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Military

26 November 2001

Transcript: White House Press Briefing, November 26, 2001

(President's daily schedule, President's remarks on terrorism, Yemen,
economic stimulus package, Nunn-Lugar threats, Vice President Cheney,
Iraq/anthrax, human cloning, Osama bin Laden location, Iraq/sanctions,
post-Taliban government)(6610)
White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer briefed:
Following is the White House transcript:
(begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
November 26, 2001
PRESS BRIEFING BY ARI FLEISCHER
The James S. Brady Briefing Room
12:50 P.M. EST
TOPIC
-- President's daily schedule
-- President's remarks on terrorism
-- Yemen
-- Economic stimulus package
-- Nunn-Lugar
-- Threats
-- Vice President Cheney
-- Iraq/anthrax
-- Human cloning
-- Osama bin Laden location
-- Iraq sanctions
-- Post-Taliban government
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
November 26, 2001
PRESS BRIEFING BY ARI FLEISCHER
MR. FLEISCHER: Good afternoon. I have brief remarks to summarize the
President's day, and then I'll be happy to take questions.
This morning the President had his usual round of intelligence
briefings from the Central Intelligence Agency, as well as the FBI.
Then he convened a meeting of his National Security Council to discuss
the latest developments in the war. And then he met in the Rose Garden
with the two American humanitarian workers who were freed from
Afghanistan, who were imprisoned for the crime of preaching
Christianity. The President was very pleased to have that meeting, as
you saw in the Rose Garden.
And that is it in the President's public schedule for the day and I'm
happy to take your questions. Ron Fournier.
Q: Can you tell me specifically when and where the President included
in his definition of terrorist-aiding states any country that produces
weapons of mass destruction that can be used by terrorists?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I think what the President was referring to is
the obvious and well-known fact that Iraq and North Korea are already
listed on the State Department list of nations that sponsor terrorism,
state sponsors of terrorism. So that's a well known existing
definition.
As you remember, Ron, from the campaign, the President repeatedly
referred to the issues of proliferation in North Korea. It's one of
the reasons the President believes in a missile defense, because of
the potential of North Korea to acquire weapons of mass destruction
and potentially use them.
He has had similar words about Iraq. So I think when you heard the
President saying his remarks in the Rose Garden, that he's always had
that definition as far as he's concerned, it's because of the
statements he's made previously.
Q: And what he's saying is clearly that if these -- Iraq, North Korea
and the other, what, five or six countries that are producing weapons
of mass destruction that are being used by terrorists, if they don't
stop they will be considered by the United States equal to terrorists
and face the same consequences?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think go back to the President's words. He said it
for a reason. The President said, "If they develop weapons of mass
destruction that will be used to terrorize nations, they will be held
accountable." That's how the President said it. And then he continued,
"So part of the war on terror is to deny terrorists weapons-getting --
I mean, weapons to be used for means of terror getting into the hands
of nations that will use them." Which is perfectly consistent with
what you've always heard the President say about nations that use
them, the concern that al Qaeda or another organization will seek to
acquire nuclear weapons from Iraq, from a North Korea. That's another
way they would use nuclear weapons if they were to give them to
another nation or an entity, a terrorist group like al Qaeda.
Q: But he's never used this -- you can't find a time where he's used
this language, this formulation before?
MR. FLEISCHER: As far as the war on terror? Well, again, I think it's
stating the obvious --
Q: As far as linking the nations that produce weapons of mass
destruction. Has he ever used this language before?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, again, he's repeatedly talked about terrorists --
nations that sponsor terrorism, that's why they're called terrorist
nations, nations that sponsor terrorism by the State Department.
Q: He hasn't linked them to sponsoring 00 to weapons of mass
destruction.
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, let me bring you back again to things the
President said previous to today. Take a look back on March 7th, when
President Kim of South Korea was here, and the President's public
remarks after that meeting. The President said, "I am concerned about
the fact that the North Koreans are shipping weapons around the world,
and any agreement that would convince them not to do so would be
beneficial. But we want to make sure that their ability to develop and
spread weapons of mass destruction was, in fact, stopped."
So he's talked about it in that context. In addition, during the
campaign, in referring to the government of North Korea, he referred
to the tyrants who are doing everything they can to be a 21st century
menace.
Q: But this is a different context. He's linking them -- he is saying
today that they are akin to terrorists and will suffer the same fate
as terrorists --
MR. FLEISCHER: And the reason I think why the President said to you
that, when you asked the question, have I expanded the definition,
"I've always had that definition, as far as I'm concerned." It's
because of the language I just read to you. And the President, when he
says that they're tyrants, when he says our concern is that they not
proliferate and we're going to take every action we need to stop them
from proliferating, and called for the inspectors to be returned in
Iraq, that's in perfect consistency with what the President was
saying. I think that's why you heard the President say what he said
today.
Q: And to focus on Iraq for a minute, which it seems where the
President is focused. He has said now a couple of times over the past
few days that Saddam Hussein must allow U.N. inspectors back in to
make sure that there is no development of weapons of mass destruction.
Is that a hard demand by this administration? Should this be seen as
the next phase in the war on terrorism? And what specifically are the
consequences for Saddam's --
MR. FLEISCHER: Okay. Well, one, I think that the President's focus is
on Afghanistan. The President has been focused on phase one,
destroying the al Qaeda and their ability to engage in terrorism;
destroying the Taliban and those who harbor terrorists. And in
response to some questions the President got about Iraq, he's answered
as he did today when he was asked just what you said, what are the
consequences. And the President has said, "that's up for -- he'll find
out," referring to Saddam Hussein.
So the President has left it in an undefined way, and I think that's
the appropriate place to leave it.
Q: If I could just follow-up. In this question on what ought to be
done with Iraq, has the administration essentially settled on an
ultimatum, allow weapons inspectors back in or face the consequences?
MR. FLEISCHER: Terry, that's a reiteration of longstanding American
policy that the inspectors need to be allowed back into Iraq.
Q: Is there any additional oomph in it? Is this administration going
to put teeth in it? It has been a long time.
MR. FLEISCHER: Again, I refer you back to what the President said
today in the Rose Garden, and he said that's for him to find out,
referring to Iraq's leader, Saddam Hussein.
Helen.
Q: Does the President feel the United States has the right to bomb or
invade any country harboring terrorists? Is he going to invade Spain?
MR. FLEISCHER: Helen, the President, as I mentioned, is focused on
phase one --
Q: Eight suspected terrorists  -- 
MR. FLEISCHER: The President is focused on phase one of the war
against terrorism. But the President has made it plain to the American
people that this a long-term war.
Q: Answer the question. What right do we have to invade any country?
MR. FLEISCHER: I'm not aware that we are invading Spain.
Q: Ari, he also said he may be focused on phase one, but that this is
just the beginning. And what does that do to the coalition? The German
Foreign Minister said last week that Europe would not support
expanding the war on terror to Iraq. So the President, in a sense, is
out there alone on this a little bit.
MR. FLEISCHER: No, it's nothing new. This is a reiteration of what you
heard the President say in his speech to the Congress, when the
President talked about either you're with the terrorists or you're
not. So it's a message that the President has consistently said from
day one, and properly so. There can be no good terrorists or bad
terrorists. And the war on terrorism is something the President is
focused on long-term. As he said, this is an opportunity for this
generation to do something for our next generation, so our children
and grandchildren don't have to grow up in an atmosphere of fear.
Q: But is he trying to prepare the allies for this, who clearly aren't
supporting you, at least at this point?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I think his words speak for themselves. And I
think the allies share a willingness to make certain that terrorism is
not able to do what it has been able to do in the last -- for the last
generation.
Q: You mentioned the speech to Congress, which was, for most
Americans, the most important enunciation of the goals of this
campaign against terror. And in that speech, the President did not, in
any way, link developing weapons of mass destruction to a legitimate
target in the war on terrorism. Today he did so. And though there were
previous statements in the campaign and other venues, they do not
exist within the same context we're dealing with now, where you have a
coalition and an active U.S. military campaign, plus planning on the
next phases. Isn't it not, today, a significant shift in
administration policy in the context of war on global terrorism, to
add weapons of mass destruction to the list of legitimate targets?
MR. FLEISCHER: That's not what the President said. The President said
that they should be held accountable, which he has said all along. And
I think that it would be a shift in policy if a President were to drop
a long-standing, existing policy that nations that sponsor terrorists
are, by definition, on the State Department list of nations that
sponsor terrorism. So the President again stated what is already
known. If you're suggesting that the President should no longer state
things that are known because they're in a different context, that
would be a change. The President reiterated the long-standing American
views about North Korea and about Iraq.
And on Campbell's question, also, I want to remind you that when the
President talks about the war, he's always talked about a multi-front
war, that includes financial actions against terrorist nations,
terrorist activities, arrest of people who are involved in terrorist
activities. Those are the various fronts that the President has always
discussed. And the President said they will be held accountable. The
President did not define what that means. And the President did so
deliberately.
So I want to just urge you, as you take a look at what the President
said, to remember that the coalition has been taking actions against
terrorists, broadly defined and shoulder-to-shoulder with the United
States on a host of activities not only military, but dealing with
financial, dealing with political, dealing with diplomatic, dealing
with the detention and the arrests of those who engage in terrorism.
Q: Ari, beyond the exact words that the President used, it did seem
like today there was a significant shift in tone. The administration,
since September 11th, has on several occasions said flatly, we have
not linked Iraq with this, with the bombing, we have not linked Iraq
with anthrax. There had been a consistent message from the
administration to downplay the notion that Iraq was somehow linked
with the terrorist attacks in America and, thus, would have invited
some kind of attack by us or response from us.
His comments today, though, seem to shift that tone and open the door
to the fact that Iraq has now joined the list of countries that could
be part of phase two. Is that what he intended to do?
MR. FLEISCHER: Again, the President reiterated what has always been
said about the State Department list of nations that sponsor
terrorism. In response to a question, he answered the question. And I
think that's something you've seen him do repeatedly.
Q: Ari, the policy may, indeed, be the same. But it's a question of
the emphasis. And all of us in this room today who were in the Rose
Garden discerned an emphasis on Iraq which has not been present in his
past public speeches. And we take it from that that there is a shift
in his emphasis.
MR. FLEISCHER: I would urge you to understand that this is a
reiteration of what he has previously said about Iraq, and that Saddam
Hussein will just have to figure out exactly what that means. And
that's why the President said, he'll find out.
Q: Will the President try to get other world leaders to get back
together and get on a weapons inspection regime in Iraq? In other
words, is he going to try to rally the coalition to focus on weapons
inspection in Iraq?
MR. FLEISCHER: The United Nations has made that plain, that Iraq, as
part of their agreement that they entered into after the Gulf War,
said they would allow weapons inspectors into Iraq. Iraq unilaterally
threw them out, in violation of that agreement. So that's, again, a
reiteration of a long-standing American policy.
Q: But, Ari, if I could try one more approach on this. I think the
question is whether this is a war aim. I don't think the President has
specifically listed this as a war aim in the past, to prevent Iraq
from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. Is it now a war aim?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, again, let me refer you to the President's words
that have sparked the conversation, because I think you have to look
at what the President said. And he said, "If they develop weapons of
mass destruction that will be used to terrorize nations, they will be
held accountable." I think you're inferring what that means to unusual
lengths. The President said they'll be held accountable. He didn't
define what the accountability would mean. Iraq and North Korea have
long been listed as nations that sponsor terrorism, and that's what
the President said. Saddam Hussein will have to figure it out.
Q: Ari, but the answer to that question came  -- 
Q: But is it a war aim  -- 
MR. FLEISCHER: The President answered the question today by saying,
he'll find out.
Major.
Q: His answer came -- when I asked him about Iraq specifically, and
referred specifically to his words at Fort Campbell, across the world
and across the years, he brought up weapons of mass destruction. In
his answer to my question about the next phase of the war, he said
nations who not only harbor, who give safe haven to terrorists, but
also develop weapons of mass destruction. He added that qualifier,
weapons of mass destruction, to a specific question about Iraq. It
seems to all of us here that that is a new dimension, a new war aim, a
shift in policy bringing that definition into a legitimate war target,
weapons of mass destruction, where it didn't occur before.
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I can only refer you back to the President's
words after the President -- toward the very end of the same remarks
that you heard, he asked the rhetorical question, have I expanded the
definition; "I've always had that definition, as far as I'm
concerned."
Jim.
Q: Yes. Let me try to make a couple of distinctions here. If, for
instance, someone used weapons of mass destruction against a civilian
population, obviously, that would be an act of terrorism.
MR. FLEISCHER: Is there a question?
Q: Yes. And that would obviously be included in what the President is
talking about -- if someone were to use anthrax or some other sort of
weapon, any weapon of mass destruction, that would obviously be an act
of terrorism in the President's view.
MR. FLEISCHER: That's correct.
Q: Is holding weapons of mass destruction an act of terrorism?
MR. FLEISCHER: Again, the President said, "So part of the war on
terror is to deny terrorists weapons getting -- I mean, weapons to be
used for means of terror getting in the hands of nations that will use
them." So the President addressed this in the context of nations that
will use them.
Q: So he's talking about the use of weapons of mass destruction  -- 
MR. FLEISCHER: That's precisely what he said.
Q: -- not the development or the holding of weapons of mass
destruction?
MR. FLEISCHER: That's correct. Because there are many nations that
hold weapons of mass destruction. The President was referring to those
nations that are listed on the State Department nations that sponsor
terrorism that would use them, which I think is something that should
be self-evident to everybody in this room. What American President
would not speak sternly about any nation that is listed as a nation
that sponsors terrorism from using weapons of mass destruction? Does
anybody think that any nation that is a terrorist sponsor that would
use weapons of mass destruction would not be held accountable? Of
course they will be. That's an existing American policy, always has
been, and under President Bush it always will be.
Dick.
Q: One other aspect, if I may, Ari  -- 
MR. FLEISCHER: Okay, Jim.
Q: Just one other aspect on that. What about development of weapons of
mass destruction and then giving them to terrorists or nations that
are prepared to use them?
MR. FLEISCHER: That is a use of weapons to give to terrorists. That is
exactly what the President warned about two or three weeks ago when he
referred to efforts by al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden to acquire weapons
of mass destruction.
Dick.
Q: Getting back to the emphasis, it really did seem to most of us
today that there was a purposeful and increased emphasis on the
subject of Iraq in a way that we haven't seen in recent days or weeks.
So, put it this way, is Iraq's alleged progress in developing either
biological or nuclear weapons, has that been over the past several
months an increasing cause of concern for the President and his
advisors?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think we've just about exhausted this. I understand
why you're asking these questions, and it's something that I've talked
to the President about since he made the comments. And I'd just refer
you back, again, to what the President said about Iraq, about North
Korea, prior to September 11th. It's a reaffirmation, a restatement of
a long-standing American policy. And I think it should be readily
understood that every American President has spoken out strongly about
Iraq or North Korea, and any nation that would use nuclear weapons,
especially those nations that are state sponsors of terrorism,
regardless of whether September 11th took place or not. But Saddam
Hussein can figure out the rest of it if he wants.
Q: Is the President trying to lay the groundwork for the sanctions to
be --
MR. FLEISCHER: Peter.
Q: Ari, you've got the President of Yemen coming in to meet with
President Bush tomorrow. Two questions. What's the assessment of their
cooperation in the current war, and the investigation of the Cole?
And, secondly, they are now saying that the suspects in the bombing of
the Cole, that their trial has been postponed at the request of the
U.S., because the U.S. wants to expand the investigation. Is that an
accurate assessment?
MR. FLEISCHER: Let me come back to you on that this afternoon, and let
me post that. I want to take a look at some information on Yemen
before I do that.
Q: All right. But what about the first question, just the assessment
of their cooperation?
MR. FLEISCHER: On both questions. I'll post both of those. Q Ari, just
one last one on Iraq. When the President left open how we might
respond, a lot of us are kind of looking at it as from the military
perspective. But is the President trying to lay the groundwork for
debate over the sanctions with Iraq?
MR. FLEISCHER: No, again, go back to what the President had said
previously. I recall him giving a very similar answer when he said,
"That's up for -- he'll find out." The President said something very
similar about Iraq during one of the presidential debates -- I think
it was during the Republican primary in New Hampshire. The President
gave almost the exact same answer.
So what you heard today in the Rose Garden about Iraq and North Korea
is what you've heard from this President repeatedly, for two years
now, from the campaign forward, about the manner in which he would
treat Iraq or North Korea, or any nation that's a terrorist sponsor --
state sponsor of terrorism, if they were to use, as he put it, use
nuclear weapons. There is a long body of quotes from the President
prior to November -- September 11th, very similar.
Q: But Ari, has he set up some sort of time limit? Because in the
Newsweek interview, they ask him about Iraq, and he says they should
let state inspectors in. And then they come back, and they say, have
you set some sort of time limit? And he seems to imply, well, that he
has gotten a message to Hussein, there is a time limit. Has he? How
did that message get through, and what is that time limit? And then,
what's the action if it's not met?
MR. FLEISCHER: No, I do not read any implied time limit in that story.
It's a longstanding American demand. And it's been something that Iraq
agreed to. That was one of the conditions that Iraq agreed to.
Q: Ari, what's behind the decision to use language like, "he'll find
out"? Why be intentionally ambiguous?
MR. FLEISCHER: It's a reiteration of something he's been saying for
years.
Q: But what's behind it?
Q: On the economic stimulus package, does the President support a
provision which requires that money made from tax reductions be
funneled back into investments in this country, rather than supporting
factories overseas, for example?
MR. FLEISCHER: Can you be more specific, when you say, not supporting
factories overseas?
Q: Is there a "buy America first" provision in the economic stimulus
package, or should there be one?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, as you know, the way the trade works, there are
so many businesses that are headquartered in America, that have
production in America and other nations; and, conversely, there are
many businesses such as BMW, that's headquartered in Germany, that has
plants in South Carolina, for example, that we are a very
interdependent world of business.
And the President believes that the best way to promote the economy
and to stimulate the economy so it creates jobs is through a package
that is now pending in the Senate, that would cut taxes for middle
income Americans, for people who have had their taxes cut that are
supposed to go into effect on January 1st of this coming year, and
next year, and the year beyond that, and accelerating those tax cuts,
providing tax cuts for low-income workers, as well as extending
unemployment insurance, and as well as providing a package of national
emergency grants to get health benefits to people who have lost their
jobs.
The President believes that's the package that can help create jobs,
along with business expensing and repeal of the corporate alternative
minimum tax. That's the package the President supports.
Q: But there's no guarantee that tax cuts will actually be used to
stimulate the economy, is there?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, the President believes tax cuts do stimulate the
economy. He believes that's the way it works. And I think there's no
question, when you take a look at the economic data that had the
existing tax cut that was passed by the Congress, signed by the
President last spring, not gone into effect, the recession would be
deeper, the recession would probably be longer. The tax cut has helped
to buffer the impact of that recession.
And it's important, in the President's opinion, for the Senate to take
action now, in the wake of September 11th, because the economy needs
another jolt.
Q: Why did the President capitulate today on his deadline for the
economic stimulus plan, extending it from the end of November to
Christmas? Is that not a concession that Congress won't get it done?
And if it's not until Christmas, what part of the -- when are we going
to stimulate this economy?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think what you're seeing from the President is a good
faith effort to work with the Senate. The President would still like
the Senate to finish their business and get that to him so he can sign
it into law.
Every day the Senate waits is another day that is made more difficult
for the unemployed worker. It's another day that's made for difficult
for a business that wants to be able to keep its work force without
laying off workers. The longer the Senate waits, the more difficult it
will be for the economy to come back. And that's the message the
President was giving.
Clearly, if the Senate could get this done in November, the President
would be pleased and will work with the Senate so he can sign it in
November. It may not be too late. But, realistically, will the Senate
do it? They haven't so far. Perhaps they will.
Q: Didn't he give them the green light to spend an extra month
debating this by saying, by Christmas?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, there's nothing scheduled for this week, and this
is the last week of November. So the President will have a meeting
with the congressional leaders this week. He'll again remind them of
the need to get the stimulus done.
Clearly, if they were to leave without getting it done, most of the
private sector forecasts, which assume that there will be growth next
year, will change the amount of growth, they will predict less growth
because the Senate will have failed to act. Most of the private sector
forecasters have baked into their estimates the view that the amount
of growth will depend on whether or not Congress this year passes a
stimulus.
And let me give you some specifics on that, as well. Macroeconomic
Advisors assumed on October 15th -- they're one of the leading private
sector forecasters -- that there would be a $60 billion stimulus
package for 2002. And they're 2002 growth rate is 4.1 percent. They've
built that into their estimates. Another group that has also done that
is J.P. Morgan. They've assumed a $75 billion stimulus in their report
of growth, and they've projected 2.6 percent growth.
So there's a variety of different growth forecast for 2002, but all
those private sector forecasters have assumed Congress will pass a
stimulus that the President will be able to sign. Failure to pass a
stimulus means less growth next year.
Q: On the economic stimulus, given the President wants this bill sent
to conference, is he considering embracing or endorsing the centrist
coalition as the best vehicle to getting it to conference? Or does he
disagree with every element in it?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President is open-minded about the vehicle. The
President is going to continue to work with the various senators. And
I think he recognizes that there are some senators that are simply too
liberal who will not be interested in passing a stimulus that relies
on tax cuts.
But there is another group of Democrats who are more willing to pass a
stimulus that provides tax cuts. And the President sees putting
together a coalition with whoever is willing to vote for a stimulus
that provides incentives based on tax cuts, not more spending. Because
the President has already proposed extending unemployment insurance,
which he thinks is terribly important and Congress needs to do that.
The President thinks it's terribly important for people to get health
care coverage as a result of the national emergency grants that he's
proposed.
But as important as that is, the President also knows the American
people want more than unemployment checks, they want paychecks. And
that's the President's focus.
Q: A week ago last Sunday, Condi Rice said that the Nunn-Lugar program
had not been -- was not going to be cut under the administration's
budget proposal. But your own documents show a $98-million cut from
2001 to 2002 for the Department of Energy portion of that program. How
does that square with what the National Security Advisor said?
MR. FLEISCHER: Actually, it depends on the component you look at, at
it. But, broadly, under the Clinton administration, DOD requested less
money in those programs than it did in fiscal year 2001 because of
spending requirements foreseen for that year. And the Bush
administration took the same position in the budget it submitted to
Congress, so it matched that level of funding.
There was a separate item under the Department of Energy that a cut
was taken before the Bush administration review of the
nonproliferation programs with Russia had been put into effect. But
the administration is committed to Nunn-Lugar. The President has long
believed that working cooperatively with Russia to help them to
dismantle their nuclear weapons is a very effective means of fighting
against proliferation around the world, and will continue in that
vein.
Q: Ari, the President in the Rose Garden said that, we're entering
into a dangerous time. Clearly, for the troops on the ground in
Afghanistan, that's true. Was he also referring to the home front?
Because there have been warnings to the natural gas industry, for
instance, that if Osama bin Laden is captured or killed, there could
be attacks on natural gas facilities? Could you just elaborate on what
that warning is about?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, the President has always believed that we've
been, since September 11th, in a dangerous time here on the home
front. The President begins his days every morning with a review of
what's called the threat matrix, which are the analysts' understanding
of the threats that have been received in this country. And it's a
sobering way to begin a day. So the President has focused very
strongly through Governor Ridge on the homeland defense and the
efforts we need to take, and that's why security measures have been
increased throughout the country in a variety of industries.
But the President, specifically to answer your question, in his
remarks that he made was talking about the war in Afghanistan, because
he's talking there about cities may have fallen, but the mission has
not yet been achieved; the objective, which is to destroy al Qaeda's
ability to engage in terrorism, has not yet been finalized, and it
won't be, necessarily, for who knows how long. It could be years, as
the President has reminded everybody, until Osama bin Laden is brought
to justice, until his top lieutenants are also brought to justice.
Q: Ari, what's going on with the Vice President? Is he still in an
undisclosed location? The President was joking about it last week, but
this morning he sort of dismissed it like he's been here all along, "I
had breakfast with him."
MR. FLEISCHER: Yes. The Vice President met with the President this
morning. He was here this morning after breakfast, so they spent some
time together this morning. The Vice President has been in a secure
location, as well, and as we've indicated, there are going to be days
when they're together -- the President said this -- there will be days
when they are not. They happened to be together today.
Q: But there's no change in this policy of trying to keep them
separate in the interest of having someone protected --
MR. FLEISCHER: No, that policy remains in effect. Throughout that
policy there have been times when they were together. And as the
President said -- I think he said this about a month or so ago --
there will be times when they're together and there will be times when
they're not. More often they have not been. Today the Vice President
was here this morning.
Q: Ari, you and Governor Ridge have said repeatedly in the past that
there's no evidence linking Iraq to the September 11th attacks or the
anthrax attacks. Is that still the case?
MR. FLEISCHER: That is correct, Ron. There is nothing that has been
brought to my attention by it, so nothing would change that from
anything I've heard recently.
Q: The President today said, cloning is morally wrong and bad public
policy. Does he plan to take any other steps, either by executive
order or by urging Congress to act, in view of what was revealed
yesterday?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, this is now a matter in the Congress' hands, and
the House has already acted. The House, earlier this year in an
overwhelmingly bipartisan vote of 265 to 162, banned the type of
cloning that took place in Massachusetts. And the President applauded
the House at the time, expressed his strong support for that
legislation.
The President, through stem cell research, sees great promise in
fighting diseases and curing diseases, without crossing the morally
hazardous line of cloning humans. And that's why the President
believes that we can unleash the great potential of science through
stem cell research without entering the dangerous area of human
cloning. And he calls on the Senate to pass the House legislation. It
was overwhelmingly bipartisan -- some 63 Democrats voted for it in the
House, both Independents voted for it in the House, so the President
hopes the Senate will similarly act.
Q: Does he think that doctors who engage in the kind of research that
these people in Massachusetts should -- should be disciplined, sent to
jail, what?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President thinks that the practice of cloning
should be made illegal.
Q: -- make it illegal if somebody does it, then the question is, what
do you do with the people who do it?
MR. FLEISCHER: I would refer you to what the penalty section was of
the House bill. I don't have the bill in front of me. But he has
supported the Weldon legislation.
Q: Iranian radio said that Osama bin Laden is in Pakistan. Do you
think the President still believes that he is in Afghanistan? And,
number two, international Red Cross is reporting that hundreds of
Pakistanis in Afghanistan fighting against the United States, and
thousands are still there. Do you think, according to the reports, the
President is surprised to know? And five air fighters were sent to
Afghanistan to defend them.
MR. FLEISCHER: One, I have not heard anything that would change what
Secretary Rumsfeld said last week about, we have no reason to believe
that he's left the country. Secretary Rumsfeld talked about how there
could be things in Afghanistan that are unknown, but he said that we
have no reason to believe that he has.
On the second question, you know, I think the President obviously
understands the situation on the ground in Afghanistan is made more
complicated by the presence of people who are not Afghani. They don't
only include Pakistanis, but they include many people from Arab
nations. Afghanistan is not an Arab nation, but much of its current
problems stem from the fact that Osama bin Laden, who is Saudi, came
into Afghanistan with other non-Afghans for the purpose of hijacking a
country and hijacking a religion so they could engage in worldwide
sponsorship of terrorism. So that's -- the President, of course, is
aware of that.
Q: The President this morning said that Americans need to be -- there
will be loss of life in Afghanistan. Is he preparing people for the
Marines going -- the Marines, those thousand Marines now --
MR. FLEISCHER: If you remember, the President also said that in his
speech to the Congress. The President warned the American people that
this would not be an antiseptic war, that there would be casualties in
the war, and he said that explicitly in that address. And the
President, as he said in the Rose Garden, also reminded people that
we've already lost lives in this war, the lives -- some 4,000 or so
people were lost in the destruction of the World Trade Center, the
brave people who were on board Flight 93, as well as all the
passengers of the airplanes that were hijacked, and one that hit the
Pentagon, the deaths at the Pentagon.
America has already had many casualties -- civilian, as well as, of
course -- military is always at risk. And the President was reminding
people that the risks remain, particularly at this time, to our
military.
Q: Ari, are we making any progress on a new sanctions regime against
Iraq?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President continues to hold out hope that the
sanctions regime against Iraq can be made less porous, that it can be
tightened up so that it can be a more focused series of sanctions.
That's something that, written, has spoken eloquently about, at the
United Nations, and the President remains hopeful that that will one
day become the case.
Q: If I can follow up on that, was this a topic of discussion in
Crawford with President Putin, since the Russians have been one of the
key obstacles here?
MR. FLEISCHER: The Iraq sanctions? I'll have to go back to take a
look.
Q: Ari, does the President believe there is any legitimate role for
any former member of the Taliban in a new Afghanistan government?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, a couple points on it. One, the future of the
government of Afghanistan will be up to the Afghani people. Having
said that, the President also wants to make certain that it is a
multi-ethnic front -- multi-ethnic group that governs Afghanistan,
that includes women. It's hard to imagine any moderate Taliban.
However, Afghanistan is a large country. There may be people who were
in Afghanistan who are not members of the Taliban, in an active sense.
But that's something that will be sorted through in the dialogue that
begins Tuesday in Germany. And that's the first step in a long process
to help determine what the government of Afghanistan will look like.
But, again, it fundamentally remains an issue for the Afghani people.
And it's hard to imagine that they want any of the Taliban who
governed them having any positions of authority, if they had authority
before.
THE PRESS: Thank you.
MR. FLEISCHER: Thank you.
(end transcript)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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