Oh wow, a licensed attorney dropping the “U.S. gave Saddam the chemical weapons” greatest-hits meme like it’s fresh evidence in court.
— John “TIG” Tiegen (@TigTiegen) March 17, 2026
Counselor, you bill clients for actual proof, right? So maybe glance at the declassified docs before you hit send:
Here’s the accurate history… https://t.co/MRHcBfk7eY
Thanks to John TIG Tiegen,
Oh wow, a licensed attorney dropping the “U.S. gave Saddam the chemical weapons” greatest-hits meme like it’s fresh evidence in court.
Counselor, you bill clients for actual proof, right? So maybe glance at the declassified docs before you hit send: Here’s the accurate history (from declassified U.S. documents): • Yes, the U.S. tilted toward Iraq after Iran’s 1979 hostage crisis and revolution. Reagan removed Iraq from the terrorism sponsors list, shared satellite photos of Iranian troop positions, provided limited battlefield intelligence, and offered some economic/diplomatic help. The goal was to contain revolutionary Iran and protect Gulf oil routes. Declassified CIA files (released 2013) confirm officials knew Iraq was using chemical weapons and continued the tilt anyway. • No, the U.S. did not supply chemical weapons. Iraq built its entire chemical weapons program primarily with European suppliers German companies (Karl Kolb and others) were the main source, along with firms from the Netherlands, Austria, France, and Egypt. This is documented in 1990s U.N. inspections, German court records, and the National Security Archive’s “Shaking Hands with Saddam” collection. A few U.S. companies sold commercial pesticide precursors (dual-use) under export licenses, but the State Department began blocking or restricting them once Iraq’s chemical attacks were confirmed in 1983–84. The U.S. never provided chemical agents, munitions, or delivery systems. • “Hundreds of thousands killed” is inflated. Iraq did use mustard gas, tabun, and sarin against Iranian human-wave attacks. Iranian and U.N. estimates put total chemical-weapons casualties (dead + injured) at roughly 50,000–100,000 over the 8-year war. Direct deaths from CW were in the low tens of thousands (often 2–5% fatality rate per attack). The war’s overall death toll (~500,000–1 million combined) was overwhelmingly from conventional weapons. U.S. policy in the 1980s was cynical realpolitik many historians (and even some Reagan officials later) criticize it as morally questionable. But claiming America “aided Iraq with chemical weapons” to mass-murder Iranians turns intelligence sharing into a false conspiracy. You skipped the part where facts > vibes, apparently. As a lawyer you should know better than to repeat TikTok history with the confidence of a guy who just passed the bar on vibes alone.
Next time bring exhibits, not memes. The court of public opinion still has standards.
(Real sources: National Security Archive, UN Iran-Iraq War reports, 2013 CIA declass.)