UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

08 February 2003

Text: Rumsfeld Urges Nations to Prepare for War with Iraq

(Address to Munich Conference on European Security Policy) (2720)
The international community should begin preparing for war with Iraq
in the face of that country's continued defiance of U.N. resolutions
to disarm itself of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), according to
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
In his address to the Munich Conference on European Security Policy
February 8, Rumsfeld said the United States still hopes that force may
not be necessary to disarm Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, but added that
"the risks of war [must] be balanced against the risks of doing
nothing while Iraq pursues the tools of mass destruction."
"We all hope for a peaceful solution. But the one chance for a
peaceful solution is to make clear that free nations are prepared to
use force if necessary -- that the world is united and, while
reluctant, is willing to act," he said.
Rumsfeld warned that delaying preparations for war with Iraq would
make it more, not less, likely to occur.
"[D]elaying preparations sends a signal of uncertainty, instead of a
signal of resolve," he said. "If the international community once
again shows a lack of resolve, there is no chance that Saddam Hussein
will disarm voluntarily or flee his country -- and thus little chance
of a peaceful outcome."
"There is another reason to prepare now: NATO member nations have an
Article V commitment to defend Turkey, should it come under attack by
Iraq," Rumsfeld continued. "Those preventing the Alliance from taking
even minimum measures to prepare to do so, risk undermining the
credibility of the NATO Alliance."
Rumsfeld warned that delaying preparations for war with Iraq would
also undermine the credibility of the United Nations.
"Seventeen times the United Nations has drawn a line in the sand --
and 17 times Saddam Hussein has crossed that line. As last week's
statement by the eight European leaders so eloquently put it, quote:
'If [those resolutions] are not complied with, the Security Council
will lose its credibility and world peace will suffer as a result.'"
"There are moments in history when the judgment and the resolve of
free nations are put to the test. This is such a moment," Rumsfeld
said.
Following is the text of Rumsfeld's remarks, as released by the
Department of Defense:
(begin text)
Secretary Rumsfeld
Address to the Munich Conference on European Security Policy
Munich, Germany
Dr. Horst Teltschik, ministers, parliamentarians, distinguished
guests, friends, ladies and gentlemen. I thank you so much. Horst, I'm
delighted to be with you. Indeed it is most certainly not my first
visit to this conference. I've come off and on over many decades. It's
a particular pleasure to be back in Europe! I'm told that when I used
the phase "old Europe" the other day, it caused a bit of a stir. I
don't quite understand what the fuss is about. As I said at the time
-- at my age, I consider "old" a term of endearment. Like an old
friend.
As a matter of fact, you mentioned, I forget quite how you said I say
things, but I'm told one of the German newspapers referenced the fact
that my ancestors came from northern Germany and that it is an area
known for plain, straight talk.
One of the advantages of age, and I've got some, when you are as old
as I am, you've seen a lot of history. I lived through our depression
and World War II. A young man when the NATO Alliance was founded, the
names Churchill, Roosevelt, Adenauer, Marshall and Truman were not
figures I learned about from history, but leaders that we all followed
over the years, as Europe drifted into war and then was lifted from
the ashes of World War II. They helped build our transatlantic
Alliance and fashioned it into a bulwark against tyranny and in
defense of common values and our freedom.
When the President appointed me Ambassador to NATO in the early 1970s,
it was a defining moment in my life. I worked closely with dedicated
and highly skilled diplomats such as Andre de Starke, the former dean
of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, my close friend Francois de
Rose, then the French Ambassador to NATO, Franz Krapf from the Federal
Republic of Germany, and so many other very talented diplomats. None
of us could have imagined then that NATO leaders would one day meet in
Prague, where they would invite Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovenia,
Slovakia, Bulgaria and Romania to become members of the Atlantic
Alliance.
It is remarkable how Europe has changed just over the course of my
lifetime. Thanks to NATO's efforts, the center of Europe has indeed
shifted eastward -- and our Alliance is stronger for it.
Not only is the map of Europe being transformed, but so too is the map
of the world. Out of the tragedy of September 11th came great
responsibilities to be sure, but also unprecedented opportunities --
to tear down calcified barriers left over from earlier eras and build
new relationships with countries that would have been unimaginable
just a few short years ago. And that is precisely what we have been
doing in the global war on terror.
Our coalition for the global war on terror today includes some 90
nations -- almost half the world. It is the largest coalition in human
history. We are fighting alongside old allies and new friends alike.
(Whoops -- there's that word "old" again.) Some are involved in the
military effort in Afghanistan. Others are helping elsewhere in the
world -- in Asia, the Gulf, the Horn of Africa. Some are helping with
stability operations; still others are providing basing, re-fueling,
over-flight, and intelligence. Some are not participating in the
military effort but are helping in the financial, diplomatic and law
enforcement efforts. All of these are important and deeply appreciated
by all nations committed to the global war on terrorism.
As to Iraq, we still hope that force may not be necessary to disarm
Saddam Hussein. If it comes to that; however, we already know that the
same will hold true -- some countries will participate, while others
may choose not to. The strength of our coalition is that we do not
expect every member to be a party of every undertaking.
The support that has already been pledged to disarm Iraq, here in
Europe and across the world, is impressive and it's growing. A large
number of nations have already said they will be with us in a
coalition of the willing -- and more are stepping up each day.
Last week, the leaders of Britain, the Czech Republic, Denmark,
Hungary, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Spain, issued a courageous statement
declaring that "the Iraqi regime and its weapons of mass destruction
represent a clear threat to world security," and pledging that they
would "remain united in insisting that his regime be disarmed."
Their statement was followed this week by an equally bold declaration
by the "Vilnius 10" -- Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia,
Bulgaria and Romania, Albania, Croatia and Macedonia. They declared:
"Our countries understand the dangers posed by tyranny and the special
responsibility of democracies to defend shared values... We are
prepared to contribute to an international coalition to enforce
[Resolution 1441] and the disarmament of Iraq."
Clearly, momentum is building -- momentum that sends a critically
important message to the Iraqi regime -- about the seriousness of
purpose and the world's determination that Iraq disarm.
Let me be clear: no one wants war. No, war is never a first or an easy
choice. But the risks of war to be balanced against the risks of doing
nothing while Iraq pursues the tools of mass destruction.
It may be difficult for some to fully understand just how
fundamentally September 11th transformed our country. Americans saw
the attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Towers as a painful and
vivid foreshadowing of far more deadly attacks to come. We looked at
the destruction caused by the terrorists, who took jetliners, turned
them into missiles, and used them to kill 3,000 innocent men, women
and children -- and we considered the destruction that could be caused
by an adversary armed with nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.
Instead of 3,000 to be killed, it could be 30,000, 300,000.
Konrad Adenauer once said that "history is the sum total of things
that could have been avoided." With history, we have the advantage of
hindsight. But we must use that advantage to learn. Our challenge
today is even more difficult. It is to try to connect the dots before
the fact -- to prevent an attack before it happens -- not to wait and
then hope to try to pick up the pieces after it happens.
To do so, we must come to terms with a fundamental truth -- we have
reached a point in history when the margin for error that we once
enjoyed is gone. In the 20th century, we, all of us here, were
dealing, for the most part, with conventional weapons that could kill
hundreds or thousands of people. If we miscalculated -- or
underestimated or ignored a threat -- it could absorb an attack,
recover, take a deep breath, mobilize, and go and defeat an attacker.
In the 21st century, that's not the case; the cost of underestimating
the threat is unthinkable.
There is a momentous fact of life that we must come to terms with and
it is the nexus between weapons of mass destruction, terrorist states
and terrorist networks. On September 11th, terrorist states discovered
that missiles are not the only way to strike Washington -- or Paris,
or Berlin or Rome or any of our capitals. There are other means of
delivery -- terrorist networks. To the extent a terrorist state
transfers weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups, they could
conceal their responsibility for an attack.
To this day, we still do not know with certainty who was behind the
1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia. We still do not
know who was responsible for the anthrax attacks in the United States.
The nature of terrorist attacks is that it is difficult, and sometimes
impossible, to identify those responsible. And a terrorist state that
can conceal its responsibility for an attack certainly would not be
deterred.
We are all vulnerable to these threats. As President Bush said in
Berlin, "Those who despise human freedom will attack it on every
continent." We need only to look at the recent terrorist bombings in
Kenya or Bali, or the poison cells that have recently been uncovered
and disclosed here in Europe, to see that is the case.
Last week, President Bush spoke to the world about the threat posed by
Saddam Hussein. This week, Secretary Powell presented additional
information in the Security Council:
-- Intercepted communications between Iraqi officials,
-- Satellite images of Iraqi weapons facilities, and
-- Human intelligence -- from agents inside Iraq, defectors and
detainees captured in the global war on terror.
He presented not opinions, not conjecture, but facts demonstrating:
-- Iraq's ongoing pursuit of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons;
-- Its development of delivery systems, including missiles and
unmanned aerial vehicles;
-- Its tests of chemical weapons on human beings;
-- Its ongoing efforts to deceive UN inspectors and conceal its WMD
programs; and
-- Its ties to terrorist networks, including al-Qaeda-affiliated cells
operating in Baghdad.
It is difficult to believe there still could be question in the minds
of reasonable people open to the facts before them. The threat is
there to see. And if the worst were to happen -- and if we had done
nothing to stop it -- not one of us here today could honestly say that
it was a surprise. It will not be a surprise. We are on notice, each
of our nations, each of us individually. Really the only question is:
what will we do about it?
We all hope for a peaceful solution. But the one chance for a peaceful
solution is to make clear that free nations are prepared to use force
if necessary -- that the world is united and, while reluctant, is
willing to act.
There are those who counsel that we should delay preparations.
Ironically, that approach could well make war more likely, not less
likely -- because delaying preparations sends a signal of uncertainty,
instead of a signal of resolve. If the international community once
again shows a lack of resolve, there is no chance that Saddam Hussein
will disarm voluntarily or flee his country -- and thus little chance
of a peaceful outcome.
There is another reason to prepare now: NATO member nations have an
Article V commitment to defend Turkey, should it come under attack by
Iraq. Those preventing the Alliance from taking even minimum measures
to prepare to do so, risk undermining the credibility of the NATO
Alliance.
The stakes are high. Iraq is now defying the 17th UN Security Council
resolution. The Council voted to warn Iraq that this was its "final
opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations." Quote,
unquote. The resolution, which passed unanimously, did not say the
"next to final opportunity." It said the "final opportunity." And
those who voted for it, and they voted unanimously, knew what it said.
They were explicitly reminded what it said. The question is did the UN
mean it? Did they mean it? We will soon know.
Seventeen times the United Nations has drawn a line in the sand -- and
17 times Saddam Hussein has crossed that line. As last week's
statement by the eight European leaders so eloquently put it, quote:
"If [those resolutions] are not complied with, the Security Council
will lose its credibility and world peace will suffer as a result."
Let me add these sad thoughts about the state of the United Nations.
An institution that, with the support and acquiescence of many of the
nations represented in this room, that would permit Iraq, a terrorist
state that refuses to disarm, to become soon the chair of the United
Nations Commission on Disarmament, and which recently elected Libya --
a terrorist state -- to chair the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights of all things, seems not to be even struggling to regain
credibility.
That these acts of irresponsibility could happen now, at this moment
in history, is breathtaking. Those acts will be marked in the history
of the UN as either the low point of that institution in retreat, or
the turning point when the UN woke up, took hold of itself, and moved
away from a path of ridicule to a path of responsibility.
To understand what is at stake, it is worth reminding ourselves of the
history of the UN's predecessor, the League of Nations. When the
League failed to act after the invasion of Abyssinia, it was
discredited as an instrument of peace. It was discredited properly.
The lesson of that experience was best summed up at the time by
Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King, who declared: "Collective
bluffing cannot bring about collective security."
That lesson is as true today, at the start of the 21st century, as it
was in the 20th century. The question before us is -- have we learned
it?
There are moments in history when the judgment and the resolve of free
nations are put to the test. This is such a moment. The security
environment we are entering is the most dangerous the world has seen.
The lives of our children and grandchildren could well hang in the
balance.
When they look back at this period, what will they say of us? Have we
properly recognized the seriousness of the threat, the nexus between
weapons of mass destruction, terrorist states and terrorist networks?
Will they say we stood still -- paralyzed by a straightjacket of
indecision and 20th century thinking -- while dangers gathered? Or
will they say that we recognized the coming danger, united, and took
action before it was too late?
The coming days and weeks will tell. Thank you very much.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list