Affiliates
| Works by
Scott Ritter (U.N. Weapons
Inspector, Writer)
[1961 - ] |
Email: ???
Website:
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Profile created June 8, 2007 |
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Endgame: Solving the Iraq Problem - Once and For All (1999)
The resignation of Scott Ritter as chief weapons inspector for UNSCOM in
August 1998 made front-page news around the world. Now Scott Ritter draws
on his seven years' experience hunting Saddam's weapons of mass
destruction to take readers inside Iraq and show that country as it has
never been seen by outsiders before. In Endgame, he dissects the failure
of U.S. policy in Iraq and reveals a bold new approach to ending the
ongoing Iraq crisis.
Ritter describes Saddam Hussein's rise to power, painting a damning
portrait of a dictator who ruthlessly eliminated rivals as he fought his
way to the top. Ritter explains how Saddam cleverly drew on tribal and
family connections to consolidate power and then outmaneuver and often
execute opponents.
Once he had become the uncontested strongman in Iraq, Saddam began
planning the domination of the Persian Gulf region, fighting a war with
Iran, threatening Israel, and finally invading Kuwait, the action that
provoked the Gulf War. Along the way Saddam repeatedly purged Iraq's
military, putting his own key allies and relatives in charge. He also
discovered the value of chemical weapons and ballistic missiles, which he
used to turn the tide in the war against Iran.
When the U.N. Security Council authorized inspections of Iraq's chemical,
biological, and nuclear weapons facilities following the conclusion of the
Gulf War, Saddam put in place a concealment program designed to preserve
his weapons capabilities. It was this concealment mechanism that UNSCOM
spent seven years trying to penetrate in its search for Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction. Ritter takes us with him inside some of Iraq's most
carefully guarded sites as he describes what it was like to conduct these
inspections. He tells stories of dramatic face-offs by unarmed inspectors
with hostile Iraqi guards and officials.
Endgame criticizes current U.S. policy toward Iraq, pointing out that we
have squandered an international consensus and now find ourselves
virtually isolated over our Iraq policy. Scott Ritter offers a way out of
the Iraqi morass, proposing a bold and innovative solution to the current
crisis. He argues that the U.S. should again take a leadership position on
Iraq if we are to avoid facing a re-armed and emboldened Saddam on another
battlefield in the future.
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War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know (2002) by
William Rivers Pitt
with Scott Ritter
War on Iraq offers a balanced, non-partisan examination of the current
debate in Washington and beyond. In this shocking expose on the impending
offensive against Iraq, activist, author, and teacher William Rivers Pitt
sits down with former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter to expose the
truth behind the hawkish rhetoric of the Bush administration.
Ritter--ex-Marine, intelligence specialist, expert on Iraqi military
strategy, and Gulf War veteran--dismantles the myths surrounding Saddam
Hussein's biological, chemical and nuclear weapons capabilities while
revealing the neo-conservative forces pushing the White House toward war.
During the seven years the inspections took place, Ritter and other
inspectors were able to confirm that Iraq's chemical, biological, and
nuclear weapons programs were effectively destroyed, counter to current
White House claims. Pitt and Ritter also explain the lack of any plausible
link between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda, and highlight the absurdity of
forcing democracy on a nation that has been divided for centuries. The book
closes with a stark forecast for American troops if a ground war ensues and
urges the White House to seek a diplomatic solution. A complete listing of
contact information for U.S. senators as well as outreach and activist
resources is included.
Frontier Justice : Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Bushwhacking of America (2003)
Frontier Justice exposes the fraudulent manner in which President Bush and
Company's new scheme of world domination has been sold to Congress and the
American people, especially through the "Big Lie" about the threat posed by
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. A former Marine intelligence officer who
served in the 1991 Gulf War and led U.N. weapons inspection efforts in Iraq
until his resignation in 1998, Ritter dissects this myth and reveals how
Bush carried out the international equivalent of a west Texas lynch mob,
forcing his own brand of frontier justice in the Middle East.
Iraq Confidential: The Untold Story of the Intelligence Conspiracy to Undermine
the UN and Overthrow Saddam Hussein (2005)
Scott Ritter is the straight-talking former marine officer who the CIA wants
to silence. After the 1991 Gulf War, Ritter helped lead the UN weapons
inspections of Iraq and found himself at the center of a dangerous game
between the Iraqi and US regimes.
As Ritter reveals in this explosive book, Washington was only interested in
disarmament as a tool for its own agenda. Operating in a fog of espionage
and counter-espionage, Ritter and his team were determined to find out the
truth about Iraq’s WMD. The CIA were equally determined to stop them. The
truth, as we now know, was that Iraq was playing a deadly game of
double-bluff, and actually had no WMD. But to have revealed this would have
derailed America’s drive for regime change.
Iraq Confidential charts the disillusionment of a staunch patriot who came
to realize that his own government sought to undermine effective arms
control in the Middle East. Ritter shows us a world of deceit and betrayal
in which nothing is as it seems. A host of characters from Mossad, MI6 and
the CIA pepper this powerful narrative, which contains revelations that will
permanently affect the ongoing debates about Iraq.
Target Iran: The Truth About the White House's Plans for Regime Change (2006)
In the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, Scott Ritter's War on Iraq was
embraced by the antiwar movement in America even though his claims that Iraq
had been effectively disarmed were ignored by both the Bush administration
and the mainstream media. In the wake of the debacle, Ritter has been
vindicated. Now Ritter, a former United Nations weapons inspector, has set
his sights on the White House's hyping of Iran's alleged nuclear weapons
program. In Target Iran he once again sets the record straight.
This book offers Ritter's “national intelligence assessment” of the Iranian
imbroglio. He examines the Bush administration's regime-change policy and
the potential of Iran to threaten U.S. national security interests. The
author also considers how the country is seen by other interested parties,
including the United Kingdom (Tony Blair may once again be called upon by
Bush to provide an international “cover” in any confrontation), Israel (the
Israelis view Iran as their number one threat today), and the International
Atomic Energy Agency (responsible for inspecting the alleged nuclear
program).
Waging Peace: The Art of War for the Antiwar Movement (2007)
Scott Ritter, former Marine and UN weapons inspector, argues that
there is a growing despondency amongst the anti-war movement. Ritter
proposes the anti-war movement seek guidance from sources they normally
spurn — that one must study the “enemy” in order to learn the art of
campaigning and of waging battles when necessary. They need to understand
the pro-war movement’s decision-making cycle, then undertake a comprehensive
course of action.
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