Monkey Catskin wrote:
Michael Wilson wrote that Reuters wrote:
Quoting U.S. officials and U.N. diplomats, the newspaper said that Iraqi scientists and defense officials are using Western-made computers to transfer data from bulky papers to small disks that can be easily dispersed, making the information difficult for inspectors to track.
This is an interesting development because it also makes it hard for the Iraqi government to track what is going on, too. The government of Iraq has been aware of the dangers of computers for many years. At one time they were tightly controlled. Even typewriters were controlled. The government had writing samples of each one.
Now, apparently, this policy is loosening. This suggests that U.S. policy of the last 8 years has managed to achieve what Saddam Hussein could not - it has made the Hussein regime a genuinely popular government.
I told the Pentagon that they could avoid the Iraqui citizens misunderstanding our intentions by stenciling "We're from the US government, and we're here to help you!" on the sides of the missles and bombs. But nnooooo...that would make too much sense, wouldn't it?
Still, it can't be universally popular. How many cypherpunks live in Iraq?
At least one... SaddaMonger