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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

26 February 2003

Fact Sheet Outlines Humanitarian Assistance Preparations for Iraq

(White House Fact Sheet) (1020)
Following is a fact sheet issued by the Office of Global
Communications of the White House about preparations for humanitarian
assistance for Iraq in the event of war:
(begin fact sheet)
Humanitarian Assistance Preparations for Iraq
"[A]s we and our coalition partners are doing in Afghanistan, we will
bring to the Iraqi people food and medicines and supplies - and
freedom."
-- President Bush, State of the Union Address, January 28, 2003
Today the humanitarian situation in Iraq is tenuous. More than 750,000
refugees have fled Iraq, and there are approximately 800,000 people
displaced from their homes within the country.
President Bush has repeatedly stressed his hope that the Iraq regime
will peacefully disarm. We recognize that military action in Iraq, if
necessary, would have adverse humanitarian consequences. Many of those
consequences could result from Saddam's actions. Destructive acts by
Saddam, including co-location of military assets with civilians,
targeting of civilians, encouragement of ethnic violence, destruction
of the infrastructure, and WMD use, would increase the suffering of
Iraq's people and make the provision of relief much harder. We have
been planning over the last several months, across all relevant
agencies, to limit any such consequences and provide relief quickly.
Our humanitarian relief strategy has six key components:
1. Minimize displacement, damage to the infrastructure, and disruption
of services
The U.S. Government (USG) recognizes the extent to which Iraqi
civilians rely on infrastructure for vital services. We are therefore
identifying key humanitarian infrastructure and cultural sites for
protection to the extent possible. Military campaign planning for the
liberation of Iraq is carefully tailored to minimize impact on
civilian populations. In addition, we hope to discourage population
displacement through an information campaign that will reassure those
populations not at risk that they are safe in their homes. We will
also work to promptly provide aid and rapidly restore services.
2.     Rely Primarily on Civilian Relief Agencies
The USG is coordinating and planning across all relevant agencies for
relief and reconstruction in Iraq, with civilian agencies and
personnel in the lead. We recognize the expertise and capacity of the
United Nations, other international organizations, and NGOs in
humanitarian relief operations, and we plan to support them --
facilitating and funding their efforts -- to the greatest extent
possible. USAID's Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) and
the State Department's Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration
have been meeting with representatives of the international aid
community for several months.
UN agencies often play a key role providing and coordinating
humanitarian aid during crises. We welcome UN plans to have their
operational agencies play a similar role in Iraq, and want to work
with UN agencies to support and facilitate their activities.
The US military does not have a lead role in humanitarian relief
activities, but will facilitate early secure access, humanitarian
space, and information for USG civilian teams and civilian relief
agencies to fulfill their humanitarian mandates.
3.    Effective Civil-Military Coordination
The USG is training and preparing a 60-person civilian Disaster
Assistance Response Team (DART), the largest of its kind in US
history, that would enter liberated areas of Iraq in coordination with
military forces to assess humanitarian needs, coordinate USG relief
actions, offer immediate in-the-field grant making capacity and
coordination with international organizations, NGOs, donors and
military. The DART, made up of humanitarian emergency professionals
from civilian government agencies, will soon have representatives in
Kuwait, Turkey, Jordan, and Qatar. These are being established with
the cooperation of governments in the region.
4. Facilitating the Operations of International Organizations and NGOs
We will provide civilian experts as liaisons with international
organizations and NGOs. These experts will support and staff various
civil-military coordination centers to facilitate humanitarian efforts
through the sharing of critical information regarding access,
security, and populations in need.
In order to expedite the issuance of licenses to NGOs so they may
operate inside Iraq, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Asset
Control is streamlining licensing procedures. State and USAID now have
blanket licenses that cover agencies receiving grants from them. NGOs
working in areas not controlled by the Government of Iraq or those
conducting only assessments in the country will have an expedited
registration process.
We have provided funding to relief agencies to support their efforts
to plan, hire staff, and pre-position supplies:
The State Department's Bureau for Population, Refugees and Migration
has provided over $15 million to international agencies for
pre-positioning and contingency planning requirements, including $15
million to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and $100,000 to the
International Organization for Migration.
USAID has provided $9.2 million for contingency planning, including
$900,000 to a newly created Joint NGO Emergency Preparedness
Initiative, $2 million to UNICEF, $1.2 million to the UN Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), $5 million to the
World Food Program, and $200,000 to the International Organization for
Migration (IOM). USAID is in discussions with international
organizations to provide an additional $56 million soon for relief and
rehabilitation.
In addition to U.S. contributions, we are encouraging other donors to
contribute to these critical efforts to provide assistance to the
Iraqi people.
5.    Pre-position Relief Supplies
We are stockpiling blankets, water containers, shelter supplies, World
Health Organization essential medicines and other relief items for 1
million people worth approximately $17.3 million. Much of these
stockpiles are being forward-deployed to the region. The USG currently
has 46 40-foot containers of relief supplies en route to 3 warehouses
in the Gulf. The USG is also stockpiling and pre-positioning up to
2.89 million Humanitarian Daily Rations to be used to meet limited and
temporary emergency food needs.
6.    Support the Resumption of the Ration Distribution System
Almost all Iraqis get rations for the Oil-for-Food ration distribution
system, and 60 percent rely on the rations as their sole source of
food. A tremendous effort is being made to minimize disruption to this
system. We recognize the importance of the rations to Iraqis and will
support efforts to maintain the ration system.
(end fact sheet)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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