First of all, the liberal line that "Zomg! Bush lied there never were any WMD's! Blood for Oil! Konspiracy! /faint" is logically inconsistent with the position that anything, anywhere in Iraq was remotely close to being a WMD.
Since you now are screaming that there WERE WMD's present, you must concede that Bush's stated reason for the invasion is, in fact, legitimate.
Furthermore, Ddrak's line that as long as the UN, incorruptible paragons of virtue that they are, was monitoring the sites, everything was safe as houses is bogus. As early as 1997, Saddam had been breaking UN seals on the bunkers at Al Qa Qaa and doing the Curley Shuffle with the explosives therein.
http://www.hri.org/cgi-bin/brief?/news/ ... .undh.html
Iraq has returned high explosives it had removed from the Al Qa Qaa facility, according to the Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
In a letter to the United Nations Secretary-General, Mohamed Elbaradei says that in accordance with its notification of IAEA, Iraq had removed IAEA seals from five of the six high-explosive bunkers at the Al Qa Qaa facility and dispersed approximately 50 tonnes out of a total of 228 tonnes of high explosives (HMX) to other locations at Al Qa Qaa. Mr. Elbaradei says that IAEA inspectors have witnessed the return of this material to its original storage location and have taken measures to account for the original inventory. "There are no indications that any of this material has been diverted", the IAEA Director-General says.
In addition to these activities, other IAEA personnel and experts from United Nations Member States have serviced and upgraded the video surveillance systems at two facilities. They have also carried out an extensive campaign for the collection of environmental samples.
The IAEA Director-General says that the agency has directed is resources towards verification of the status of critical dual-use equipment.
On 25 November, the IAEA team was temporarily increased to 12 persons in order to restore the technical basis of the IAEA's monitoring and verification activities as quickly as possible, says Mr. Elbaradei. Since that time, he points out, the Nuclear Monitoring Group has carried out more than 42 inspections at 40 locations, some of which have been inspected more than once.
Following an impasse caused by Iraq's objection to the United Nations weapons inspectors, IAEA inspectors returned to Baghdad on 21 November and resumed their inspections the following day.
Give me a break. like a strip of tape was gonna keep Saddam out of his own weapons bunkers if he ever decided to use them.
(fixed the quoteblock for readability)