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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

USIS Washington File

10 November 1998

ADD WHITE HOUSE REPORT, NOVEMBER 10, 1998

(Iraq, Dalai Lama, Central America) (890)
White House Press Secretary Joe Lockhart answered reporters' questions
at morning and afternoon sessions.
CLINTON MEETS 90 MINUTES ON IRAQ WITH FOREIGN POLICY TEAM
President Clinton discussed Iraq for 90 minutes with his principal
foreign policy advisors the morning of November 10.
The participants included Secretary of State Albright, National
Security Advisor Berger, Secretary of Defense Cohen and Joint Chiefs
of Staff Chairman General Shelton, as well as senior military
intelligence and logistics personnel, Lockhart said.
"They had a broad discussion of the options...both diplomatic and
military that remain on the table" regarding Iraq, he said. "My
understanding is that this is a process that is ongoing and that no
decisions have been made."
Lockhart said it was "a broader discussion" than what he had told the
press at the morning session with reporters in his office, when he
thought the meeting included predominately a discussion of military
options. He only learned later, he said, that Secretary of State
Albright was at that meeting.
"Our objective and preference is that Saddam Hussein reverse course
and this can be done in a peaceful way and allow UNSCOM to resume
their aggressive monitoring regime in order to pursue our policy of
limiting his ability to reconstitute his weapons and threaten his
neighbors," Lockhart said.
Saddam Hussein needs to understand that the international community,
as UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has said, sees Saddam Hussein's
decision not to permit the UNSCOM weapons inspectors to continue their
work in Iraq as a flagrant violation of UN Security Council
resolutions.
President Clinton November 10 phoned Britain's Prime Minister Tony
Blair and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss Iraq,
Lockhart said.
The President is consulting "with our allies on a situation that
obviously is of great importance to the international community," the
Press Secretary said, indicating that the President might make more
such calls before the day is out.
"This is not a situation where we are looking for a negotiation," the
Press Secretary said in answer to a question. "There is nothing to
negotiate."
Lockhart said he will not discuss "what options the President may
choose except to say that all of them remain on the table. I am not
going to get into a timeline," he said, "except to say that we have
made clear that our policy is to limit and reduce the ability of
Saddam Hussein and Iraq to reconstitute their weapons of mass
destruction, and to deliver those weapons of mass destruction, and to
threaten its neighbors.
"This is not an abstract threat," he said. "Iraq is a country that has
invaded Kuwait, launched Scud missiles at its neighbors, used chemical
and biological weapons both on its neighbors and its own people so
this threat is real."
The United States believes that the most effective way to pursue its
policy with regard to Iraq "is through an aggressive and intrusive
UNSCOM regime as well as sanctions" against Iraq, Lockhart said.
"We will look at options and keep them on the table. That allows us to
pursue our policy," he said.
Lockhart said "we are watching things around the world, particularly
in Iraq, closely, but at this point the President is scheduled to take
the trip" to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Malaysia
later this week.
The President is scheduled to leave November 14 for the 10-day trip
that also includes stops in Japan, South Korea and Guam.
...........
 




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