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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

19 January 2003

Powell Says Time Is Running Out for Iraq to Comply With U.N.

(Secretary of state interviewed on CNN television January 19) (4100)
Secretary of State Colin Powell was interviewed January 19 on CNN's
Late Edition With Wolf Blitzer. He answered questions about U.S.
policy toward Iraq and North Korea, and also answered a domestic
policy question concerning affirmative action. The transcript of the
interview follows:
(begin transcript)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
INTERVIEW
Secretary Of State Colin L. Powell
On CNN's Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer
January 19, 2003
MR. BLITZER:  Mr. Secretary, thanks once again for joining us.
SECRETARY POWELL: Good morning, Wolf, and congratulations on your
fifth anniversary.
MR. BLITZER: Oh, thank you very much. A quick question everybody in
the country, people around the world, want to know: Will there be a
war with Iraq?
SECRETARY POWELL: We're still hoping for a peaceful solution, but it
is up to Saddam Hussein and Iraq to make that decision. Dr. Blix and
Dr. ElBaradei are in Baghdad today. I hope they will make it clear to
Saddam Hussein that he is running out of time, he has got to
cooperate; moreover, he has got to disarm and he has got to do it in a
way that the inspectors don't have to go hunt-and-peck looking for
things, but that Iraq comes forward and meets the will of the
international community that it must disarm of its weapons of mass
destruction. If they do that, there is still a chance for a peaceful
solution.
MR. BLITZER:  How much time do the Iraqis have?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, we'll see. I think time is running out. We
can't keep this up forever. And we'll all look forward to receiving
the report from Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei next Monday, the 27th of
January, at the United Nations. And after that, the Security Council
will have an opportunity to make its judgment as to what should happen
next, and the President of the United States will also make his
judgment as to what he thinks should happen next.
MR. BLITZER: Well, you're quoted as saying earlier in the week, you
said, "We believe a persuasive case will be there at the end of the
month that Iraq is not cooperating."
SECRETARY POWELL: I think there is a persuasive case there now. Iraq
has given us a false declaration in December, still has not accounted
for stocks of various biological and chemical agents that we know they
had. And there is a discrepancy between what they had and what they
are now reporting they have, and they have not solved those
discrepancies. And we simply can't walk away from that kind of
discrepancy.
So there is a case now. And we will see how strong that case looks
when Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei report, but I think it's fairly
persuasive that they are not cooperating, and I hope they understand
as a result of the visit of the two chief inspectors today that time
is running out on them.
MR. BLITZER: It's one thing not to cooperate. It's another thing to
find a smoking gun. The inspectors say so far they have not found a
smoking gun. Is not cooperating enough of a smoking gun, if you will,
to justify war?
SECRETARY POWELL: That will be a matter for the Council to decide, and
the President will make his own decision. But, you know, look at what
we have found. We have found false declarations. There are all sorts
of toxic agents that are unaccounted for. And then this week, the
inspectors found chemical rockets. Now, those rockets are not just
laying benignly around. What are they doing there? Why --
MR. BLITZER:  But they were --
SECRETARY POWELL: What difference does it make? The point is that they
are designed for a unique purpose, and that is to carry a chemical
agent. And so they should have been declared. They should have been
destroyed. This is the kind of weapon that Iraq says it no longer has,
and yet there it is.
Now, whether that constitutes one person's smoking gun or some other
person's smoking gun, I think it contributes to a body of evidence
that suggests Iraq is not disarming and is not cooperating with
efforts of the United Nations inspectors to get them to disarm. And
that's what we're looking for, and I hope that message comes through
clearly today when they meet with the Iraqi officials.
MR. BLITZER: Well, the Iraqis say it was simply a slip, they made a
mistake.
SECRETARY POWELL: Yeah. Well, how many other slips are there out
there? They are laying there. They are in a facility. It's not a slip.
They knew they were there. Somebody knew they were there. The
inspectors found them. They didn't have a chance to hide these. How
many other slips are there?
And when you look at the declaration, when you look at the efforts
they have been taking to hide things, when you see the documents that
are relevant -- relevant to knowing the truth -- are being squirreled
away in the homes of scientists, when scientists are not allowed to
come forward, then you can't say that they are participating in the
effort to make sure they have no weapons of mass destruction.
And so I think their record so far, since the passage of U.N.
Resolution 1441, is not a good record. And they have very little time
left to make it a good record. And everybody knows what they have to
do: come forward, tell the truth, give an accurate declaration, tell
us what happened to these stocks of biological and chemical agents,
tell us what you've got and put it out there for the inspectors to
see. If you say you don't have them, if you say you're clean, then
come clean.
And time is running out, and we just can't keep hunting and pecking
and looking and trying to see if we can capture something or discover
something. Iraq is supposed to be cooperating in this effort. Iraq is
supposed to be disarming. And they have not established, to my
satisfaction anyway, and I think to the satisfaction of the
international community, that they are moving in good faith to disarm,
which is what they're supposed to do under the resolution.
MR. BLITZER: You keep saying time is running out. How much time do
they have?
SECRETARY POWELL: I'm not prepared to give a time here today, Wolf,
because I think it's important that we continue this deliberative
process that was set out in U.N. Resolution 1441. Dr. Blix and Dr.
ElBaradei will report next Monday. The Council will hear their report,
take their report into account. So will the President of the United
States and his advisors. And then we'll see what happens next or what
steps are appropriate after that.
MR. BLITZER: You have heard the chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix say
that after January 27th, a week from tomorrow, they still need 60 days
thereafter to come up with another review before any action
necessarily could be taken. Do you accept that argument?
SECRETARY POWELL: I heard Dr. Blix, and what he's referring to, of
course, is another U.N. Resolution, [UNSC] 1284, which has another
deadline to it.
MR. BLITZER:  That was back in 1998.
SECRETARY POWELL: Right. Well, 1999, if I'm not mistaken. Early 1999.
But the real issue is how the Council views this. 1441, the latest
resolution, was rather specific. We want an accurate, complete and
full declaration of what you're doing. We want cooperation with
inspections. We don't want you to frustrate their efforts. Iraq is
making it hard for us to perform aerial reconnaissance in support of
the U.N. inspectors. And so far, they have not acted in a way that
suggests they're serious about disarming. And if they're not serious
about disarming, the Council should recognize that next week and start
to decide what to do, and not just say let's just keep going and slip
into the 1284 -- the other resolution -- route.
And so I know Dr. Blix is operating under two resolutions, but the
fact of the matter, it will be up to the Council to decide what
happens next after Dr. Blix reports and Dr. ElBaradei reports.
MR. BLITZER: Some of the allies -- the French, other permanent members
of the Security Council, the Russians -- say they need a second
resolution before there can be any war. You disagree with them. Why?
SECRETARY POWELL: I'm saying that there is more than enough evidence,
and frankly there is more than enough authority in previous
resolutions, if it becomes necessary to act unilaterally or with
likeminded nations.
But there are a number of nations who say they would like to see a
second resolution. Well, the United States will examine the evidence
that is before us after the two inspectors report next week. We'll
consult with our friends and allies. And it is up to the Security
Council to decide whether or not they want a referral to Council to
see whether or not a second resolution is appropriate at this time.
And if that is what the Council wants to do, the United States would
certainly participate in that debate. But the President has always
said, from the very beginning, that the object is to disarm Iraq, and
if the U.N. is not willing to do it and is not willing to be relevant
in a situation such as this, the United States reserves the option, if
it feels it must do so, to act with like-minded nations to disarm
Iraq.
MR. BLITZER: But as you well know, being a former Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, you can't keep tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands of U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf region forever in an
unlimited capacity, 50- or 60- or 70,000 Marines aboard amphibious
assault ships under a hot sun in the Persian Gulf. How long can you
keep them there? So there is a sort of deadline that's created by the
deployment.
SECRETARY POWELL: The President has not made a decision. These are
deployments with the purpose of supporting diplomacy and making sure
there is no doubt in Saddam Hussein's mind that we're going to keep
the pressure on. If we had not shown a willingness to put in place a
military force, the inspectors would never have gotten in. Iraq isn't
doing this as, you know, a cooperative effort. They still don't
understand that they must comply with the requirements of 1441 or
they're going to face military action.
And therefore, it is very prudent of the United States and other
nations to begin deploying armed forces to the region. Now, how long
they would stay and how long you can maintain a particular level, I
will let my colleague Don Rumsfeld talk to that. But the President has
made it clear that we will position ourselves to do whatever might be
necessary in the absence of Saddam Hussein disarming under the terms
of 1441.
MR. BLITZER: If you take a look at this proposal apparently out there,
the Saudis, the Turks, others, that want to see some Iraqi generals
overthrow Saddam Hussein or get Saddam Hussein to leave, to go into
exile someplace.
Do either of these proposals, in your estimate, have a chance of
succeeding?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, I'm not familiar with all of these proposals
that are being talked about in the press. I don't know how real any of
them are. I think the Iraqi people would be a lot better off and this
whole situation would be resolved if Saddam Hussein and all of those
around him who think like him -- his sons and the top leadership of
the regime -- would leave so that others could step forward who would
understand the importance of disarming and how a better future awaits
the Iraqi people if they disarmed and cooperated with the U.N. and
used their oil wealth for the benefit of the people, as opposed to
developing weapons of mass destruction to threaten their neighbors and
to threaten the world.
And so if that were to happen, I think that would be just fine, from
my standpoint. But I don't know how much merit there is to these
various so-called proposals.
MR. BLITZER: Are you open to supporting a U.N. Security Council
resolution that would give amnesty to these generals, these military
officers, if they were to rise up against Saddam Hussein?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, I would certainly consider it. I can't say in
the abstract whether or not we would support such a resolution or not.
If this happens or there is a possibility of it happening, I'd be more
than willing to talk to my colleagues in the U.N. about it. But I'm
not going to say today in a hypothetical sense what we might or might
not do.
MR. BLITZER: Five years ago, you were on his program, the first year
that I was hosting this program, and we spoke about Iraq. You were
then in the private sector. I want you to listen to what you said:
"Perhaps we should communicate to the Iraqis that we're not going to
get into this "Perils of Pauline" exercise every few months. Once you
have denied us access to a particular facility, we're going to put
that on the target list and take it out at a time of our choosing, and
not have to create large armadas every four months to impose our
will."
MR. BLITZER: That was a little younger Colin Powell, five years ago,
in April 1998. But those words probably still ring true today.
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, they tried it with Desert Fox, I think later
that year, and it didn't persuade the Iraqis to disarm. And so a
policy was adopted at the end of the Clinton Administration and
continued under this administration, toward the end of the Clinton
Administration, that said regime change seems to be the only thing
these people understand.
And so, once again, they are being given a last chance by the United
Nations, under 1441, to disarm, change the nature of this regime,
disarm, participate in the disarmament, cooperate with your
disarmament, come forward, be honest. You say you don't have them?
Then let's establish the facts that you don't have. But we think you
do have them. And if that is not the solution you choose, then it is
not going to be pinpricks; it's going to be a military operation that
will remove the regime.
MR. BLITZER: Like me, you lived through the anti-war demonstrations
during Vietnam. Yesterday, a big demonstration here in Washington,
elsewhere around the country. How concerned are you that this anti-war
movement seems to be growing across the United States?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, people are free to express their concerns and
there's always a great deal of anxiety when it looks like military
action may be coming. But I think most American people understand that
if we have to undertake military action, it will be for good reason,
and that is to disarm a regime that is threatening its neighbors and
threatening the United States, and they would support the President if
it becomes necessary to undertake military action.
MR. BLITZER: Just ahead, more of my interview with the Secretary of
State. I'll ask him his thoughts on President Bush's position on
affirmative action. We'll also talk about the situation involving
North Korea.
First, we've welcomed you, our Late Edition viewers, from many places
around the world over the past five years. Take a look.
(Programming break.)
MR. BLITZER: Welcome back to our special Fifth Anniversary of Late
Edition. Now back to my interview with the Secretary of State, Colin
Powell.
The New York Times, in an editorial today, writes this: "The Bush
Administration's radically different responses to weapons threats from
Iraq and North Korea have confused the American people. Worse, they
risk sending other rogue states the perverse message that the way to
receive lenient treatment from Washington is to develop nuclear
weapons."
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, I think that's an incorrect assessment. We
don't have a cookie-cutter policy for every situation. Iraq -- we have
tried to solve that problem diplomatically for 12 years.
In the case of North Korea, we all had believed that the problem had
been dealt with with the Agreed Framework of 1994 that, at least for
eight years, capped what was happening at the facilities at Yongbyon.
But we discovered earlier last year that those activities may have
been capped at Yongbyon, but the North Koreans had started another
nuclear weapons development program having to do with enriched
uranium.
And this administration did not ignore those facts, did not walk away
from them. We presented those facts to the North Koreans. We said we
know what you're doing. Now, we want to have a better relationship
with you. We believe there are ways we can help your starving
population, your country without electricity, your country with a
failed economy. We have a bold approach, but you've got to stop this
kind of activity.
And what did they do? They acknowledged the existence of this program.
And so we are now three months into this situation with North Korea.
And the President still believes strongly that a diplomatic solution
is possible, and we're working with our friends and allies to achieve
a diplomatic solution, just as we were trying to do with Iraq for 12
years.
MR. BLITZER:  Are you close?
SECRETARY POWELL: So there isn't inconsistency in the policy. It's, I
think, silly to think that because you're doing -- you're adopting a
certain set of policy tools in one place, you have to adopt them in
another place in the same fashion.
I think we are seeing some progress with respect to the work we are
doing with our friends in the region. This is an international
problem. It's not just a problem between the United States and North
Korea. It's between North Korea and its neighbors and the
international community, the IAEA, the U.N., as well as the United
States. And we are working with all of those parties and I'll be in
New York this afternoon at the U.N. speaking to my fellow foreign
ministers on the Security Council.
MR. BLITZER:  On this issue?
SECRETARY POWELL:  Yes.
MR. BLITZER:  Whether to bring it before the Security Council?
SECRETARY POWELL: We'll be discussing it. Right now, it is not -- it
is being considered by the IAEA, and I hope that the Board of
Governors will meet in the not too distant future in Vienna and, from
that meeting, make a referral of the matter to the Security Council.
MR. BLITZER: The Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist
Seymour Hersch writes a new article in The New Yorker just coming out,
and he writes this:
"One American intelligence official who has attended recent White
House meetings cautioned against relying on the day-to-day
administration statements that emphasize a quick settlement of the
dispute. The public talk of compromise is being matched by much
private talk of high-level vindication. `Bush and Cheney want the
guy's head,' Kim Jong-il's, 'on a platter. Don't be distracted by all
this talk about negotiations. There will be negotiations, but they
have a plan and they are going to get this guy after Iraq. He's their
version of Hitler.'"
SECRETARY POWELL: I have no idea what Mr. Hersch is talking about.
I've been in every meeting with the President since this began to
unfold, since the beginning of the administration, and the President
has made it clear he wants this solved diplomatically. I refer you to
the President's speech in South Korea last February where he spoke
about a better future for the peninsula, where he spoke to the North
and said we want to help, we're helping you with food, and we want to
see the light that exists in the South extend to the North. And so I
have been in no conversation that reflects that kind of judgment.
MR. BLITZER: We have only a minute left, but let me ask you about
affirmative action, an issue the President raised this week in
opposing the University of Michigan's policies on affirmative action.
This is what you said at the Republican convention in 2000. Listen to
this:
"We must understand the cynicism that exists in the black community,
the kind of cynicism that is created when, for example, some in our
party miss no opportunity to roundly and loudly condemn affirmative
action that helped a few thousand black kids get an education, but you
hardly hear a whimper when it's affirmative action for lobbyists who
load our federal tax code with preferences for special interest. It
doesn't work."
MR. BLITZER: Did the President ask for your opinion on affirmative
action before he went public this week?
SECRETARY POWELL: The President and I have spoken about affirmative
action on a number of occasions, and particularly about the time of my
speech to the convention. He was not surprised by my speech. He is
quite familiar with my views on affirmative action. And we had a
conversation about the Michigan case just about the time he was
deciding it.
I think what the President has done in this case is to leave open the
possibility for the court to make a judgment as to how race can or can
not be used, and he restricted the brief that he submitted, that the
government submitted, to the merits of the Michigan case. And I think
reasonable people can differ over that case. The President made a
judgment that he felt that the program followed by the University of
Michigan was unconstitutional, and therefore he felt he had an
obligation to present that point of view to the court.
And it is now up to the court to make a judgment as to whether that
kind of affirmative action program at the University of Michigan is
acceptable or not. And we will see what the court believes. I am, as
you know, a strong proponent of affirmative action. I wish it was
possible for everything to be race-neutral in this country, but I'm
afraid we are not yet at that point where things are race-neutral.
MR. BLITZER: So you still believe that race should be a factor, one of
many factors, in accepting young kids to college?
SECRETARY POWELL: Yes, I think -- I most certainly do. I believe race
should be a factor, among many other factors, in determining the
makeup of a student body of a university. A public university, a
university, exists to educate the public, and if there is any segment
of the public that is not adequately represented in the university, is
the university doing its chartered job for the public?
So, in the case of Michigan, they were trying to get more minorities
into the university and into the law school. They were also trying to
get more students from the upper peninsula of Michigan to make the
university more representative.
Each university goes about this in a different way. President Bush,
when he faced this issue as Governor Bush and found that he had to
change the policies for the University of Texas system, put in place,
or the legislature put in place, with his support, a 10 percent rule
that said that the top 10 percent of all high school graduating
classes in Texas were eligible to go to the public universities of
Texas. That was another way to get at it. President Bush calls it
"affirmative access."
One thing I'm absolutely sure is that President Bush is committed to
diversity in education. And he has said so. He and I have talked about
it on many occasions. It's just that he found that the University of
Michigan case did not meet what he believed was a constitutional test.
MR. BLITZER: Ten seconds. Do you still think the University of
Michigan has the stronger case, as you suggested two years ago?
SECRETARY POWELL: Several years ago when I looked at it, I thought the
University of Michigan had a strong case, and now it is before the
Supreme Court to make a decision.
MR. BLITZER: All right. Mr. Secretary, thanks very much. Good luck to
you.
SECRETARY POWELL:  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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