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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

13 February 2003

Hadley: Contingency Plans Under Way For Postwar Iraq

(Deputy national security advisor describes "Future of Iraq Project")
(640)
By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent
New York -- Outlining a U.S. initiative called the "Future of Iraq
Project," a senior U.S. official February 12 said that rebuilding
Iraq's infrastructure and protecting Iraq's oil supplies will be an
immediate priority in any post-Saddam Hussein reconstruction effort.
In a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations, Stephen Hadley,
deputy national security advisor, said that President Bush has not
made a final decision whether or when to use military force to disarm
Iraq, but extensive planning has begun on how to assist Iraq should
military action be taken.
Hadley described the principles guiding the U.S. government's
contingency planning for the complex, post-war problems and challenges
facing the international community. A joint effort of U.S. officials,
representatives of private agencies, and free Iraqis, the planning
process has identified five principles and a number of specific tasks
that will have to be pursued. Some of the tasks are similar to those
that have been undertaken to help Afghans rebuild their country.
While he did not estimate costs or the duration of the reconstruction
effort, Hadley did say that the United States is prepared to stay in
Iraq "as long as is necessary, but not one day more."
If war comes, Hadley said, "it will be a war of liberation, not
occupation." The United States needs the support of Iraq's people and
it "will work to win that support," he said.
First, he said, the United States and the international community will
have to ensure the rapid flow of humanitarian relief and the quick
start of economic reconstruction efforts, including restoring
electricity and providing clean water and medical care.
"A critical part of the reconstruction effort will be ensuring that
Iraq's oil sector is protected from acts of sabotage by Saddam
Hussein's regime and that its proceeds are applied for the benefit of
the Iraqi people," he said.
"Iraq's oil and other natural resources belong to all the Iraqi people
-- and the United States will respect this fact," Hadley said.
The United States would not dictate the precise nature of the
government. That will be decided by the people of Iraq, Hadley also
said. "But no one should be interested in simply replacing one
dictator with another."
"The goal -- which we are confident we share with Iraq's people -- is
an Iraq that is whole, free, and at peace with itself and its
neighbors," a democracy in which all religions, ethnic communities,
and individual rights are protected, he said.
While most senior Iraqi officials "will be called to account for their
complicity in Saddam's reign of terror," Hadley said, many current
government officials, military officers, and scientists who are not
involved in the regime's crimes will be able to contribute their
talent and experience to rebuilding the country.
Hadley sketched out rough plans for an "Iraqi National Council" to
advise U.S. and coalition authorities, a "judicial council" to revise
Iraq's legal structure, and a "constitutional commission" to draft a
new constitution. He mentioned providing help to create a modern
system of taxation and budgeting, to stabilize the dinar, and to
resolve debt and reparation obligations.
Hadley said that detailed planning is "well under way" to undertake
the complex, dangerous, and expensive task of ridding Iraq of all
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, production capabilities and
delivery systems.
Iraq's terrorist infrastructure must also be eliminated and the United
States and its coalition allies must provide security to prevent
chaos, score-settling and bloodletting, Hadley said.
"Iraq must be preserved as a unified state, with its territorial
integrity intact. Concern for the safety of Iraq's people will begin
not on the day hostilities cease, but on the day they begin," 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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