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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

16 September 2002

Rumsfeld Says Coalition Tactics Have Changed Over Iraqi No-Fly Zones

(Defense Department Report, September 16) (490)
By Jacqui Porth
Washington File Staff Writer
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told reporters at the Pentagon
September 16 that he had ordered a change of tactics by military
aircraft patrolling the northern and southern No-Fly Zones over Iraq
so that fixed rather than mobile Iraqi air defenses are being
targeted.
He said he ordered the change because he did not like the idea that
coalition pilots were being fired upon by the Iraqis "with impunity."
The secretary said he could not remember with any precision when he
directed the change, but suggested his decision was communicated
within the timeframe of "less than six months and more than a month."
Marine General Peter Pace, Vice Chairman of the Joints Chiefs of
Staff, indicated that American and British commanders are now allowing
their pilots to respond to Iraqi anti-aircraft fire by going after
fixed structures like communications buildings "that are not easily
moved." Recent coalition air strikes, he said, have degraded Iraqi air
defense capabilities.
The remarks by Pace and Rumsfeld were made in response to questions
from reporters asking whether escalated efforts were being taken to
wear down Iraqi military capabilities in advance of any future
decision which might be made by the United States to eliminate Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction.
Rumsfeld said he would present to the Senate and House Armed Services
Committees this week an elaboration of the case made by President Bush
to the United Nations about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
"But what will be taking place in the next few weeks in the Congress
will be attempting to connect the dots before a tragedy happens, not
after," he said.
"The goal will be to try to take the pieces and help people understand
that it isn't simple -- that there isn't a single smoking gun that
everyone nods and says 'Ah-hah. That's it.' If we wait for a smoking
gun in this instance," he said, "you'd find it after . lethal weapons
were used against the United States, our friends and allies. And
that's a little late when you're dealing with capabilities of the
lethality that represent these capabilities."
Rumsfeld also noted that the military mission of Operation Desert
Storm more than a decade ago was not to bring about a change of regime
in Iraq. As President Bush proceeds with his deliberations, the
secretary said the subject of an Iraqi regime change remains "an open
question." The regime in Iraq is quite small, he said, consisting of
Saddam Hussein's family and a few supportive generals. Other people on
the periphery, Rumsfeld suggested, ought to be careful about their
association with Iraqi weapons of mass destruction or in supporting
terrorist networks because in doing so "they would be nominating
themselves as part of the regime."
Asked about force preparedness should Iraq strike out against U.S.
forces with WMD, Pace said commanders have had a decade to consider a
potential combat environment in the Persian Gulf and to think through
the most appropriate tactics, procedures, techniques and equipment. He
also said U.S. forces are better prepared than in 1991.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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