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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

20 January 2003

Powell: Iraq's Actions to Date "Just More of the Same"

(January report not the beginning, secretary of state says) (810)
By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent
United Nations -- Attending a Security Council meeting on terrorism
January 20, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell used the occasion to
warn Iraq that "time is running out" for it to eliminate its weapons
of mass destruction and reminded the council that it must not shrink
from its responsibilities.
In his formal speech to the council and during a brief press
conference afterward, Powell stressed that both Iraq and the 15-nation
Security Council have obligations and responsibilities under
resolution 1441, which was unanimously adopted in November 2002. Those
responsibilities, the secretary said, will be a key issue when the
chief weapons inspectors of the U.N. Monitoring, Verification and
Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) make the first major report required by the resolution
on January 27.
Powell emphasized that neither the report nor the discovery of empty
chemical warheads in Iraq five days ago is the starting point of the
effort to disarm Iraq.
"This is not the beginning," he said. "They have known for years how
many chemical weapons warheads they have. ... The inspectors had to
discover another cache of them last week and then suddenly the Iraqis
say, 'oh, by the way, we have found four more.'"
"They know what they have. It is their obligation to come forward. We
cannot let them dribble this information and dribble these items out
for as long as they choose to in an effort to thwart the will of the
international community," Powell said.
Security Council resolution 1441 "lays out clearly Iraq has an
obligation to provide to the inspectors all the information that they
need to do their job. Iraq has an obligation to have submitted a
complete, accurate declaration. Iraq has an obligation to create
conditions within Iraq so that the inspectors can do their work and
not guess at where things might be," the secretary said.
"I want there to be no mistake about this: time is running out. There
is no question Iraq continues not to understand the seriousness of the
position that it is in. This is the time for it to realize that we
will not just allow Iraq to frustrate the will of the United Nations,"
Powell said.
The secretary said that Iraq's pledge to the chief weapons inspectors
to be more helpful and appoint a team to look for other chemical
weapons is "just more of the same."
"Only under pressure does Iraq respond," Powell said.
Iraq could avoid a war by a "very simple matter ... come clean" about
its weapons of mass destruction, he said.
"We will anxiously await the chief inspectors' report next Monday and
then the council has to examine Iraq's behavior against the
requirements of 1441 and make a judgment as to what should happen
next," he said.
Powell said that he had discussed Iraq with the foreign ministers
attending the terrorism session and expected to continue talks at the
luncheon being hosted by France, which is president of the council for
the month of January. He said the United States is anxiously awaiting
the January 27 report.
"I assure you in the days after (January 27) there will be many
conversations between me and my colleagues to determine what the steps
will be to make a judgment as to whether or not Iraq is disarming,"
the secretary said.
"If Iraq is disarming then there may be a solution ... but if Iraq is
not disarming the United Nations cannot simply turn its head away and
ignore this lack of respect Iraq has for the United Nations and
international community," he said.
In his formal speech to the Security Council Powell said, "We must not
shrink from our duties and responsibilities when the material comes
before us next week."
"We cannot fail to take the action that may be necessary because we
are afraid of what others might do. We cannot be shocked into
impotence because we are afraid of the difficult choices that are
ahead of us," he said.
"We have much difficult work in the days ahead," Powell continued,
"but we cannot shrink from the responsibilities of dealing with a
regime that has gone about development, acquiring, stocking of weapons
of mass destruction; that committed terrorist acts against its
neighbors and its own people; trampled human rights of its people and
its neighbors.
"So however difficult the road ahead may be ... we must not shrink
from the need to travel down that road. Hopefully there will be a
peaceful solution, but if Iraq does not come into full compliance we
must not shrink from the responsibility that we set before ourselves
when we adopted 1441," he said.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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