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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

15 January 2003

Rumsfeld Says U.S. Seeks NATO Assistance on Iraq

(Defense Department Report) (680)
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, briefing at the Pentagon January
15, confirmed that U.S. diplomatic representatives have asked NATO for
indirect military assistance in the event of military operations in
Iraq.
"The U.S. ambassador to NATO [Ambassador R. Nicholas Burns] did, in
fact, recently go into the North Atlantic Council and say that here
are a series of things that might or might not be appropriate, and
opened that dialogue," Rumsfeld said. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz also held informal discussions about NATO support during a
visit in December and will consult again January 17 during change of
command ceremonies at NATO headquarters in Brussels.
"In any case, obviously we have to begin with the fact that the
president has made no decision to use force, but it does take time to
plan, and just as we're planning with individual countries it seemed
appropriate, to the extent NATO wished to, to begin that planning
process," he said.
Among the items being discussed are: using collective forces such as
AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) E-3A surveillance
aircraft, minesweepers or navy patrol ships; possibly protecting
Turkey (a NATO member nation) from any counter-strikes by Iraq; using
command facilities to plan efforts such as air or sea transport,
air-to-air refueling aircraft, and even air cover for ground troops;
and base and overflight rights from NATO allies, according to Rumsfeld
at the Pentagon briefing and to U.S. Representative Douglas Bereuter,
the Nebraska Republican who heads NATO's Parliamentary Assembly.
At the same briefing, Air Force General Richard Myers, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, pointedly warned Iraq not to use noncombatant
civilians as human shields to try to prevent air strikes or other
operations in the event of a war, because such actions would
constitute war crimes.
"Iraq announced in late December that it will recruit and receive
volunteers from Arab and Western countries to serve as human shields
who would be deployed to protect sensitive sites," Myers said at the
outset of the Pentagon briefing. "This is a deliberate recruitment of
innocent civilians for the purpose of putting them in harm's way
should a conflict occur. I'd like to note that it is illegal under the
International Law of Armed Conflict to use noncombatants as a means of
shielding potential targets, and Iraqi action to do so would not only
violate this law, but be considered a war crime in any conflict."
Myers also announced that several hundred U.S. Army trainers would
begin setting up a specialized training program at Taszar Air Base in
Hungary for members of the Iraqi opposition who have volunteered for
possible action in Iraq. "The use of Taszar Air Base emphasizes a
rather long-standing relationship between the United States and
Hungary," he said. It is expected that the Iraqi opposition members
will be trained for support roles should military operations begin in
Iraq, he said.
Earlier January 15, Rumsfeld and Myers appeared before the Senate
Armed Services Committee in a classified briefing on issues involving
Iraq, North Korea and Afghanistan. Following their appearances,
officials from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA) were also to brief the Armed Services
Committee.
Speaking to reporters after that meeting on Capitol Hill, Rumsfeld
said that he and Myers were there to bring the Armed Services
Committee up to date on actions and operations in these three areas of
interest. He also praised President Bush's diplomatic measures in
dealing with North Korea over its renewed nuclear program.
The president is "determined to follow a diplomatic path. He is
attempting to internationalize it. It will end up in the United
Nations as a result of the IAEA's assessment. And the fact that we're
working with Japan and South Korea, as well as Russia and the People's
Republic of China, I think is the proper thing to do," Rumsfeld said.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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