The report of the chief UN weapons inspector Dr Hans Blix was not so much the "mixed bag" he had promised as the sandbagging of Iraq.
He concluded: "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance - not even today - of the disarmament which was demanded of it and which it needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world and to live in peace."
"
Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance - not even today - of the disarmament which was demanded of it and which it needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world and to live in peace
"
Dr Hans Blix
What he said enabled the United States to increase the intensity of its diplomatic assault on Iraq, which might soon become a physical assault.
This was the key test - whether the United States would moderate its language. It did not. It has plenty of ammunition from Iraq's "missing munitions".
The US Secretary of State Colin Powell's response was ominous: "Iraq's refusal to disarm ... still threatens international peace and security." He added that there was "not much more time".
Note that Dr Blix's words do not mean that we are at the end of the road.
They suggest that Iraq still has time to come to the "genuine acceptance" he wants.
But they do imply that we are near the end of the road.
No nuclear evidence
The senior nuclear inspector Dr Mohamed ElBaradei was more positive.
He said that there was no evidence that Iraq has revived its nuclear weapons programme and that the inspectors' work "should be allowed to run its natural course" over the next months.
He is unlikely to get his months. It was Dr Blix to whom the Americans were listening.
The American UN Ambassador John Negroponte pointed the way to the marshalling of Security Council votes for a second resolution authorising force.
He said: "In the days ahead we believe that the council and its member governments must face their responsibilities."
The use of the word "days" was not a casual one.
Next report
On 14 February it is likely that Dr Blix will report again. If that report, too, is negative, the moment of decision will not be far off.
The United States will press for an attack, if possible with the approval of the Security Council, if necessary alone. March will then be the most likely month for war.
"
In the days ahead we believe that the council and its member governments must face their responsibilities
"
John Negroponte,
US ambassador
The British attitude is only a bit more reticent than that of the Americans.
The British Ambassador Sir Jeremy Greenstock described the Blix report as a "catalogue of unanswered questions". If answers are not forthcoming soon, the British response, too, will be harsh.
The problem for the Iraqi Government and for those governments opposing war (and they are many, led by France, Russia, China and Germany on the Security Council) is that there was evidence against Iraq in Dr Blix's report, even though there were mitigating factors as well.
And for the United States, the evidence produced was evidence enough.
Asked about whether Iraq is co-operating, the White House has said that "if the answer is a partial yes, the answer is no".
Evidence against
The evidence against included:
Evidence in favour
Against that, the reports revealed:
Is the glass half full or half empty?
Secretary Powell said that President Bush would be consulting with other leaders in the days ahead. They will be dangerous days.