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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

24 September 2002

Deputy Defense Secretary Says Iraq Issue Part of War on Terrorism

(Sept. 20: Paul Wolfowitz interview with NATO journalists) (4255)
The United States sees the issue of Iraq and its defiance of the
United Nations as "part of the war on terrorism," not a diversion from
it, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz told a group of
journalists from NATO countries September 20.
While praising the help from the NATO allies in Afghanistan as
"absolutely wonderful," Wolfowitz cautioned: "We're not going to win
this war against terrorism simply by chasing down individual
terrorists or by closing the door to particular plots. We're not going
to win it on defense. We've got to make it clear that support for
terrorism in an age of weapons of mass destruction is simply not
something that any country can be in the business of and that's the
heart of our issue with Iraq."
"When weapons of mass destruction can be delivered anonymously through
terrorist networks, traditional notions of deterrence don't work.
We're in a different world," Wolfowitz said.
He also emphasized that what is "at stake here is the ability of the
United Nations to enforce its will."
Asked about German criticism of the U.S. position on Iraq, Wolfowitz
said that "the demonstrations of disunity are harmful to achieving the
kind of political outcome that I believe everybody would like to
achieve."
Regarding NATO, Wolfowitz said President Bush and his whole
administration "treasure" the alliance. The prospect of NATO
enlargement is "changing important things" throughout Europe, he said.
On the subject of European citizens being detained at Guantanamo Bay
as enemy combatants, he said that the "primary concern ... is to make
sure that, while handling these people humanely and to the extent
possible releasing those that one can safely release, our principal
focus has got to be on preventing future acts of terrorism."
Following is the Defense Department transcript of the interview:
(begin transcript)
U.S. Department of Defense 
News Briefing 
Friday, Sept. 20, 2002
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz 
(Interview with NATO Journalists)
Wolfowitz: It's a pleasure to meet with this group. I'm glad you've
taken the time to be our guests and I hope we're treating you
properly. How long does this tour last?
Q:  Nine days.
Q: Next Monday we will go to Pacific Command and we will end our tour
there. We've been here all week.
Wolfowitz:  In Washington?
Q:  In Washington.
Wolfowitz: Let me maybe just say a few comments in the beginning and
get to questions quickly.
But first of all the reason why I'm particularly delighted to meet
with this group is I'm a great believer in NATO. So is Mr. Rumsfeld.
It's an incredible organization. In many respects one could say its
record in the Cold War was I think remarkable by any historical
standard but what's equally remarkable is how important it's been
since the Cold War.
I remember still quite vividly going to London in July of [1991], the
first really post-Cold War NATO Summit and I remember Prime Minister
Thatcher introducing the whole meeting by making some kind of ironic
comments about the uncertainty of the future, and then a month later
Iraq invaded Kuwait and this alliance that people thought was about to
go on the ash heap of history along with the Soviet Union suddenly had
an out-of-area -- not the alliance as such, obviously, but the members
of the alliance worked together in ways that would not have been
possible if it had not been for NATO.
Then we get into the period of enlargement. To summarize ten years of
history in three sentences, a lot of people that say large [inaudible]
sort of spell the end of good U.S. or West -- U.S.-European relations
with Russia and instead it now seems to become the bridge to a new
relationship with Russia. A bridge to a whole new set of members.
I met with the Rumanian Defense Minister just yesterday and it's
obvious that the prospect of NATO enlargement is changing important
things in that country and I think throughout Europe.
So it's adapted to incredible new circumstances and one of them came
on September 11th and for the first time in NATO's history Article 5
was invoked and it was invoked in defense of the United States, which
was the kind of -- I mean it was a terrible occasion, but there was a
beautiful irony there. More than just symbolism. We got terrific help
here in our homeland defense mission. The NATO AWACS has taken a big
burden off one of our most stretched assets. We never expected to be
deploying so many of our aircraft to maintain a combat air patrol over
the United States but we have done that at the same time we've been
fighting a substantial war halfway around the world. It would have
been very hard to do without NATO support.
The help we've gotten from NATO allies in Afghanistan as allies,
though not through the NATO framework, has been absolutely wonderful.
We've had first the British and now the Turks take up the important
challenge of leading the International Security Assistance Force in
Kabul, so I don't want to go on too long but to me it's very important
that this Secretary of Defense, this President, this whole
Administration really treasures this alliance. I know we have some
troubles. I can't remember a time, though, in my career when there
weren't trans-Atlantic tensions of one kind or another. But what is
impressive is the endurance of the basic values, the basic interests,
how they've worked together.
I guess one last -- I think that is obviously crucial in this war on
terrorism. I don't want to spend this whole time talking about Iraq,
but clearly Iraq is the issue of the hour. In our view, and I really
believe it's undeniable, this is part of the war on terrorism. It's
not a separate thing. The whole issue of terrorism has to be seen in a
different light I think after September 11th. I know many of our
European allies say finally you Americans know what it's like to be a
target of terrorism; we've lived with it for decades.
That's precisely the problem. The whole world lived with it for
decades. I think the lesson of September 11th is we can't live with it
when the scale is 3,000 people killed in a single day, and a
foreshadowing of 10,000 or 100,000 or even a million people killed in
a mass attack. Therefore the things that we've lived with for the last
20 years have to be viewed in a different way. And while it's
important to chase down and capture and kill the terrorists that we
can find, and we've had incredible good cooperation among many
countries including all our NATO allies in that respect, we're not
going to win this war against terrorism simply by chasing down
individual terrorists or by closing the door to particular plots.
We're not going to win it on defense. We've got to make it clear that
support for terrorism in an age of weapons of mass destruction is
simply not something that any country can be in the business of, and
that's the heart of our issue with Iraq.
I think the President laid it out very clearly at the United Nations
where he also laid out another dimension, which is that even before
September 11th, Iraq was a country that was in massive, flagrant
violation of I think it's some 16 UN Security Council Resolutions.
There's a phrase which I think you folks will appreciate in the
President's speech where, I paraphrase slightly, he said Iraq is
unilaterally violating the strictures of the largest multilateral
organization in the world. Obviously we feel a little bit unfairly
accused of unilateralism.
I think clearly what is at stake here is the ability of the United
Nations to enforce its will. Obviously we have not succeeded over the
last 11 years but it is important that we succeed now.
I promised to be brief. That wasn't quite brief. But I'll go to
questions.
Q: What does Saddam have to do to avoid a war, or the United States
have to do as well?
Wolfowitz: The President really laid it out quite clearly in his
General Assembly speech. If you want to say it's a lot, it is a lot.
That's not our fault. It's because he has violated an extraordinary
range of prohibitions. And clearly he has to do something more than
just come forward and lie about his weapons of mass destruction
program and that seems to be what his latest declarations amount to.
Go back to Resolution 687. The purpose of inspectors was to verify the
truthfulness of Iraq's declarations about what it had in weapons of
mass destruction. I think under 687 they were supposed to have made
those declarations within 15 days of the Resolution which means
they're about 11 years late. To say that they have none in the face of
the intelligence we have is simply clearly not an answer.
I guess at a minimum they need to start telling the truth. That would
be an important start.
Q:  Is a democratic [inaudible], do you have [inaudible]?
Wolfowitz: I should turn around and ask you since Turkey's right next
door.
I think, if I can step back from Iraq for just a minute and say that I
very strongly disagree with this view that's summarized in the title
of Samuel Huntington's book The Clash of Civilizations. Huntington is
a wonderful, decent man but he's wrong on this point and unfortunately
he is in agreement with al Qaeda and people who say that there's
inevitable conflict.
I believe very deeply that the values that we treasure as NATO allies,
and by the way, it can't be said often enough, I think one of the
reasons this alliance has been so remarkable is because it is built on
common values. Even when there have been occasional departures as
there was after the colonel's coups, I think the alliance has helped
to bring countries back to those democratic values.
I was in Malta with the first President Bush in his meeting with
Gorbachev where Gorbachev said please stop talking about these as
Western values, they're democratic values. He said a little
disingenuously, they're our values also.
Well, by now they are beginning to be Russian values and they're
certainly Japanese values and now they're Indonesian values, and
they're very universal. I spent a lot of time as Ambassador to
Indonesia for three years, I spent a lot of time in Turkey. Those are
two countries with huge Muslim majorities that belies this idea that
there's something antithetical between being a Muslim and being a
democrat.
From that background it seems to me while we don't know what the
future of Iraq will be, there's no reason to think that the Iraqi
people who are among the most talented people in the Arab world are
not capable of the same kinds of achievements that the Poles or the
Hungarians or the Rumanians, in fact there are a lot of Iraqi jokes
about similarities between Ceaucesceau and Saddam Hussein. I hope the
similarities carry forward to what freed Iraqi people can achieve.
The last comment, that means that the leadership of the future of Iraq
should be chosen by the Iraqi people not by our figuring out some
particular individual who's going to run the country.
Q: There is a lot of discussion going on now in the United Nations
about resolutions. Plans are being made for a new inspection regime.
What I would like to know, it can take quite some time. Is there a
deadline for a possible American military action?
Wolfowitz: I'm not aware of any. We are clearly trying to find a
political solution. War is the last thing anyone wants to resort to.
But at the same time the threats that we're dealing with are very
serious. The defiance of the United Nations is extraordinary. And just
to pick on one phrase you used, we need more than an inspections
regime. We need a disarmament regime. We need full compliance with all
of the resolutions that have been applied. If there are going to be
deadlines set they're going to be set not by me. But I think we don't
have forever in this process, but I can't give you a timetable.
Q: Mr. Secretary, how, much do you care about European skepticisms,
concerns, concerning a war on Iraq?
Wolfowitz: I care a lot about everybody's views. I care about the
views particularly of our own people. I care about the views of the
whole world I'd say including with some respects particularly the
Muslim world. I care very very much about the views of our European
allies.
The President really started making our case only at the beginning of
this month in a very organized way with his speech at the UN General
Assembly and I think one is already beginning to see significant
changes in people's understanding, and certainly here in the United
States. You're better experts about Europe but it seems to me also in
Europe. I think people are coming to understand that this is not just
an issue between the United States and Iraq. It's really an issue
between the United Nations and Iraq. The authority of the United
Nations is at stake.
I hope also that as we discuss this more and more that people will
come to understand what is a somewhat difficult point, but it is at
the heart of the matter which is I guess best summarized with a rather
vivid phrase Mr. Rumsfeld used the other day, is that we can't wait
for a smoking gun. A gun smokes after it's been fired.
The dots are already out there to be connected and we don't want to
look back at some horrible event and say why didn't we connect the
dots? The problem is there, the threat is there. We prefer to see it
solved peacefully but we can't continue living with it.
Q: Do the [inaudible] damage the relations with the U.S. government
and with the USIA because of the strong anti-attitude of our
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder?
Wolfowitz: I'm not going to say a lot here. It would be undiplomatic
and here in the Defense Department we're very diplomatic. But it seems
to me if one looks at it not just in terms of U.S.-German relations
but in terms of our ability to accomplish what I think everybody ought
to agree we'd want to accomplish through the United Nations, that if
UN diplomacy is to succeed, it seems to me it's very important that
the Iraqi regime see itself confronted with a unified world. I guess
I'll just leave it there.
I think the demonstrations of disunity are harmful to achieving the
kind of political outcome that I believe everybody would like to
achieve.
Q: To follow up, do you expect that in case he is reelected he will
change his attitude after the election?
Wolfowitz:  I would certainly hope so.
Q: To come back to the smoking gun. How do you make the world safer if
you open the door to preemptive action and any state in the world can
attack its neighbor if he is frightened by the neighbor, like India
attacking Pakistan because it has good reason to feel threatened by
Pakistan; Taiwan and China; so on.
Wolfowitz: There is a lot that is unique about the case of Iraq. In
the first place there are 16 UN Security Council resolutions that
distinguish it from every other possible case of this kind. But
secondly what is at the heart of the matter here, and people it seems
to me, -- this is a dot I don't understand why it isn't connected more
often, let me put it that way -- that it is the combination of those
lethal capabilities with active consorting with terrorists and a
declared hostility, indeed open threats that makes it so dangerous.
When weapons of mass destruction can be delivered anonymously through
terrorist networks, traditional notions of deterrence don't work.
We're in a different world. That's the problem that we're dealing with
is we're not talking about some general philosophy of any time you
feel you have a problem you can preempt it militarily.
Q:  So it's not a new twist, unique?
Wolfowitz: I think people make too much of new doctrine. There is a
new doctrine. I said Iraq is unique in its defiance of the United
Nations. It is not quite unique, unfortunately, in this combination of
having weapons of mass destruction, declared hostility, and connection
to terrorist networks. And that is a new problem. It's one that really
didn't exist until possibly the end of the last century and we weren't
really aware of until September 11th, but I think September 11th has
confronted everybody.
This is not just an American problem. This is a worldwide problem.
Unless we as a world say here and now that the world's most dangerous
weapons can't be put in the hands of the world's most dangerous
people, I think that's the phrase the President used some time ago,
sooner or later one of us is going to get hit very very hard. It may
not even be the United States.
Q: The government is preparing a resolution about this issue and will
this resolution to the House, to the Congress be specific on Iraq? Or
could it concern more countries of Iran or North Korea or Libya in the
future?
Wolfowitz: I think they have proposed the resolution. You can check it
factually. I think it's factually correct. We'll check for you. I
believe that the resolution that we suggested to the Congress is, in
its operative language at least, identical to the resolution that was
passed by the Senate back in February of 1998, four years ago.
Q: [inaudible] out of hand in the Middle East and after you attack
Iraq there will be an all-out war and will be more than one Arab
nation [inaudible]?
Wolfowitz: I really don't want to start speculating about military
contingencies when the President has made no decision about the use of
military force.
Clearly in any serious thinking about this subject one has to think
about a very wide range of possibilities and I can assure you that we
don't think about any use of force lightly or ignoring ways in which
things can go wrong.
I spent a significant part of my life in 1991 including traveling to
Israel with Deputy Secretary Eagleburger, to pressure the Israelis to
stay out of that war and I know just how close it was and how
dangerous those kinds of things can be.
What has to be weighed in any decision about whether to take action or
not to take action is not only what the cost of action will be, which
can be considerable, but what the cost of inaction could be. What we
are concerned about with inaction is to have a tragedy like September
11th repeated on a much much larger scale with weapons of mass
destruction. So we're weighing very difficult things, but I would say
this final point.
I think you're already beginning to see since the President's speech
at the United Nations and as the focus of activity is turned toward
the United Nations, that a number of Arab countries in the region have
begun to shift their attitudes. Some cases quite clearly, in other
cases gradually. Hopefully as we confront this problem more directly,
and I'm hopeful we will have the kind of support we need, because
frankly it's the best hope of achieving the kind of political outcome
that would spare everybody those kinds of risks.
Q: In the strategy document it stated that deterrence no longer works
against people like Saddam Hussein. My question is, deterrence worked
for 50 years towards the Soviets and all kinds of let's say more or
less evil regimes. Can you explain why do you think that deterrence
will not work against Saddam Hussein?
Wolfowitz: Deterrence premises a number of things. It premises that
the regime being deterred is rational by our lights. We've now learned
that some highly educated people think it's rational to fly commercial
airliners into the World Trade Center. The notion that rationality
precludes suicide obviously doesn't apply to some large number of
people who have declared their hostility to the United States.
Deterrence works when it works, when you can identify the source of
the threat. Unfortunately these terrorist networks give countries and
organizations the opportunity to execute threats anonymously and hide
their hand.
Finally, I think even with the Soviet Union deterrence did not work
particularly effectively against Soviet proxies. What we see with
these terrorist networks is a potentially lethal kind of proxy that
makes what the Soviet Union played around with mild by comparison.
Q: A question concerning terrorism, but a little on the side. I'm sure
you're aware that a number of European citizens are being held,
detained in Guantanamo Bay. Do you have any idea what will happen to
these people? Will they be prosecuted at some point? Or will they be
sent back to whatever country they [inaudible]? What do you perceive?
Wolfowitz: Let me emphasize at the outset, number one, they are being
treated humanely. Number two, we've made sure that every country that
has nationals there and wants to check on the status of their
nationals has the ability to do so.
These people are being detained as enemy combatants and it needs to be
understood in that context.
It's obviously a different kind of war and it may be harder to say
when this particular war will be over. That's a thought that requires
thinking through the whole notion of enemy combatants in a way that
was different from earlier wars.
But we are frankly not eager to hold anyone any longer than we have
to, and we are working through the kinds of policies that would allow
us to make determinations about when people ought to be turned over to
their own countries for some kind of treatment or detention or
punishment or when, if appropriate, they should be put before some
kind of judicial proceeding here.
But I think the point to fundamentally emphasize is that these are
dangerous people. We're not holding, believe me, anyone that we don't
have some reason to be very concerned about. And many of them have in
their heads the knowledge that could help us to prevent future
terrorist attacks.
So our primary concern I think is a concern that's shared in common
with our allies is to make sure that, while handling these people
humanely and to the extent possible releasing those that one can
safely release, our principal focus has got to be on preventing future
acts of terrorism.
Q: The United States, the Vietnam Syndrome is definitely over in the
wake of 9/11 I've read that a lot of generals are reluctant in
accepting a war against Iraq, and that the political officials, for
instance here in the Pentagon, are pressing for war. Can you say if
that is a definite turn in the attitude of the United States to get
involved and to form conflicts and [inaudible]?
Wolfowitz: The basic premise is simply not true. Nobody in their right
mind is going to be eager for war or casual about war. I guess 16, 18
months ago when I was first setting up my office I came across a
painting of the battle of Antietam and I have it on my wall. It's a
very stark reminder of what was actually the bloodiest in American
history. It's a powerful painting because it's this beautiful,
peaceful looking Maryland countryside, and then if you look closely in
the front you see this ditch that was full of bodies. I don't remember
the numbers, but I think roughly 25,000 people killed in a single day.
War is a terrible thing. I think everyone in our leadership, civilian
and military, understands that. It is sometimes a necessary evil but
it's not something that anyone would embrace.
At the same time this notion of the Vietnam Syndrome, that the United
States lost its nerve or isn't capable of action I think is belied by
30 years of history since then.
This is a country that has been impressive, if I can boast a little,
in honoring its commitments including through the most difficult
period of the Cold War.
It's been impressive, and I guess I'd like to say this, in coming to
the aid of people who were threatened by aggression or by war-induced
famine in Somalia, in Kuwait, in Kosovo, in Bosnia, in Afghanistan. I
think there's one other from my list. Every one of those populations
was predominantly Muslim. It is -- Oh, yes. Northern Iraq. The notion
that we're at war with the Muslim world is simply wrong. I believe the
ideals that we're fighting for, the opportunity of people who live in
peace and freedom, and for women to not be enslaved in archaic,
quasi-medieval sort of system I think is something that puts us on the
side of a great majority of the world's Muslims as well as I think all
civilized people in the world.
So the stakes are huge. The risks are also not inconsiderable. But I
think we had a demonstration on September 11th of what the risks are
of doing nothing.
Thank you very much.
Q:  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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