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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

17 June 2003

Bush Confident Iraqi Weapons of Mass Destruction Will be Found

(Claims "a lot of revisionist history going on") (960)
By Wendy S. Ross
Washington File White House Correspondent
Washington -- President Bush, for the second day in a row, took on
those who now are questioning whether the Saddam Hussein regime in
Iraq had weapons of mass destruction prior to the war in Iraq.
"We made it clear to the dictator of Iraq that he must disarm. We
asked other nations to join us in seeing to it that he would disarm,
and he chose not to do so, so we disarmed him," Bush said in a speech
in northern Virginia, June 17.
"And I know there's a lot of revisionist history now going on, but one
thing is certain. He is no longer a threat to the free world, and the
people of Iraq are free," Bush said.
On June 16, Bush branded as "revisionist historians" those who now
criticize his decision to use military force to oust Saddam Hussein
from power. "This nation acted to a threat from the dictator of Iraq.
Now there are some who would like to rewrite history; revisionist
historians is what I like to call them," the president said in a
speech in New Jersey.
Asked about these statements, White House Press Secretary Fleischer
told reporters June 17 that Bush "describes as revisionist history
those who would now seem to cast doubt on the accuracy of the
intelligence information that stated that Saddam Hussein had weapons
of mass destruction prior to the war."
Fleischer made clear that Bush remains confident in the accuracy of
the intelligence reports he received and believes weapons of mass
destruction will be located.
"The President has every confidence that the intelligence that he
received was accurate intelligence and that weapons of mass
destruction will, indeed, be found," Fleischer said.
He noted that Bush "has repeatedly expressed his confidence that as a
result of the actions that we have put in place, with the Department
of Defense undertaking the search (for WMD) with the increased number
of personnel DOD has now to carry out its mission, as well as the
interviews that are being done and will be done with mid-level Iraqi
officials, including scientists, that a review of the paperwork that
we're finding, as well as the expertise of [former U.N. weapons
inspector] David Kay, who is now helping, that we will indeed find the
weapons of mass destruction."
The reason they have not been found so far, Fleischer said, "is
exactly because of the lengths that Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi
officials went to hide" them.
"After all, it was the United Nations [weapons inspectors], when they
left Iraq, when they were thrown out of Iraq in 1998, that concluded
and told the world that Iraq had failed to account for the thousands
of liters of botulin, of VX, of sarin gas. It was the United Nations
who put it on the record and reported they had it.
"Now of course we had information that also lent credence to that
conclusion," Fleischer said.
"To suggest that Saddam Hussein threw out the inspectors and therefore
used the fact that the inspectors were gone to destroy his weapons is
fanciful. It's a fit of imagination.
"So the fact is he did design a system that was intended to conceal it
from the inspectors. After all, even in the early to mid '90s, when we
did find the proof of the weapons of mass destruction, it was only
after defectors told us about it. The inspectors were in the country,
and they were unable to find it because of the great lengths the
Saddam Hussein regime had gone to perfect their ability to hide and to
conceal.
"And we still are in an environment where whatever they hid, and
whatever they concealed could remain hidden and concealed. ... In
addition to the fact, the President said earlier, that they may have
destroyed some of it."
The Central Intelligence Agency and the Department of Defense,
Fleischer said, are working together to find the weapons of mass
destruction.
In a country as large as Iraq -- the size of California -- "it
requires a tremendous number of people to help move with the
logistics, to get people into place, to carry out their work. Iraq
remains a place with great danger in many places, and so there has to
be security provided for some of the experts to travel around. So it's
a combination, it's a combined effort of the CIA and the DOD,"
Fleischer said.
In another development, the U.S. Congress is set to begin hearings
into the intelligence case for war with Iraq.
President Bush "has welcomed these hearings," Fleischer said, pointing
out that the intelligence information about Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction had been shared with the Congress for a decade.
"I would suggest to you, go back and read any number of speeches given
by members of Congress, Democrat and Republican alike, in 1998, when
the Congress passed -- and wisely passed -- the regime change act for
Iraq, and you'll find floor speech after floor speech that talks about
Iraq's possession of weapons of mass destruction.
"Members of Congress said it with certainty then; the previous
administration said it with certainty then. And unless somebody
thinks, again, that Saddam Hussein threw out the weapons inspectors
and after he threw out the weapons inspectors he got rid of his
weapons of mass destruction and didn't tell anybody, and had no proof
that he got rid of his weapons of mass destruction -- that's why the
intelligence community continues to believe as strongly as it has and
does that Saddam Hussein did, indeed, have weapons of mass destruction
leading up to the war."
(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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