UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

04 September 2002

Powell Says Bush Will State Position on Iraq in "Near Future"

(Secretary also says U.S. offering leadership on development problems)
(4090)
The Bush administration is discussing every aspect of the Iraq issue
both within the administration and with U.S. friends and allies, and
President Bush will explain the U.S. position fully in the "near
future," according to Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Briefing reporters September 3 on the airplane taking him to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, Powell said the
president's advisers "are all working hard, and we are all working in
harmony to make sure the President has the very best information and
all the different insights that exist within his cabinet that can be
brought to bear on this so that he can make the best decision."
Asked about differences within the administration on how to deal with
Iraq, Powell acknowledged that they exist: "I see that there are lots
of differences. Some are real, some are perceived, some are
over-hyped," he said. For example, on the matter of arms inspections
in Iraq, the value of which Vice President Cheney has questioned,
Powell said the real issue is disarmament, not inspections.
"Inspections are one way of getting at that question," he said.
"Whether it's the only way or there are other ways that have to be
used to get at the question of disarmament is the debate that we're
having within the entire international community."
Powell said he consults frequently with allies on Iraq policy. "I've
been on the wires pretty constantly for the last week talking to all
of our friends and making sure I understand their point of view," he
said, "making sure they know where the President is."
Discussing the Johannesburg summit and development issues, Powell said
the Bush administration is providing leadership in helping developing
nations, noting U.S. initiatives on U.S.-African trade, on foreign
assistance, on advancement of trade liberalization in the Doha trade
talks, on support for global health programs and other measures.
Following is a transcript of the Powell interview:
(Note: In the text "billion" equals 1,000 million.)
(begin transcript)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman (Johannesburg, South Africa)
September 4, 2002
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell And Actor Chris Tucker Press
Briefing on Board Plane En Route Johannesburg, South Africa
September 3, 2002
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, thank you for joining me on this rather quick
trip over and back. I think it will be an interesting and exciting
trip, and it certainly is an important one. We have a very powerful
delegation already there, and they've been doing terrific work under
the leadership of Under Secretary of State Paula Dobriansky, as well
as Andrew Natsios [U.S. Agency for International Development
administrator], who's been there and now he's with us, going back over
after some other side trips, and with representation from (inaudible),
and all of the other agencies. Christie Todd Whitman [Environmental
Protection Agency administrator] is there now.
I've been getting regular reports from them several times a day for
the last week or so, and I'm pleased at the progress that has been
made on the Johannesburg plan of action, unlike some previous
conferences. Some of you may have memories of ???Durban last year.???
This is a conference where people came to do serious work, to debate
important issues, and come up with a plan of action that was not just
rhetoric, but things people could actually get their teeth into and
execute on. That's why I'm particularly pleased about the very fine
reception that our initiative for partnerships, different kinds of
partnerships, received, and that so many other nations are responding
to that idea of public/private partnerships. As you know, we've
announced a number of them already: water, energy, Congo Basin
Initiative, housing initiative that you'll hear more about tomorrow.
I'm pleased that other nations are joining in this because sustainable
development is not just aid. Sustainable development is aid, it's
education, it's the environment, it's trading, it's opening up
economies, it is good governance, it is the rule of law, it is ending
corruption. All of these things have to be taken into account, and I
think that the strategy that the United States has brought to this
summit reflects all of that. With the President's Millennium Challenge
Account that you're all familiar with, an additional 5 billion dollars
a year, when we get it implemented in 3 years' time will go to those
countries that are in need but that have also demonstrated a
willingness to put in place the rule of law, good governance,
educating their youngsters, and taking care of their resources and
ending corruption. That's the right way to go about it.
I'll also be making the point to the summit participants that they
have to remember that 80 percent of the resources that are available
to help developing nations are in the private sector. That once again
reinforces the importance of partnerships and reinforces the
importance of making your country a welcoming place for private
partnerships where the money will be used properly. It will be
protected by the rule of law. It will not be wasted, and it will go to
the benefit of the people. So I'm very pleased at everything I've
heard from the delegation so far and I'll be briefed by Under
Secretary Dobriansky and the others when I arrive.
I'm also appreciative of the NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] who
have traveled from the United States, as well as a number of private
citizens and political figures, and I'm bringing over with me now one
more very important figure who I'm sure you all recognize -- Chris
Tucker, famous movie star, comedian, but more than that, a committed
young man who is making a mark for himself not only in the world of
entertainment but by his presence here. Other things we have done with
Chris that have shown that he realizes that at this point in his life,
with all of his success that he's already enjoyed, he has to use part
of his time and energy to give back and think about people in need.
Chris, it's a great pleasure to have you with us, and now you've got
the rest of the interview.
(Laughter)
MR. TUCKER: Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Thank you, and it's an honor,
thank you for having me here on the trip. I'm excited about the trip
and about the conference. South Africa is very important, and I'm just
looking forward to seeing the important solutions and different things
that can be done to help the problems on the continent of Africa. So
I'm looking forward to the conference. Thank you.
SECRETARY POWELL: Okay, what have you got?
QUESTION: You've got quite a diplomatic flurry going on on your
schedule there. Can you give us an idea of the types of things you
plan to discuss with some of these other heads of state?
SECRETARY POWELL: It is quite a busy day tomorrow, with lots of
bilateral meetings with different heads of state. We'll talk about,
first and foremost, the summit and the outcome of the summit. We'll
thank them for their participation and cooperation. Then there are a
variety of bilateral issues with each of them that I'll take up.
With President Mbeki, I'm sure we will talk about the situation in the
Congo and some of the success that we've seen recently with his
leadership, and we'll show our support for that effort. I'm sure that
we will also discuss the difficult situation in Zimbabwe, a country
that is desperately in need and doesn't have all of those things that
I described earlier that are essential for drawing in trade and
investment in your country.
I'm seeing the Prime Minister of Russia tomorrow night; I'm sure that
we will discuss a variety of trade issues. I'd like to review with him
how things are several months after the summit meeting in Moscow back
in late June. We will shake hands and congratulate ourselves on having
solved the great chicken war of 2002, finally.
There are a variety of other leaders, I expect to see the Albanian
President, the Danish Prime Minister, and a number of other leaders.
I'm going to try to keep the focus though on sustainable development
and the summit. I'm sure there will be regional issues they'll want to
talk about, of course.
QUESTION: There have been a lot of protests, the United States is
getting a lot of flack for things, the NGOs and some of these
developing countries feel the U.S. has not done enough. Do you think
there's a kind of dichotomy between what the U.S. is actually doing
and the perception that you're not giving enough?
If I can ask on Zimbabwe, there have been some reports that the United
States would join a call by other nations at the conference for Mugabe
to go. Do you think it's time for him to step down, and will you be
talking to other leaders about this?
SECRETARY POWELL: I guess it's our place in the world as the largest
economy in the world and the wealthiest country in the world to be
looked at for leadership in helping developing nations. I think the
United States has provided that leadership, especially President Bush
with his commitment to expanded AGOA [African Growth and Opportunity
Act] action, with his leadership in getting the Doha round of trade
talks going, and passage of the Trade Promotion Act recently which
will liberalize trade even more -- also with the Millennium Challenge
Account, with what we have done on getting the Global Health Fund up
and running to deal with HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. With
just the regular aid account seeing real increases in the first two
years of this administration, I've been able to get increases in the
regular accounts before we even go to the Millennium Challenge
Accounts.
The President has also made a strong commitment to providing
anti-retroviral drugs to break the mother-child transmission of the
HIV virus. A number of education programs, I'm going to be announcing
more of those in the very near future, related to the Middle East. So
I think we've got a very, very good record.
We'd like to do more. We're always trying to find ways to do more, but
I think that we have done a lot and I think we've had a good story to
tell, a good story to rest on. It is always the case, though, that
people will comment on the United States and occasionally criticize us
for not doing even more. I think we've got a good record, and I think
it's a record we can all be proud of defending.
With respect to the second part of your question, on Zimbabwe -- we
have long felt that the people of Zimbabwe would be better off if
there had been a change in leadership. The election recently held, we
think, was fatally flawed. I have spoken out about this regularly, the
United States government has spoken out about this regularly.
For those of you who were with me on my Africa trip last year, at the
University of (inaudible) in South Africa, I spoke directly to the
challenge that Mugabe was presenting to Africa and to the world. We
could see improper behavior, we could see corrupt governance, and the
world should speak out about it and stand up to this kind of action.
We have not seen any improvement in the situation since then. I'm not
aware of a specific call at the summit for his removal so I have
nothing to say to that. I'll perhaps learn more about that when I
arrive, but I would not want to hypothesize about what we might do if
there was such a call. I've only heard the report that you mention but
I haven't seen anything officially, and I don't know who is making the
call.
QUESTION: Okay, I'll ask the dreaded Iraq question. Do you feel that
there is a split in the administration over what should be done on
Iraq? Or is this a normal discussion within an administration? I mean,
the Vice President's words seemed to be much stronger than yours along
going ahead with an intervention against them.
SECRETARY POWELL: We are discussing Iraq and we are discussing every
aspect of the issue. We are discussing the threat that this regime
presents to the rest of the world. We are discussing the simple
reality that for almost 12 years now, the Iraqi regime has refused to
comply with a number of UN resolutions and dozens of conditions that
they were supposed to meet. So they have affronted the international
community.
It is a challenge not just to the United States but to the
international community and to the United Nations. We are discussing
within the administration and with our friends and allies and with the
international community and the United Nations how we should respond
to this. It is a serious matter. There can be no question that he
continues to pursue these kinds of weapons of mass destruction. He
threw out, or made it impossible for the inspectors to continue 4
years ago. So it is a very serious issue and we're discussing it in a
very serious way.
The only position that really counts at the end of the day is the
President's position, and we are all working hard, and we are all
working in harmony to make sure the President has the very best
information and all the different insights that exist within his
cabinet that can be brought to bear on this so that he can make the
best decision.
QUESTION: Do you see a decision coming in the next 2 months?
SECRETARY POWELL: Now that the holiday period, the summer period, is
over and all of our European colleagues are back to work, and the
United Nations General Assembly will be meeting next week, I think you
will see that the President will pull all of these threads together.
Keep in mind what he said a couple of weeks ago. He said he was
patient, he said he was consulting, he said that he would take all of
that consultation into account as he made his decisions, and I'm quite
confident that's what he intends to do.
QUESTION: Just one follow-up on that, Mr. Secretary. Do you disagree
with Vice President Cheney on the issue of UN inspections in Iraq?
SECRETARY POWELL: The point the Vice President was making, and he made
it very powerfully and very vividly, is that inspections in and of
itself may not give you the assurance you need. The inspectors were
there for years. They found a lot, no question. For the years they
were there, they found a lot, they discovered a lot, they provided a
baseline, but they didn't get it all and they didn't find it all, and
so the Vice President was, I think, making the case that you can't
think that just because the inspectors go in, that that solves your
problem. The issue is not the inspectors. The issue is disarmament.
The resolutions call for disarmament, not inspections. Inspections are
one way of getting at that question. Whether it's the only way or
there are other ways that have to be used to get at the question of
disarmament is the debate that we're having within the entire
international community.
QUESTION: So why is it that there's this perception, you gave the
interview the other day to David Frost, talking about the need for
inspections, whereas the Vice President said inspections don't matter,
we need to have regime change and he's got these weapons. Can you see
how there's a difference internationally in your two views and how
other countries may see it as different views within one
administration? Just Monday, Tariq Aziz [Iraqi deputy prime minister]
said, look, I don't know which member of the administration speaks for
the entire administration? (inaudible)
SECRETARY POWELL: Tariq Aziz knows perfectly well what needs to be
done, and for years, he has been on television and manages to have
reported without comment his assertion that they have no such weapons.
This is nonsense, utter nonsense. He knows it's nonsense, we know it's
nonsense. It's a con that the Iraqi regime, and especially Mr. Tariq
Aziz, has been pulling on the international community for years, and
where we are now is that it's time for the international community to
speak back.
With respect to what the American position will be, the President will
articulate it, he will articulate it and he will articulate it fully
in the near future. I see that there are lots of differences. Some are
real, some are perceived, some are over-hyped. My David Frost
interview -- which you haven't really seen, all you've seen is a promo
for my David Frost interview; I call your attention to BBC this
weekend for about 40 straight minutes of it -- it's a 9/11 interview
mostly, and you've all had 9/11 interviews. All that was on last
weekend was a promo, right Richard? It was an outtake, or it was an
intake that was used as a promo. You'll see the rest of it. What I was
saying in that interview was administration policy and the President's
policy. The President's called for the return of inspectors, as you
will recall.
QUESTION: As the debate has played out in the last two weeks, the
international community has begun to respond, and a lot of it is
rather negative to the notion of some sort of unilateral action by the
United States, or even U.S. proceeding along this course. The Russians
have come out against it, the Chinese, the French. How much does that
raise your level of concern as the President tries to make the case in
the coming week or so?
SECRETARY POWELL: The President has not decided upon nor announced a
unilateral action or as you described it, a course of action. Now,
there are courses of action that are postulated and speculated upon,
and once they're out there, everybody starts responding to that, and
that's in the nature of a full, free, open debate on a subject. As the
President has said -- in Crawford, I guess, the week before last --
he's taking all of the advice he gets into account, he's consulting
widely, and he will approach this patiently and he has not made any
decisions, either of the unilateral nature or of the multilateral
nature. But he is listening carefully and I think in the very near
future, he will answer all of the burning questions that are on your
minds and lips.
QUESTION: Does that international reaction play a factor in the
decision-making here?
SECRETARY POWELL: When you're consulting, you have to listen to
everything, and you listen to positive responses and negative
responses. I spent an enormous amount of time on the phone -- as you
know, I'm something of a phone freak -- but I've been on the wires
pretty constantly for the last week talking to all of our friends and
making sure I understand their point of view, making sure they know
where the President is, not where some people say the President is, or
people who are not even in the government who claim to know where the
President is, or the President hasn't decided yet where he is. So I
think we've been able to put it into perspective.
I will be meeting with leaders tomorrow, I will be up at New York at
the UNGA [U.N. General Assembly] for the better part of a week, which
will give me additional opportunity as it will give the President for
the 2 days, 3 days he's up there, to hear from our close friends and
allies around the world.
QUESTION: I just want to make sure I understand sort of the import of
what you're saying. The President's U.N. General Assembly speech will
sort of be the kickoff of a campaign by the administration to convince
the world of a course, and also, can you tell us, has the President
reached a decision on the way for the U.N. authorization is not needed
but it would be helpful politically?
SECRETARY POWELL: I didn't say the U.N. speech was the kickoff, but
nice try. Obviously, at the U.N. next week, there will be leaders from
around the world. The President, of course, will speak as will many
other leaders, and I would not prejudge right now what the President
is going to say next week, but obviously this is a very timely issue.
With respect to additional resolutions from the U.N., that depends on
what course of action the President decides upon and the other members
of the Security Council decide upon, if anything. But it would be
premature for me now to confirm to you that that's what's going to
happen next Wednesday or what we're thinking about with respect to
resolutions. Obviously, all of that is in the mix.
QUESTION: In your conversations with friends and allies, have you
begun to ask for their support for a specific course of action yet?
SECRETARY POWELL: We've spoken in diplomatic and political terms. If
your specific question is with respect to military options, I have
not, no. Sure, I constantly explore with my foreign minister
colleagues diplomatic options, inspectors in, inspectors with what
other support for the inspectors, the nature of the inspection, any
time, any place, can we really get an inspection team in that would
give confidence that we're going to get to the root of the matter, or
is it going to take something more than inspections? There are a lot
of things that get discussed. We have excellent lines of communication
with all of our friends around the world on this, and there's a good
solid exchange of views back and forth.
As you noted, the European Union foreign ministers met this past
weekend. I spoke to fully more than a third of them before the meeting
last Wednesday and Thursday, and then I've spoken to at least 4 of
them since the meeting, just to coordinate with each other and
understand where they're coming from, where we're coming from, not
only on Iraq, but on Article 98 negotiations, the Middle East, and all
the other issues that we stay in close touch with our European friends
on.
QUESTION: There are others in the administration and in Congress
perhaps who say that an international consensus on what to do with
Iraq is not necessary. Is it your view that you do need support of key
allies around the world in any action or any course the U.S. would
take?
SECRETARY POWELL: There are lots of views in the administration,
outside the administration, up on the Hill [Capitol Hill, or
Congress], throughout the talk shows, media, and throughout the
international community. The President's considering it all, and, in
due course, he will let you know how he plans to approach this
problem.
QUESTION: Thank you very much.
QUESTION: I wanted to know what particularly made you want to get
involved with Africa, and would you like to be in a movie with
Secretary Powell?
MR. TUCKER: Well, I'm doing this movie, I'm playing the President of
the United States, and the name of it is "Mr. President." I've been
doing a lot of research. I've been fortunate enough to meet with the
Secretary of State, and also I've traveled to Africa several times to
promote movies. I fell in love with the continent. I've been fortunate
enough to spend a lot of time there, to meet the people. I went on a
trip with the Treasury Secretary to Africa. I learned a lot on that
trip. So I have a history of Africa, so I'm really excited to go to
this conference to learn even more about it.
To answer your second question, I would love to do a movie with the
Secretary. I'm basing a lot of my character on the Secretary so I want
to make sure that I represent the office right. Thank you.
QUESTION: Will you accompany the President to Africa sometime next
year?
MR. TUCKER: I hope so, but it's not confirmed yet, but I hope so.
QUESTION: (inaudible)
MR. TUCKER: Well, I think that for the Secretary of State to come to
the conference is a very, very big thing, and I think that something
good is going to come out of it. I hope so. I'm just looking forward
to seeing what solutions can be done to help some of the problems
around the continent.
(end transcript)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list