The emperor has some clothes on: fairy tales, scary tales and Weapons of Mass Destruction

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Series Title
Series Details No.46 August 2004
Publication Date 05/08/2004
ISBN 951-769-157-2
ISSN 1456-1360
Content Type

Abstract:

The debate on the invasion of Iraq revolved around so-called 'Weapons of Mass Destruction' (WMD). Thousands of lives were lost, hundreds of billions of dollars spent, alliances fractured, and international relations thrown into turmoil. The debates raged over whether WMD were there or not; whether the UN inspectors should have more time to find them or not; whether Iraq having or seeking WMD justified invasion or not, amongst other issues.

There were a myriad of differing positions on the value of
the war, but the idea that WMD are a distinct and special class of weapons has remained essentially uncontested.

It was the innocence, and perhaps ignorance, of a child that saw through the emperor’s new clothes. In the case of WMD it is the reverse – only when we have a basic understanding of what these weapons are, how they work and what they can do, can we start to assess the value of the term 'WMD', and – I will argue – see the fundamental
problems it causes for policymakers, and for electorates of democratic countries in knowing how to react to those policies.

This paper also suggests that the classification 'WMD', as it is now used, has allowed the development, deployment and usage of terrible weapons that are deemed for arbitrary reasons not to be WMD.

The technologies behind many of the weapon-systems that have become known as WMD may be complex, but the principles are not. They can be explained to non-specialists, as this paper aims to do. Once this is done, the ramifications of conflating what will be shown to be very different weapons under one title become clearer.

Source Link Link to Main Source https://www.fiia.fi/en/publication/the-emperor-has-some-clothes-on-fairy-tales-scary-tales-and-weapons-of-mass-destruction
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