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Notes -
That is very good question, that depends on how you define "success". Cheney was successful in the sense that he was able to ensure that his preferred policies were implemented and would become the default policies of the United States Government for close to 30 years. At the same time, the outcome of this success was the destruction of Cheney's faction within the Republican party.
They didn't lie. The Saddam Hussein's government was in fact producing chemical and biological weapons. They even tried to use them in the opening phases of the invasion, but the casualties were almost entirely on the Iraqi side as coalition forces were universally vaccinated against Anthrax and issued protective equipment while the Iraqis were not. Meanwhile, the Iraqis had been working very hard to convince everyone else in the region that they had some sort of nuclear capability mostly as a means of keeping up with their chief rival Iran. While we now know those claims were false, I do not think it is fair to fault anyone for taking those claims seriously at the time.
As for the rest, time will tell.
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