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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

19 January 2003

"Wisdom Demands That Iraq Be Disarmed," Powell Says

(Secretary of state interviewed on CBS-TV January 19) (2210)
Secretary of State Colin Powell was interviewed January 19 on CBS-TV's
"Face the Nation" with Bob Schieffer. He answered questions concerning
U.S. policy toward Iraq, as well a domestic policy question concerning
affirmative action. The text of the interview follows:
(begin transcript)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
Secretary Of State Colin L. Powell
On CBS's Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer
January 19, 2003
MR. SCHIEFFER: And good morning again. We are pleased this morning to
have with us in the studio the Secretary of State. Mr. Secretary,
thank you for coming. I'll get right to it. Yesterday, we saw tens of
thousands of demonstrators converge on Washington -- a fairly large
crowd, I would say, a very large crowd considering that the weather
was in the 20s. They say we should not go to war against Iraq.
I would just like to ask you this morning, what do you say to those
people who say we shouldn't?
SECRETARY POWELL: What I would say to them is that the President is
trying every means not to go to war, but the decision to go to war is
in the hands of Saddam Hussein. This is a man who has had weapons of
mass destruction, who has used them against his own people, used them
against his neighbors. The international community, the United
Nations, under U.N. Resolution 1441 and many previous resolutions,
have said disarm. If he disarms, there will be no war. So the burden
is on him.
But what is clear is that the international community cannot allow
Saddam Hussein to continue to deny his responsibilities. And now
today, Dr. Hans Blix of UNMOVIC [United Nations Monitoring,
Verification and Inspection Commission] and Dr. ElBaradei of the
International Atomic Energy Agency are in Baghdad to give them one
last chance to disarm and to cooperate with the inspectors in that
disarmament process. And if he does that, then war can be avoided. But
we cannot step back from this challenge.
MR. SCHIEFFER: Well, Mr. Blix has said that it may take several months
more to come to some sort of definitive conclusion about whether he
has disarmed or not. President Chirac of France said yesterday, and
these are his words, "Wisdom requires that we grant the inspectors'
request for more time."
Should we give them more time?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, the next step in this process is to receive a
report from the two chief inspectors, Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei. Next
Monday, the 27th of January, they will appear before the Security
Council. We should listen carefully to what they say, and then I am
sure the Council, the Security Council, will consider what they say,
and so will President Bush.
What we have to make a judgment on now is whether or not Saddam
Hussein is serious about disarming, and is he cooperating with the
inspectors in that disarmament process. If he is not, if he is
continuing to try to hide things, if we have to keep discovering
rockets that were undeclared that were supposed to carry chemical
warheads, if we continue to find that documents having to do with
nuclear weapons have been hidden in the homes of scientists, then it
doesn't make any difference how long the inspection goes on because
they're not going to get to the truth because Saddam Hussein does not
want them to get to the truth.
And that's the judgment, and it's going to be a very important
judgment for the Security Council to make and for President Bush to
make.
MR. SCHIEFFER: Well, now, you say in an interview that I believe is
being published today in Berlin that by the end of January -- and
you're talking about the 27th -- it will have been convincingly proven
that Iraq has not been cooperating.
What is it that you want them to do, Mr. Secretary, that they're not
doing?
SECRETARY POWELL: What I said in the interview is that I believe a
persuasive case will be there, and I think that persuasive case is
there now, that they're not cooperating. What we wanted from them
under U.N. Resolution 1441 was a full, complete and accurate
declaration. Nobody in the Security Council is saying that the
declaration they put forward is full and complete. There are questions
about what they did with anthrax that they had, with botulinum toxin,
with all kinds of horrible biological and chemical agents that they
have not accounted for. They have not fully accounted for all of the
weapons that they have that can deliver such materials. They have not
fully reported to the Council on what they might or might not have
been doing with respect to nuclear weapons development.
So what we want is a full disclosure on the part of Iraq. The
inspectors should not be sneaking around trying to find out who might
have something hidden. If Iraq were serious, they should be presenting
everything that they have. I mean, the chemical warheads that were
found earlier on the rockets this week, the question of whether that's
a smoking gun or not is not the issue. The issue is, once again, here
are items, dangerous items that were not reported by Iraq that should
have been reported. They should have been destroyed.
And so that is what we are looking for: full cooperation on the part
of Iraq in its disarmament. It says it's disarmed. It should be
willing to put forward documents, to make witnesses available, to let
planes fly over and reconnaissance missions to assist the inspectors
so that the inspectors can work with the Iraqis in presenting the case
to the international community that Iraq is disarmed. Disarmament is
what it's all about.
MR. SCHIEFFER: Well, I think just yesterday Hans Blix told Dan Rather
that they had not found a smoking gun as yet. And as I listen to you
this morning, it seems to me that what you're saying is it's not that
we have to find weapons of mass destruction, it's just that they're
not cooperating; that would be justification enough to take action.
SECRETARY POWELL: It is their responsibility under 1441 to cooperate
fully with the inspectors in the disarmament process. Dr. Blix says he
has found no smoking gun, but he has also said that all he is getting
from the Iraqis is passive cooperation: catch us if you can; if you
find something, we might admit it, but we're working hard to deceive
you, to hide things, and make it harder for you to get to the truth.
They're not supposed to be making it harder. They're supposed to be
assisting in the disarmament process to demonstrate to the world the
truth of their statements. They say they don't have any weapons of
mass destruction. If that's the case, why did Dr. Blix and Dr.
ElBaradei -- why did they succeed in finding these rockets, whether
their warheads are filled or not with chemical agent? They are there.
They are a potential weapon that could be used in the future.
MR. SCHIEFFER: So just to make sure I understand what you're saying,
you're saying a lack of cooperation would be reason enough to take
military action?
SECRETARY POWELL: What I am saying is that Iraq has an obligation
under 1441 and earlier resolutions to disarm. And one way to
demonstrate that they are disarmed or are going to disarm is to
cooperate with the inspectors and help the inspectors do their job.
The issue is not just the inspections. The issue is disarmament. And
we will get a full report from Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei next week as
to how that process is going.
Time is running out. We can't just keep bouncing this ball down the
street. I think the Security Council will be anxiously awaiting the
reports of the two chief inspectors, and after we have heard what they
have said and seen what they have provided, the Council will have to
make its judgment as to what happens next, and the President will have
to make his judgment.
MR. SCHIEFFER: But, Mr. Secretary, I don't think you would disagree if
I said to you that that view is not prevalent right now among U.N.
Security Council members. I mean, there are quotes all over every
paper you read this morning, where the view in the U.N. is that the
case for using force has become less, rather than more, compelling.
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, let's wait and see what the case looks like
after the inspectors have presented the results of their work. But I
think everybody who signed on to U.N. Resolution 1441, all 15 members
of the Security Council, understood that if we were not getting to
disarmament then the Council would have to come back into session to
make a judgment as to what next steps should be.
MR. SCHIEFFER: And to go back to the question I asked you earlier,
when President Chirac says wisdom requires that we may -- that we
should grant the inspectors more time, if they ask for more time on
January 27th, what would be the US administration's attitude?
SECRETARY POWELL: We will wait and see what they say and what they ask
for and what they believe their needs are. I heard what President
Chirac said. But wisdom demands that Iraq be disarmed. Wisdom demands
that these kinds of weapons not be allowed to remain in the hands of
an individual like Saddam Hussein or a regime like the Iraqi regime.
MR. SCHIEFFER: Let me ask you about reports that the Saudis and the
Turks have launched a diplomatic effort to try to force Saddam to step
down. They've offered such things as exile, amnesty for him and for
his extended family. What do you think of that? Do you think that has
a chance of succeeding?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, all I know is that I've read these reports. I
don't know if there have actually been such offers or not, and so
that's all I can say about it. I don't know the truth of these
reports. But --
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Well, if he left --
SECRETARY POWELL: If he were to leave and take with him members of his
family and the ruling regime, then, in effect, we would have a
different regime. And the challenge before us then would be to see
whether or not that new regime would commit itself to eliminating
weapons of mass destruction, satisfying the international community
that they are interested in the welfare of their people and not in
threatening their own people or threatening their neighbors, then we
would have had an entirely new situation presented to the
international community and we might be able to avoid war. So I would
encourage Saddam Hussein, if he is getting any messages of this type,
to listen to them carefully.
MR. SCHIEFFER: All right. Let me shift to the President's statements
this week and the legal brief that the administration filed coming out
against the affirmative action plan for admissions at the University
of Michigan. I've discovered that back during Campaign 2000, you said
that you believe affirmative is still necessary. You said you will
continue to speak out for it. And you said at that time, and I quote
you directly, "There is a case now pending, of course, with the
University of Michigan that I hope the university wins."
So do you take the other side that the President took in his statement
this week and in the briefs he filed?
SECRETARY POWELL: The President and I have spoken about affirmative
action and the need for diversity in our universities on many
occasions, long before I came in government, when he and I would talk
about youth programs. And we have a common desire, the President and
I, and I think Dr. Rice and all of us in the administration, to see
our universities as diverse places, where all members of the public
served by the university have a chance to participate in the
educational activities of the university.
How best to achieve that is a challenge and has always been a
challenge. I am a strong believer in affirmative action. The President
likes to call it "affirmative access."
In the Michigan case, whereas I have expressed my support for the
policies used by the University of Michigan, the President, in looking
at it, came to the conclusion that it was constitutionally flawed
based on the legal advice he received. And he also had the benefit of
advice from Dr. Condi Rice, his National Security Advisor, who was a
provost of a university for six years.
And so he came down on that side of the issue and I understand why he
did. But I do know that he is absolutely committed to diversity, and
the manner in which the brief has been filed to the court allows the
court to make its choice on the Michigan case but doesn't go to the
underlying issues.
MR. SCHIEFFER: All right. Mr. Secretary, thank you so much for being
with us this morning.
(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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