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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

USIS Washington File

11 January 1999

TEXT: BUTLER'S SPEECH AT CARNEGIE NON-PROLIFERATION CONF., JANUARY 11

(UNSCOM chief says Iraq has raised grave challenges to UNSC) (1730)
Washington -- Following is the text of remarks, as prepared, by
Richard Butler, Chairman of UNSCOM (United Nations Special Commission)
January 11 at the 7th Annual Carnegie International Non-Proliferation
Conference:
(Begin text)
Speech by Richard Butler, UNSCOM
Delivered at the
7th Annual Carnegie International Non-Proliferation Conference January
11, 1999 Washington, DC
Remarks as prepared
Because only a short time is available in which to deal with an
important and complex subject, but also because I am aware that this
room is filled with non-proliferation experts and persons with an
already deeply formed knowledge of the case of Iraq, I will go
directly to the main points.
First, following Iraq's expulsion from Kuwait, it became clear that
the Saddam Hussein government had created a range and quality of
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) that was truly alarming. Iraq had
also acquired a very considerable long-range missile force to deliver
those weapons. There was also concern about Iraq's nuclear weapons
program, which through the International Atomic Energy Agency, we now
know was advanced. It was for these reasons that the Security Council
imposed very heavy, very strict requirements upon Iraq for the
destruction, removal or rendering harmless of those weapons, and all
of that to be done under international supervision. Those obligations
were backed up by heavy sanctions.
The actions that were taken to try to ensure the fulfillment of Iraq's
obligations included the establishment of a unique organization and
set of mechanisms; namely, UNSCOM.
It was envisaged that UNSCOM's job in the disarmament of Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction would take a relatively short time,
possibly as little as a year. It has taken eight years, and the job is
still not completely finished.
The reason for this distressing lag is that Iraq never kept its side
of the bargain by: not making honest disclosure statements of its
prohibited weapons and weapons capability; unilaterally destroying
weapons in order to ensure that the Commission would never know the
full nature and scope of what it had held and this, under
circumstances where the law required that all destruction be conducted
under international supervision; and, through the pursuit of an active
policy and practice of concealing weapons and proscribed components
from the Commission.
Secondly, in addition to the envisaged disarmament of Iraq, the
Security Council decided that a system of ongoing monitoring and
verification should be established to seek to ensure that Iraq did not
reconstitute its prohibited weapons in the future. The first version
of that system has been established and, in fact, been in operation
since 1994. It is widely recognized, however, that the monitoring
system will need further, and perhaps substantial development when it
is decided by the Security Council that the disarmament phase has
concluded, and, as a consequence, certain, if not all, of the
sanctions are lifted, and thus Iraq's economic and financial capacity,
including, by definition, the capacity to acquire dual-use materials
which might be diverted for the production of weapons of mass
destruction capability, has increased.
Thirdly, the case of Iraq has two aspects, both of which are
important, but I suggest, the second of which should be of particular
concern to a conference such as this one, a conference of persons
devoted to the concept of the non-proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction.
The first aspect is what I would call the intrinsic one; namely, the
need to deal with that array of weapons created and obtained by Iraq,
as an intrinsic case of physical disarmament. It has long been held to
be true that this is, in and of itself, important, especially given
the past behavior of Iraq with respect to its use of the weapons it
has had at its disposal but, of course, also because of the particular
characteristics of the region in which Iraq is situated.
The second aspect is that of Iraq as a wider test case of the ability
of the international community to maintain the non-proliferation
regimes. It has been suggested frequently that were the intrinsic case
of Iraq to be lost, something of deeper and wider importance would
also be lost, namely, the faith of States in many parts of the world
in the non-proliferation regimes themselves. On the whole, I must say
I share that view.
Let us look briefly at what is the inner nature of the
non-proliferation regimes.
I would argue that the concept and the treaties themselves have three
aspects: a moral commitment; a political decision; a system of
verification and common assurance.
The moral commitment, put at its simplest, is the view or value
judgment to the effect that the weapons involved are inadmissible.
Such commitment can be seen in the three main treaties; the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, the Chemical Weapons Convention, and the
Biological Weapons Convention. Each of these asserts, elementally,
that no one should have, or seek to acquire, the weapons involved.
Now, when Governments embrace that commitment, the pattern has been
that this is then followed by the second feature, namely political
commitment to give effect to what has been agreed upon at the moral
level. And typically, that political commitment is expressed in the
development of a Treaty or Convention and the decision to join it.
That latter decision is deeply influenced by the third feature, namely
the perception of States of whether or not adherence to the Treaty by
Treaty partners can be relied upon. The key way in which that
assurance is given is through a system of verification of compliance
with the terms of the Treaty and its obligations.
Now, no one should fantasize that verification can ever be 100 percent
effective, but I deeply believe that there is a discernible point of
intersection between a relatively high degree of credible
verification, expressed largely in technical terms, and a similarly
high degree of political confidence derived from that level of
verification. This point of intersection, the intersection of
objective fact and subjective political judgment, results in a climate
of confidence which then underpins the non-proliferation objective.
Simply put, as every day passes in which States see that their
neighbors are keeping their promise, they then recommit to keeping
their own. As every year passes, under circumstances such as this, the
original moral commitment and the behavioral implications flowing from
it, solidifies to the point where, as the Nuclear Non-proliferation
Treaty has largely demonstrated, it becomes unthinkable for most
States that they should take the extraordinary decision to back away
from the moral and political commitment and begin to acquire
prohibited weapons.
Now, this conceptual structure and, indeed, reality I have just
described, a reality that has grown in strength during the last 30
years, is most deeply threatened by what I would call the "worst
nightmare" of Treaty partners or potential Treaty partners -- that a
state will cheat from within.
The problem of States which remain outside the non-proliferation
system is well known and not small. But there is an obvious sense in
which cheating from within, that is behavior by States to the effect
that while they have joined a given Treaty, they in fact seek, on a
clandestine basis, to make the weapons prohibited by that Treaty, is
the larger problem. This is the "nightmare"; problem because it
threatens the whole non-proliferation concept and structure at the
most fundamental level.
Iraq is a party to NPT and BWC. Yet it has cheated on and/or sought to
cheat on both of them. Iraq has made "the nightmare problem" more than
theoretical.
Iraq's behavior in respect of its obligations, principally under
Security Council resolution 687, has also raised very grave challenges
to both the authority of the Security Council and to the credibility
of efforts to verify compliance with the non-proliferation regimes.
I will have little if anything to say about the first of these
challenges because, strictly speaking, that is beyond the scope of my
present mandate. The Council alone can address this issue.
But, with respect to the second concern, I will make these main
points.
First, UNSCOM developed ground-breaking means of inspection and
verification. These were needed because of the special nature of the
Iraq case. But their spin-off is that they have demonstrated that,
with a relatively modest organization and budget, much can be achieved
if the organization involved is endowed with the required technical
skills and flexibility of operation. These are facts and lessons which
should be valued in the context of work under the non-proliferation
regimes. In this context, it is important to note that UNSCOM's
verification and monitoring rights are far more extensive than those
of any current disarmament and verification agency. This has been and
remains important.
Secondly, Iraq's behavior has illustrated another point of irreducible
significance. In a world of sovereign States and, bear in mind that
all of the non-proliferation Treaties accept that the responsible
actor is the sovereign independent State, recalcitrance on the part of
any State, refusal to provide the modicum of cooperation required by
the Treaty regime, can be a major and possibly inseparable obstacle to
the achievement of common objectives.
You will have noticed that we are at present, yet again, in one of
those periods where Iraq is challenging the concept of cooperation on
the ground that it will not bring results, such as the lifting of
sanctions. This is a sadly planned stance. Cooperation is essential to
the conduct of UNSCOM's work and thus to the fulfillment of the
requirements of the Security Council including presumably any
sanctions decision.
Various solutions are being suggested for this problem. Work is under
way at very high levels, but it is not yet clear what solution will be
chosen, as the means of ending the present crisis. Your discussions at
this Conference could be helpful.
My hope and indeed belief is that the decisions that will be taken
will be consistent with the advancement of what is one of the great
achievements of the international system in the second half of the
20th Century -- the establishment of a tapestry of Treaties which
express the determination to ensure that weapons of mass destruction
do not proliferate.
(End text)




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