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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

22 January 2003

Bush Repeats Warning on Dangers Posed by Saddam Hussein

(Says U.S. and "friends of freedom" will disarm Iraq if he will not)
(980)
By Wendy S. Ross
Washington File White House Correspondent
Washington -- In remarks during a speech on the U.S. economy in St.
Louis, Missouri, January 22 President Bush again spoke of the threat
posed to the United States and the world by the Iraqi regime of Saddam
Hussein.
"My hope is that Saddam Hussein will disarm voluntarily; that's my
hope," said Bush. "I take seriously the commitment of any troops into
combat. I desire peace. But in the name of peace, in the name of
securing our future, if Saddam Hussein will not disarm, the United
States of America and friends of freedom will disarm Saddam Hussein."
"And should that path be forced upon us," Bush said, "there will be
serious consequences for the dictator in Iraq. And there will be
serious consequences for any Iraqi general or soldier who were to use
weapons of mass destruction on our troops or on innocent lives within
Iraq.
"Should any Iraqi officer or soldier receive an order from Saddam
Hussein, or his sons, or any of the killers who occupy the high levels
of their government, my advice is, don't follow that order." Bush
warned that if they chose to do so, they would be tried as war
criminals once the fighting was over.
Bush told the people of Iraq that if the United States is forced into
action, they will be freed from oppression, torture, and murder, and
will be able to realize their full potential.
"The dictator of Iraq has got weapons of mass destruction. He has used
weapons of mass destruction. He can't stand America and what we stand
for. He can't stand our friends and allies. He's a dangerous,
dangerous man with dangerous, dangerous weapons. And that's why the
world came together at the United Nations Security Council and said,
Mr. Saddam Hussein must disarm. The message was as clear as can
possibly be delivered -- Mr. Saddam Hussein must disarm.
"And the first step of that disarmament was for him to make a
declaration of his weapons -- 12,000 pages of deceit and deception
were placed at the U.N. Security Council. We know what it means to
disarm; we know what a disarmed regime does. We know how a disarmed
regime accounts for weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein is not
disarming, like the world has told him he must do.
"He's a dangerous man, with dangerous weapons. He's a danger to
America, and our friends and allies. And that's why the world has
said, disarm," Bush said.
"But Saddam Hussein has learned lessons from the past. See, the first
time he was told to disarm was 11 years ago. He is adept at deception
and delays and denying. He asked for more time so he can give the
so-called inspectors more runaround. He's interested in playing hide
and seek in a huge country. He's not interested in disarming."
Bush said he hopes the world has learned the lessons from the past,
just as he hopes Saddam Hussein has learned the lessons from the past.
"It's time for us to hold the world to account, and for Saddam to be
held to account. We must not be fooled by the ways of the past. After
all, we just discovered undeclared chemical warheads in Iraq. It's
incredibly troubling and disturbing ... evidence of a man not
disarming."
"He wants to play a game," said Bush. "For the sake of peace, we must
not let him play a game. And so the resolutions of the Security
Council will be enforced."
Bush also discussed the U.S. war against terrorism that began after
the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States.
Even though September 11 "appears to be distant in our rear-view
mirror, our country is still under threat," Bush said.
"We're making progress. Sometimes you'll see it, sometimes you won't.
And progress comes in different kinds of ways. Our friends in Great
Britain have recently uncovered and have arrested a group of al Qaeda
that they think were intending to poison the British people. Slowly
but surely, we're rounding them up. That coalition of freedom-loving
people still stands: Either you're with us and those of us who love
freedom, or you're with the enemy," he said.
"We've got an obligation to our children to hunt these people down.
We've also got an obligation to our children to address problems
before they come back to America, and in my judgment, in my considered
judgment, there is a real risk to America and our friends and allies
in Iraq," Bush said.
Earlier in the day, on Air Force One en route to Missouri, White House
Press Secretary Ari Fleischer noted that a day after the White House
issued its 22 page pamphlet detailing Saddam Hussein's disinformation
and propaganda from 1990 to 2003, he again "this morning lied to the
Iraqi people and the world.
"Iraq claimed to have shot down a Predator [drone] this morning. There
is no truth to the Iraqi claim. They couldn't even wait 24 hours to
show the world that they, once again, lie," Fleischer said.
Asked by reporters on the plane about recent public opinion polls in
the United States, some of which indicate a decrease in support for
military action against Iraq, Fleischer said, "there should be no
misunderstanding the position of the American people on this.
Pollsters can ask every type of follow-up question they want, but the
basic fundamentals are unchanged, and that is the strong majority of
the American people are willing to support military action if it comes
down to that. And if the president makes that case to the American
people, I think you will see even more of the country supporting" it.
(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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