen on Bulgaria since the war in Kosovo began: 2
Source:

NATO (Brussels)

Aug 1998Amount British Nuclear Fuels paid the British Scouts last year to add its logo to their scientist badge: $49,776
Source:

British Nuclear Fuels (Warrington, U.K.)

August 29, 2007A federal judge upheld New York City's prohibition on metal baseball bats.
Source:

NY Times

February 23, 2007 Researchers at Johns Hopkins University confirmed that mothers suffering from heartburn are likely to give birth to hairy newborns, and scientists in Senegal watched chimpanzees fashion spears from sticks and use their weapons to stab sleeping bush babies.
Source 1:

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Source 2:

Washington Post

January 25, 2007The U.S. military gave a public demonstration of a new non-lethal heat-ray gun known as the Active Denial System.
Source:

BBC

January 10, 2007In Illinois, Derrick Shareef, a 22-year-old Muslim convert who was arrested last month after trading two stereo speakers to a federal agent for a pistol and four nonfunctioning grenades that he planned to set off at a local mall, pleaded not guilty to attempting to use weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

Saulkvalley.com

November 23, 2006Previously unreleased video footage from early 2003 showed Saddam Hussein and his generals preparing to fight the United States with slingshots and crossbows. “Let’s use all the methods we can,” says Hussein. “These methods can be made at home.”
Source:

New York Times

October 16, 2006The United States Coast Guard announced plans to mount 7.62 mm, M-240B machine guns on official boats in the Great Lakes. Rear Adm. John E. Crowley Jr. said, “I don’t know when or if something might happen on the Great Lakes, but I don’t want to learn the hard way.”
Source:

New York Times

September 5, 2006The White House warned of a “WMD-terrorism nexus” emanating from Iran.
Source:

New York Times

August 31, 2006 U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan denounced Israel's use of cluster bombs.
Source:

International Herald Tribune

August 26, 2006A college student from Connecticut was found with a stick of dynamite in his luggage at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston.
Source:

KNX1070 Radio via Google News

August 24, 2006At Chicago's O'Hare airport, Mardin Amin, 29, of Skokie, Illinois, was arrested after telling security agents that the penis pump in his backpack was a bomb.
Source:

Forbes

August 23, 2006Three Kurdish women testified against Saddam Hussein in his chemical-weapons genocide trial, describing a “sweet, mysterious smell” that blinded them, killed their relatives, and forced them to hide in caves.
Source:

New York Times

July 25, 2006In Minnesota people in zombie costumes were arrested for carrying “simulated weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

local6.com

July 10, 2006 India tested its long-range nuclear-capable ballistic missile, the Agni-III, in the Bay of Bengal. The test failed.
Source 1:

San Francisco Chronicle

Source 2:

New York Times

Source 3:

Guardian

July 5, 2006 North Korea launched six rockets over the Sea of Japan, including a Taepodong-2 intercontinental ballistic missile, which apparently was aborted after just 40 seconds. One thing we have learned, said President George W. Bush, who strongly dislikes North Korea's Dear Leader Kim Jong Il, “is that the rocket didn't stay up very long.” The president, who expressed annoyance when a reporter pointed out that Kim Jong Il had on all accounts increased his nuclear potency since Bush took office, claimed that his antimissile system, which has failed repeated tests, had a “reasonable chance” of intercepting the Taepodong.
Source:

New York Times

March 21, 2006It was revealed that prior to the U.S. invasion, Iraqi foreign minister Naji Sabri had, for a fee, provided the United States with detailed assessments of Iraq's military capabilities. Sabri's assessments of Iraq's nuclear and biological weapons capabilities proved, in hindsight, to be far more reliable than the CIA estimates used to justify the invasion; the CIA had no comment on why the data was ignored.
Source:

MSNBC via Commondreams

February 12, 2006 Iran, said security analysts, will be ready to retaliate with commando squads, global terrorist attacks, and long-range Shahab 3 missiles if its nuclear facilities are attacked.
Source:

The Boston Globe

February 3, 2006Professor Philippe Sands of University College, London, said he had seen a secret memo that details a January 2003 meeting between British Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George W. Bush. According to Sands' account of the memo, Blair offered Bush full British support for an invasion of Iraq regardless of whether U.N. inspectors found evidence of weapons of mass destruction. Bush also told Blair that he was thinking of having U-2 reconnaissance planes painted with U.N. colors and then flown over Iraq in order to provoke Saddam Hussein into firing upon the planes.
Source:

The Guardian

January 31, 2006Former Marine Platoon Sergeant Jim Massey said that the United States was funneling depleted uranium to Iraq through Ireland.
Source:

UTV

November 23, 2005After three years in prison, U.S. citizen Jose Padilla was indicted on charges that he conspired to murder individuals overseas and provide support for terrorists; no mention was made of prior accusations that Padilla intended to use a “dirty bomb” or claims that he conspired with Al Qaeda to blow up U.S. apartment buildings. “The indictment,” explained a former Justice Department official, “is doubtless a strategy by the Bush Administration to avoid a Supreme Court ruling that would likely hold that U.S. citizens cannot be detained incommunicado as enemy combatants if they are detained on U.S. soil.”
Source:

The Washington Post

November 16, 2005After repeated denials, the Pentagon finally admitted to using white phosphorus during the 2004 attack on Fallujah. “It is an incendiary weapon,” explained a spokesman.
Source:

Common Dreams

November 15, 2005Two Iraqi businessmen accused U.S. troops of caging them with lions in 2003. The men were also severely beaten after they were not able to tell Army interrogators where to find Saddam Hussein or weapons of mass destruction. “I thought he was joking, so I laughed,” said one of the businessmen. “He just hit me.”
Source:

The Washington Post

November 9, 2005A former U.S. soldier named Jeff Englehart said that he witnessed “burned bodies, burned children, and burned women” after a white phosphorus attack on Fallujah in 2004. The U.S. Army denied that it had used white phosphorus in the attack.
Source:

The New Zealand Herald

April 28, 2005George W. Bush gave his fourth prime-time news conference and took a firm stance against North Korea. “Perhaps Kim Jong Il has got the capacity to launch a weapon,” he said. “Wouldn't it be nice to be able to shoot it down?” North Korea then fired a missile into the Sea of Japan.
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

VOA

March 31, 2005 Pakistan successfully test-fired the Hatf II, a short-range nuclear-capable missile.
Source:

Aljazeera.com

March 16, 2005The Department of Homeland Security was preparing for: the detonation of a ten-kiloton nuclear device; a biological attack with aerosolized anthrax; an outbreak of pneumonic plague; a flu pandemic starting in south China; the spraying of a chemical blister agent over a football stadium; an attack on an oil refinery; the explosion of a tank of chlorine; a 7.2-magnitude earthquake; a major hurricane in a metropolitan area; three Cesium-137 dirty bombs going off in three different cities, each contaminating thirty-six city blocks; the detonation of improvised bombs in sports stadiums and emergency rooms; liquid anthrax in ground beef; a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak; and a cyber attack on the nation's financial infrastructure.
Source:

The New York Times

February 25, 2005 Canada declared that the U.S. must get permission before launching missiles over Canadian airspace.
Source:

Canada. com

February 17, 2005In England, a nuclear power plant was unable to account for nearly thirty kilograms of plutonium, enough to make seven nuclear bombs; the discrepancy was said to exist only on paper.
Source:

BBC News

February 15, 2005Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said that U.S. policies on Iran and North Korea are inconsistent, and that no evidence exists to implicate Iran in the development of nuclear weapons.
Source:

Washington Post

January 21, 2005 George W. Bush was sworn in again as president, and threatened to bring "the untamed fire of freedom" to the world. In his 20-minute speech the president used the words "free," "freedom," and "liberty" 49 times, but never said "war" or "Iraq."
Source:

Washington Post

January 13, 2005The Bush administration announced that the hunt for weapons of mass destruction had been a total failure.
Source:

AP

December 6, 2004ElBaradei said he believed that North Korea has converted thousands of spent nuclear fuel rods into enough weapons-grade plutonium for four to six bombs.
Source:

New York Times

November 30, 2004The International Atomic Energy Agency voted to accept Iran's promises that it was halting its nuclear weapons program.
Source:

New York Times

October 24, 2004The interim Iraqi government officially notified the International Atomic Energy Agency that 380 tons of extremely powerful HMX and RDX explosives that American forces simply failed to secure have disappeared from a former military facility called Al Qaqaa. The explosives can be used to destroy buildings, arm missile warheads, and detonate nuclear devices, and it was generally conceded that the Al Qaqaa cache, which was under seal by the IAEA prior to the U.S. invasion, is the most likely source of the explosives used in the extremely effective roadside and suicide bombs that have been the primary weapon of the Iraqi insurgency. The Department of Defense has known about the loss of the explosives for more than a year.
Source:

The Nelson Report

October 11, 2004Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, was concerned that entire buildings from Iraq's former nuclear facilities have been dismantled and removed and no one knows where they were taken.
Source:

BBC

October 7, 2004The Iraq Survey Group issued its final report and concluded that Saddam Hussein dismantled his nuclear weapons program in 1991 and did not attempt to revive it. The inspectors said that there was no evidence that Iraq continued to possess chemical or biological weapons, and they concluded that Hussein refused to admit he had disarmed because he wanted to maintain a deterrent against Iran.
Source:

New York Times

October 7, 2004Three hundred pounds of weapons-grade plutonium from the United States arrived in France.
Source:

New York Times

October 2, 2004The Pope beatified Karl I, the last emperor of Austria, an alcoholic adulterer who performed a miracle and used poison gas during World War I; the miracle allegedly occured in 1960, when a Polish nun prayed to Karl and was cured of sores and varicose veins.
Source:

Telegraph

September 17, 2004American weapons inspectors in Iraq once again concluded that Saddam Hussein would have liked to have developed unconventional weapons but did not in fact have such programs.
Source:

New York Times

September 3, 2004The United States was planning to develop portable nuclear power plants, and a
Source:

New Scientist

August 11, 2004 Iran tested a new long-range ballistic missile.
Source:

Associated Press

August 6, 2004The United States announced that it will insist that the Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty, which would ban countries from making enriched uranium and plutonium for nuclear bombs, be stripped of any mechanism for enforcement, such as inspections. This position, which would render the treaty useless, apparently was reached because the Bush Administration does not wish to submit to inspections.
Source:

New York Times

July 7, 2004Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain admitted that weapons of mass destruction might never be found in Iraq but continued to maintain that "we know" Saddam had such weapons: "I do not believe there was not a threat in relation to weapons of mass destruction."
Source:

New York Times

June 16, 2004The Senate agreed to expand the federal definition of hate crimes to include those committed because of "sexual orientation, gender or disability" but defeated a measure that would have eliminated funding for research into "bunker busting" mini-nukes.
Source:

New York Times

June 4, 2004The Department of Energy announced that it will cut the nation's stockpile of nuclear weapons "almost in half."
Source:

New York Times

May 28, 2004A British journalist who was arrested in Israel for talking to Mordechai Vanunu, the scientist who exposed Israel's nuclear weapons program, was released from custody and complained that he had been stuck in a dungeon with excrement-covered walls; Vanunu was released last month after 18 years in prison and has been ordered not to talk with foreigners.
Source:

Guardian

May 26, 2004 The New York Times published an extraordinary editors' note admitting that the newspaper had been manipulated by members of the Bush Administration and by Iraqi exiles such as Ahmad Chalabi into running false stories (especially on the subject of Iraq's nonexistent weapons of mass destruction) that advanced the administration's war agenda and had failed to follow up aggressively on many of those stories, and had failed, in those instances when it did follow up, to make prominent note of the fact that the stories were false. The retraction was published on page A10, where many readers would fail to notice it.
Source:

New York Times

May 21, 2004 British intelligence agents in World War II at one point planned to train pigeons to carry bombs or biological weapons. "Pigeon research," said one memo, "will not stand still; if we do not experiment, other powers will."
Source:

BBC

April 29, 2004The United Nations Security Council voted to ban "non-state actors" from possessing nuclear weapons.
Source:

New York Times

April 28, 2004"Brother Guide" Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya arrived in Brussels, along with his white stretch Mercedes limo and four female bodyguards wearing tight uniforms, to meet with European officials. He called on the United States and China to rid themselves of nuclear and chemical weapons. "Hopefully," he said, "nothing will force us to go back to the days when we used our cars and explosive belts."
Source:

New York Times

April 22, 2004Mordecai Vanunu, the scientist who exposed Israel's nuclear-weapons program, was released from prison after 18 years, 11 of which were in solitary confinement. Israel has maintained an official policy of "nuclear ambiguity" even though Vanunu confirmed that the country possesses weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

New York Times

April 4, 2004 Colin Powell admitted that the Iraqi National Congress, the U.S.-funded Iraqi exile group, was the source of "the most dramatic" bits in his notorious United Nations presentation on Iraq's mythical weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

Miami Herald

March 28, 2004Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, speaking of Pakistan's nuclear-weapons trafficking, said, "I do not believe that there's any evidence or any suggestion that President Musharraf was involved." Musharraf, for his part, denied that he had made a deal with the Americans to crack down on Al Qaeda in return for lenient treatment for selling nuclear technology to North Korea, Libya, Iran, and others; he also denied that his country's proliferation had done much harm. "If I hand over a missile or a bomb to any extremist, believe me, he can do nothing about it," Musharraf said. "He cannot explode it."
Source:

Reuters

March 28, 2004People all over the world were astonished when President Bush, during a speech, showed a slide of himself looking under his desk and then joked: "Those weapons of mass destruction got to be here somewhere."
Source:

Herald Sun

March 19, 2004The president of Poland acknowledged publicly that the United States "deceived us about the weapons of mass destruction" in Iraq. "We were taken for a ride," he said.
Source:

Agence France-Presse

March 19, 2004It was revealed that the United States has resumed a program designed to predict the effects of nuclear fallout.
Source:

New York Times

March 18, 2004The U.S. Army and DuPont were hoping to dispose of 1,200 tons of VX nerve gas by mixing it with sodium hydroxide and hot water and then dumping it into the Delaware River.
Source:

Philadelphia Inquirer

March 11, 2004The House of Representatives passed the so-called cheeseburger bill, which if made law would grant immunity from lawsuits to restaurants, especially fast-food chains, that serve unhealthy food.
Source:

New York Times

March 10, 2004 Pakistan tested a new long-range missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead.
Source:

New York Times

March 4, 2004The inspector general of the USDA opened a criminal investigation into whether the Washington State mad cow was falsely listed as a downer; the man who killed the cow, the man who took the cow to slaughter, and the owner of the slaughterhouse have all said that the cow was able to walk. A spokeswoman for the agency said that she could not "fathom" the notion that a high-ranking USDA official could have ordered the falsification, though she did not deny the charge but simply repeated that she could not "fathom" it.
Source:

New York Times

February 28, 2004Powerful Republicans were said to be urging President Bush to get rid of Dick Cheney, who continued to insist, contrary to all evidence, that stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction will be found in Iraq, and that Saddam Hussein was allied with Al Qaeda. "Am I the evil genius in the corner that nobody ever sees come out of his hole?" Cheney asked an interviewer. "It's a nice way to operate, actually."
Source:

Asia Times

February 27, 2004Richard Butler said that when he was chief U.N. weapons inspector he had to meet contacts in Central Park because he knew that his telephone conversations were routinely intercepted.
Source:

CNN

February 27, 2004The United States government was working to build safer land mines.
Source:

New York Times

February 27, 2004Shoko Asahara, the leader of the Aum Shinrikyo cult, which released sarin gas in the Tokyo subway in 1995, was sentenced to death, eight years after his trial began.
Source:

BBC

February 21, 2004 Colin Powell said that the conquest of Iraq was justified because Saddam Hussein would have used weapons of mass destruction if only he had had some.
Source:

Associated Press

February 13, 2004A new poll found that most Americans believe that President Bush lied or knowingly exaggerated evidence that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. The poll also showed Senator John Kerry beating the president by nine percentage points.
Source:

Washington Post

February 11, 2004Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said that he did not recall British Prime Minister Tony Blair's prewar claim that Iraq could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes. "I don't remember the statement being made, to be perfectly honest." The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Richard Myers, didn't remember it either.
Source:

Sydney Morning Herald

February 10, 2004 Bill O'Reilly of Fox News apologized on national television for his uncritical support of the Bush Administration's claims that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. "I was wrong," he said. "I am not pleased about it at all and I think all Americans should be concerned about this."
Source:

San Diego Union-Tribune

February 8, 2004President George W. Bush, apparently worried that John Kerry was beating him in recent opinion polls, appeared on a Sunday morning talk show. Bush defended his decision to conquer Iraq, and although he admitted that his stated reason for invading was false, he also suggested that weapons of mass destruction might still be found. The president said that he had total confidence in the CIA but suggested that he had been misled by incorrect intelligence. "Saddam Hussein was dangerous with weapons. Saddam Hussein was dangerous with the ability to make weapons," Bush said. "I believe it is essential that when we see a threat, we deal with those threats before they become imminent. It's too late if they become imminent."
Source:

Reuters

February 6, 2004The Bush Administration praised Pakistan after General Pervez Musharraf pardoned Abdul Qadeer Khan, the nuclear scientist who took the blame for selling nuclear technology to Iran, Libya, and North Korea; Khan claimed that no one in the government or in the military was aware of his activities.
Source:

MSNBC

February 2, 2004It was reported that David Kay, the former American arms inspector, was shocked at the huge controversy created when he simply spoke the truth about the nonexistent Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

New York Times

January 26, 2004President Pervez Musharraf admitted that some of Pakistan's top nuclear scientists had sold nuclear technology to other countries but denied that the government was involved; Musharraf was accused of scapegoating the scientists to appease the United States.
Source:

Christian Science Monitor

January 24, 2004 David Kay, the outgoing head of the Iraq Survey Group, said that Iraq got rid of its illegal weapons programs years before the United States invaded.
Source:

New York Times

January 8, 2004The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace issued a report concluding that Iraq did not in fact possess any weapons of mass destruction. The report, which drew on intelligence material and documents discovered by weapons inspectors after the war, criticized the United States government for its deliberate exaggerations of Iraq's military capabilities.
Source:

New Scientist

January 8, 2004The Bush Administration withdrew a 400-member weapons-inspection team from Iraq because they are no longer needed.
Source:

New York Times

December 28, 2003Prime Minister Tony Blair claimed in a Christmas message to the British military that the Iraq Survey Group had found "massive evidence of a huge system of clandestine laboratories"; L. Paul Bremer, the American proconsul, dismissed Blair's claim as a "red herring."
Source:

Guardian

December 20, 2003Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya announced that he has given up trying to acquire unconventional weapons and that he'll be good from now on.
Source:

Associated Press

December 19, 2003There were reports that David Kay, the head of the American team looking for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, is planning to resign.
Source:

New Scientist

December 17, 2003In that interview, the president said that he saw no difference between his earlier claims that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction and the more recent emphasis on weapons programs. "So what's the difference? If he were to acquire weapons, he would be the danger," Bush said. "I'm telling you — I made the right decision for America because Saddam Hussein used weapons of mass destruction, invaded Kuwait. But the fact that he is not there is, means America's a more secure country."
Source:

Guardian

December 16, 2003Senator Bill Nelson of Florida revealed that the Bush Administration told senators last year that Saddam Hussein definitely possessed biological and chemical weapons and that his unmanned drones could reach cities on the East Coast.
Source:

Florida Today

December 16, 2003An American gun manufacturer was promoting a new pistol that can shoot around corners.
Source:

New Scientist

December 10, 2003 Canada's Air Transport Security Authority banned fruitcakes in carry-on luggage.
Source:

CBC

December 9, 2003Scientists were studying the bombardier beetle, which can fire liquid at its enemies from its rear end at up to 300 squirts per second, in the hope of building a better airplane engine.
Source:

New Scientist

November 30, 2003The Bush Administration approved a research project to develop low-yield bunker-busting nuclear weapons, or "mini-nukes."
Source:

The Observer

November 21, 2003General Tommy Franks told a cigar magazine that the United States could become a military dictatorship if terrorists ever use weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

Newsmax

November 21, 2003Senate Democrats and moderate Republicans used a fillibuster to block a $30 billion energy bill that would have given immunity from lawsuits to petrochemical companies that have polluted water supplies with MTBE, a carcinogenic fuel additive.
Source:

Forbes

November 15, 2003Newly declassified files from MI5, the British intelligence agency, revealed that in 1940 German saboteurs had planned to attack Buckingham Palace with exploding cans of French peas.
Source:

New York Times

November 7, 2003Giant pouched rats were being used to sniff out land mines in Mozambique.
Source:

Guardian

November 2, 2003Historians were upset that the Smithsonian Institution's new exhibit of the Enola Gay bomber fails to mention that the B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
Source:

New York Times

November 1, 2003Shoko Asahara, the guru of the Aum Shinrikyo cult, claimed that he had lost control of his followers shortly before they released nerve gas in the Tokyo subway eight years ago.
Source:

Associated Press

October 29, 2003American scientists deliberately engineered a new extra-deadly form of mousepox; much the same thing has been done with cowpox and rabbitpox.
Source:

New Scientist

October 25, 2003Much of Zimbabwe's wildlife is being wiped out by poachers, naturalists said, and Human Rights Watch accused Zimbabwe of using famine as a weapon against political dissidents.
Source:

New York Times

October 21, 2003The United States was granted broad exemptions for the use of methyl bromide, a pesticide that damages the ozone layer; the chemical was supposed to be banned under the Montreal Protocol, which the U.S. signed. Strawberry and tomato farmers, as well as the owners of golf courses, will benefit.
Source:

New York Times

October 21, 2003The U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board concluded that the government's plan to bury nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, near Las Vegas, is dangerously flawed; the design, the board said, would lead to the corrosion and perforation of the containers, and thus to leaks.
Source:

New York Times

October 10, 2003 Pat Robertson said that the State Department should be blown up with a nuclear bomb.
Source:

Reuters

October 6, 2003 David Kay, the head of the CIA team searching for traces of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, issued his status report; Kay admitted that no unconventional weapons had been found but did point to a single vial of botulinum toxin, which an Iraqi scientist had stored in his refrigerator since 1993, as evidence of evil intent. President Bush cited the vial and said that the report justified the invasion.
Source:

Washington Post, International Herald Tribune

October 6, 2003and Robin Cook, the former foreign minister and leader of the Commons, who resigned to protest Britain's participation in the conquest of Iraq, claimed that Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted privately to him two weeks before the invasion that Saddam Hussein had no weapons that posed a "real and present danger."
Source:

BBC

September 28, 2003At the request of the CIA, the Justice Department began investigating charges that the White House leaked the name of undercover CIA agent Valerie Plame to the press in retaliation for remarks by her husband, former ambassador Joseph Wilson, challenging President Bush's claim that Iraq tried to buy yellowcake uranium in Africa. An unnamed administration official told the Washington Post that two White House officials had revealed the agent's identity to at least six journalists. "Clearly," the official said, "it was meant purely and simply for revenge." The White House denied that Karl Rove was responsible for the leak, which was a violation of the Intelligence Protection Act and carries penalties of up to 10 years in prison and $50,000 in fines.
Source:

Washington Post

September 25, 2003Administration officials tried to play down a disappointing progress report by the American team searching Iraq for signs of weapons of mass destruction.
Source:

New York Times

September 24, 2003A 16-year-old boy in Spokane, Washington, was wounded by police officers after he barricaded himself in a classroom with a pistol;
Source:

New York Times

September 11, 2003A British parliamentary report concluded that the Blair government did not intentionally lie in its controversial dossier on Iraq's military threat; the report did criticize the government, however, and said that its false claim that Iraq was capable of launching weapons of mass destruction in 45 minutes was "unhelpful," and that the dossier should have made clear that Iraq was not, in the opinion of the intelligence services, an imminent threat to Great Britain.
Source:

BBC

September 10, 2003 Leni Riefenstahl died, as did Edward Teller.
Source:

New York Times

August 31, 2003A decommissioned Russian nuclear submarine sank in the Barents Sea.
Source:

New York Times

August 29, 2003Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain testified before the Hutton inquiry and denied the BBC's claim that his aides had "sexed up" his dossier on Iraq's purported weapons of mass destruction; Blair said he would have resigned if the story had been true.
Source:

Guardian, BBC, New York Times

August 29, 2003 North Korea announced plans to test a nuclear device.
Source:

New York Times

August 15, 2003The United States Army delayed the destruction of more than 1,200 tons of VX, a deadly nerve agent, at the Newport Chemical Depot, 30 miles north of Terre Haute, Indiana, because the plant has failed to meet environmental standards.
Source:

Associated Press

August 10, 2003 L. Paul Bremer, the American overseer of Iraq, said he thought the bombing was carried out by "outside" forces because he wasn't sure the "ex-regime people" who have been shooting U.S. soldiers had the know-how to make a car bomb.
Source:

New York Times

August 10, 2003The United States Army began incinerating millions of pounds of chemical weapons in a small town in Alabama; nearby residents, who have been assured that the process is completely safe, were issued protective hoods.
Source:

New York Times

August 9, 2003Engineers from the Defense Intelligence Agency concluded that the mobile laboratories found in Iraq were probably used to make hydrogen for weather balloons, just as Iraqi scientists have claimed.
Source:

New York Times

August 8, 2003Two workers at Los Alamos National Laboratory were accidentally exposed to plutonium.
Source:

Newsday

July 31, 2003It was reported that the Pentagon has awarded a $500,000 grant to researchers to develop genetically engineered trees that will change color in the event of a biological- or chemical-weapons attack.
Source:

Associated Press

July 26, 2003The Army denied that depleted uranium was causing the mysterious outbreak of pneumonia among American soldiers in Iraq.
Source:

Springfield News Leader

July 25, 2003 French police evacuated an airport in Toulouse and blew up a bag of puff pastry.
Source:

Ananova

July 22, 2003The former head of the U.S. army's Depleted Uranium Project announced that the damage from munitions used in both Gulf Wars will eclipse the Agent Orange fallout of the Vietnam War.
Source:

Buffalo News

July 19, 2003 United Nations weapons inspectors said they had found traces of enriched uranium in samples taken in Iran.
Source:

Washington Post

July 19, 2003Federal authorities said that 1,100 pounds of ammonium nitrate, the explosive chemical used to blow up the Oklahoma City federal building, were stolen from quarries in Colorado and California.
Source:

Associated Press

July 18, 2003 President Bush told a group of surprised reporters that Saddam Hussein had refused to permit weapons inspectors to return to Iraq: "And we gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let them in. And therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power."
Source:

Washington Post

July 18, 2003 British prime minister Tony Blair addressed the United States Congress and predicted that history will "forgive" him even if weapons of mass destruction are never found in Iraq. He received 19 standing ovations; after the first one he responded: "This is more than I deserve and more than I'm used to, frankly."
Source:

Guardian

July 17, 2003 CIA director George Tenet testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee and again took responsibility for President Bush's false claim that Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger, but he admitted that he didn't know the claim, which he successfully removed from at least one of the president's previous speeches, would be included in the State of the Union address. Tenet said that his staff should have told him about it.
Source:

Washington Post

July 16, 2003Newly declassified documents revealed that during the Cold War British scientists planned to bury ten nuclear land mines in Germany. The plan, code-named Blue Peacock, was abandoned in 1958, after it was judged to be "politically flawed."
Source:

New Scientist

July 15, 2003 North Korea announced that it has made enough plutonium to construct several nuclear bombs.
Source:

New York Times

July 13, 2003 President Bush, asked whether he regretted his false claim about the uranium, responded by saying there was "no doubt" in his mind that he was right to conquer Iraq. "And there's no doubt in my mind, when it's all said and done, the facts will show the world the truth."
Source:

New York Times

July 9, 2003The White House admitted that President Bush's claim in his last State of the Union address that Iraq had tried to buy uranium from Niger was based on "unsubstantiated" intelligence;
Source:

CNN

July 3, 2003President George W. Bush dismissed growing complaints that he exaggerated the threat posed by Iraq in the buildup to the invasion and invited Iraqis who remain loyal to Saddam Hussein to attack American troops: "There are some who feel like that if they attack us, that we may decide to leave prematurely," he said. "My answer is: bring them on. We've got the force necessary to deal with the security situation."
Source:

Orlando Sentinel

July 1, 2003 Hans Blix retired,
Source:

Associated Press

June 27, 2003 He also said that he doesn't "know anybody in any government or any intelligence agency who suggested that the Iraqis had nuclear weapons"; it was immediately pointed out that Vice President Dick Cheney made precisely that claim in March.
Source:

New York Times

June 25, 2003A State Department intelligence analyst told a congressional hearing that he had felt pressure to make his reports conform to the administration's position on Iraq.
Source:

New York Times

June 25, 2003 Donald Rumsfeld, the secretary of defense, made the surprising claim that "before the war, there was no debate about whether Iraq had unconventional weapons."
Source:

New York Times

June 22, 200330 kilograms of cesium 137 were recovered from an unemployed schoolteacher in Bangkok who was trying to sell the material to terrorists. "Cesium 137 is serious stuff, highly radioactive," said one expert. "You put it alongside four kilograms or more of dynamite and you've got a really dangerous terror weapon."
Source:

Sydney Morning Herald

June 19, 2003 President Bush declared that the world will not tolerate nuclear weapons in Iran. "Iran would be dangerous," he said, "if they have a nuclear weapon."
Source:

New York Times

June 18, 2003 North Korea announced its intention to accelerate its program to build a nuclear deterrent and said that a U.S. naval blockade or embargo could lead to "all-out war"; a state-run newspaper said that "the Iraqi war proved that disarmament leads to war. Therefore it is quite clear that the DPRK can never accept the U.S. demand that it scrap its nuclear weapons program first."
Source:

Associated Press

June 17, 2003mainstream commentators were also beginning to use the word "impeachment" in connection with the weapons of mass destruction scandal.
Source:

Los Angeles Times

June 17, 2003One hundred seventy pounds of cesium 137 and strontium 90 were found in a taxi in Tbilisi, Georgia,
Source:

New York Times

June 11, 2003The American soldiers looking for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq were running out of places to look. "It doesn't appear there are any more targets at this time," said Lt. Col. Keith Harrington. "We're hanging around with no missions in the foreseeable future."
Source:

Washington Post

June 11, 2003Frank Luntz, the Republican pollster, said that it doesn't matter whether WMD are found, "because the rationale for the war changed. Americans like a good picture. And one photograph of an Iraqi child kissing a U.S. soldier is more powerful than two months of debate on the floor of Congress."
Source:

Washington Post

June 10, 2003 President Bush was still "absolutely convinced" that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.