WMD: Weapon of Mass Destruction explores the atrocities of Saddam Hussein and his band of thugs. It asks the question, "Was it worth sending troups to Iraq?" Interviews with top experts and ... Read allWMD: Weapon of Mass Destruction explores the atrocities of Saddam Hussein and his band of thugs. It asks the question, "Was it worth sending troups to Iraq?" Interviews with top experts and most compelling interviews with the people of Iraq. A film that looks at the war from the ... Read allWMD: Weapon of Mass Destruction explores the atrocities of Saddam Hussein and his band of thugs. It asks the question, "Was it worth sending troups to Iraq?" Interviews with top experts and most compelling interviews with the people of Iraq. A film that looks at the war from the Iraqi point of view.
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- (as Rudolph W. Giuliani)
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For a motion picture such as this I'm not certain that enjoyed is a term that applies. I will say that I found the movie very informative and very disturbing. This movie should be, but probably will never be, shown to the American public via public TV, that they may understand that Saddam was not far from being a modern day Hitler. The numbers and the degree of his atrocities are unimaginable.
As for the film, It's not a right or left piece. It's only meant to show the viewer (and accurately so), the reasons the coalition went in to Iraq. If you have already kept up with any of the reasons, then you will find that most of the information is the same stuff laid out with new footage. It's good for anybody who really didn't pay much attention to the reasons for the past five or six years. The editing, sound, and picture quality are done very well considering this was a very tight budget indie film. Those involved did a very good job in not trying to be political from whatever their viewpoints are. All in all, I would say 7 out of 10.
While no one could seriously argue that the brutality of Hussein towards political opponents, particularly the Kurds, was justified, what the film avoids is the U.S. response while these atrocities were actually being committed. Specifically, the film never asks, "Why did the Reagan & Bush, Sr. administrations adamantly oppose a Senate bill to impose sanctions on Iraq when the killings were discovered?" This bill died in committee with the administration's blessings. Their official concern was the sanctions "would hurt U.S. exporters and worsen our trade deficit" according to then-Assistant Secretary of State, John Kelly.
Fast-forward 16 years later, and after no actual WMD was discovered in Iraq; the original justification for war, the current administration (made of of many of the same people who fought to kill a bill that would have simply imposed sanctions for the atrocities in 1988) decide that, "you know what, that was a pretty bad thing Hussein did 16 years ago." And now you have an instant re-justification for war. Fortunately as polls show, the vast majority of Americans have finally seen through the ruse, leaving only the right-fringe who would argue "day is night; up is down" if they were given the marching orders by this administration.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Color