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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

12 March 2003

Wolfowitz Calls Disarming Iraq "Second Front" in War on Terror

(Deputy defense secretary speaks at VFW conference) (3670)
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz told a Veterans of Foreign
Wars (VFW) conference in Washington that once again, if necessary, the
United States is prepared to wage a war against tyranny. Fighting the
terrorist threat, he said, is "a new kind of struggle," but the
dangers are just as significant as those faced by American soldiers
who have, in the past, "fought and sacrificed in defense of freedom."
Although the Taliban was removed from power in Afghanistan and there
has been progress in the fight against al-Qaeda, disarming Saddam
Hussein's weapons of mass destruction amounts to a "second front in
the war on terrorism," Wolfowitz said March 11. "We know that
terrorists are plotting to create even greater catastrophes than the
attacks we saw on September 11th," he said, and making sure that
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction are removed and are unavailable to
terrorists reduces the potential for horror.
Wolfowitz said the current regime in Iraq has been waging war against
its own people for years and no longer has any legitimate claim to
govern the Iraqi people. He quoted the words of an Iraqi American
attending a White House meeting recently, who said that "war with
Saddam Hussein would be a war for Iraq, not against Iraq," adding that
the Iraqi people understand what this crisis is about and realize that
America will remain only as long as necessary and not one day longer.
"Like the people of France in the 1940s, they view us as their
hoped-for liberator," Wolfowitz said.
The deputy defense secretary stressed that the world can no longer
allow Saddam Hussein to ignore United Nations resolutions. He recalled
Winston Churchill's description of the Second World War as "the
unnecessary war." There "was never a war more easy to stop," Churchill
said, if only the world hadn't allowed the Nazis to build a war
machine in direct violation of international agreements. Fearing
conflict and eager to avoid it, the international community "paved the
way to a much larger war," Wolfowitz said.
He said the U.N. weapons inspectors have been thwarted continuously by
Iraqi officials.
"They have been forced to play a game of hide and seek in a country
the size of the state of California, chasing after mobile biological
labs that were designed to be hidden, and seeking weapons that could
be hidden in chicken farms and garages," he said. "The inspectors have
been subjected to intimidation. And perhaps most important, they've
been denied full and free access to those Iraqi scientists who know
where the weapons are but who have been threatened with death and
worse if they cooperate with the inspectors."
And that, Wolfowitz said, is especially important. It is unlikely any
Iraqi will speak freely because they have been intimidated into
silence. He said the U.N. weapons inspectors have not taken advantage
of provisions in U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441 that permits
them to take Iraqis and their families outside Iraq so they can be
interviewed without the threat of intimidation.
Following is a transcript of Wolfowitz's remarks:
(begin transcript)
Veterans of Foreign Wars Remarks
United States Department of Defense Speech
By Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
Omni Shoreham Hotel
Washington D.C.
March 11, 2003
Thank you, Ray [Sisk, VFW Commander in Chief]. That was a very
generous introduction. I almost think I should quit while I am ahead.
It is a real honor to be here and to be invited to address this
distinguished organization. There are some important issues on
everyone's minds these days. And I appreciate the opportunity to speak
about those issues, especially with this audience.
For more than a century, the VFW and the VFW Ladies Auxiliary have
done vital work for our nation -- supporting the men and women in
uniform, assisting veterans, cultivating civic responsibility among
young people, and (perhaps most importantly of all) keeping alive the
memories of how and why the United States of America has been involved
in wars that were waged on soil far from our own shores.
You, the members of the VFW, are the best-qualified people to keep
those memories alive. You served in those wars. You served honorably
and bravely from the beaches of Normandy and Iwo Jima, to Inchon and
Pork Chop Hill, to Khe Sanh and the Ia Drang Valley, and a thousand
other places where Americans have fought and sacrificed in defense of
freedom.
In those conflicts, you faced different enemies and different
circumstances. But one thing was constant: You did not fight for love
of war or of conquest. You fought to free people from tyranny and to
restore peace to the world. [Applause]
You fought in far-away places because it was the best way to protect
America and the people back home. And thanks to your efforts -- and
the sacrifices of hundreds of thousands of other Americans like you --
our country was spared the devastation suffered by so many others
during the 20th century. And every time, when the dust settled and the
guns were quiet as Secretary of State Colin Powell put it so
eloquently "the only land we ever asked for was enough land to bury
our dead that is the kind of nation we are." [Applause]
Today, we are engaged in a new kind of struggle. Today's enemy does
not arrive with flags flying and bugles blaring. He does not announce
his plans, or when and where he will strike. Today's enemy is found in
shadowy terrorist organizations and among the outlaw regimes that
harbor them, that provide them training, and that supply them with
weapons and money. If their objectives seem unclear, you cannot say
that about their hatred. They hate us and everything that we stand
for. And this enemy poses a mortal threat to the American people -- as
the whole world learned on September 11, 2001.
In the aftermath of that shocking event, President Bush pledged to
destroy this terrorist network and its sponsors, beginning with al
Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan. And thanks to the brave men and
women of our Armed Forces -- and the extraordinary capabilities of the
U.S. military today the people of Afghanistan have been liberated, and
the terrorists have been deprived of one of their most important
sanctuaries.
A new government that represents the people of Afghanistan has taken
office, led by President Hamid Karzai. They are working to rebuild
that devastated country, with the help of the United States and a
coalition of 49 other countries from around the world. Our military
success in Afghanistan has contributed to other successes in the war
on terrorism, in places as far removed as Singapore and Chicago,
Illinois.
A Moroccan detainee, for example, who was captured in Afghanistan and
interrogated in Guantanamo, led us to three Saudis planning terrorist
attacks in Morocco -- all of whom were subsequently arrested,
including one top al Qaeda operative. Another example was the
discovery of a videotape in a safe house in Afghanistan, which led to
the arrest of an al Qaeda cell in Singapore that had been planning to
attack a U.S. aircraft carrier and U.S. personnel in that Southeast
Asian country.
Indeed, the loss of their sanctuary in Afghanistan has made it
possible for us to capture several of Bin Laden's key lieutenants who
fled to neighboring Pakistan. One of the first was Abu Zubaydah, whose
capture last year led to the detention of Jose Padilla, who had come
into the United States with the intention of planning and coordinating
terrorist attacks in his own country. More recently, two key figures
in the September 11 plot were captured, Ramzi bin al-Shibh and, most
importantly, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
Mohammed's capture just ten days ago is a huge blow to al Qaeda. He
has been called "the Brain" of al Qaeda, and he was the mastermind of
the September 11th attacks. Moreover, he was a busy man. He was busy
organizing new attacks on us and on our friends. By getting him out of
circulation, we have undoubtedly prevented some other attacks. And we
have new leads that should help us to disrupt and destroy the al Qaeda
network even further. So the global war on terror goes on. But it will
be a long struggle -- because it is not just about one man or one
terrorist network. It is about intersecting networks of terrorists and
the support that they get from terrorist states.
Our successes in recent months in capturing terrorists demonstrate
clearly that the effort we have mobilized at the same time to disarm
Iraq of its weapons of mass terror has not distracted us from the hunt
for Al Qaeda. But make no mistake; these are not two separate issues.
Disarming Saddam's weapons of mass terror is a second front in the war
on terrorism.
We know that terrorists are plotting greater catastrophes than the
attacks we saw on September 11th. And we know that they are seeking
more terrible weapons chemical, biological, and even nuclear weapons.
In the hands of terrorists, these so-called "weapons of mass
destruction" might better be called "weapons of mass terror." They
present us with a threat that could be orders of magnitude worse than
September 11th, involving tens or even hundreds of thousands of
casualties.
The diplomatic debate centers on Iraqi non-compliance with 12 years of
U.N. resolutions 17 of them by now -- that have required Iraq to
eliminate its weapons of mass terror and abide by the agreements that
concluded the Gulf War in 1991. In the years since, there has been no
real compliance by Iraq and no genuine cooperation. Instead, we have
had delay, dishonesty, and deception.
Some people may be impressed, but we are not. We know what real
disarmament looks like. In recent years, the United States has
assisted other countries including several former republics of the
Soviet Union -- that wanted to eliminate their nuclear weapons.
Those governments took the initiative. They were cooperative and
helpful. That has never been the case with Iraq. Instead, U.N. weapons
inspectors have been thwarted at every turn. They have been forced to
play a game of hide and seek in a country the size of the state of
California, chasing after mobile biological labs that were designed to
be hidden, and seeking weapons hidden in chicken farms and garages.
The inspectors have been subjected to intimidation. And perhaps most
important, they have been denied full and free access to Iraqi
scientists, who know where the weapons are, but who have been
threatened with death and worse, if they cooperate with the
inspectors.
Resolution 1441 gave the U.N. inspectors powers that previous
inspectors did not have the power to take Iraqis and their families
outside of the country so that they could be interviewed free of
intimidation.
The U.N. inspectors have never exercised that authority. To the
contrary, in the face of the refusal of any Iraqi scientist to be
questioned in "private" interviews in the U.N. offices in Baghdad, the
inspectors agreed on January 21st to hold interviews instead at two
hotels in Baghdad, the Al Hayat and the Rimal.
That is a kind of cruel joke. No one who understands the way that the
Iraqi people are intimidated into silence could possibly think that
any Iraqi could speak free of intimidation when their families are
still inside Iraq. But you would have to be exceptionally gullible to
think that interviews conducted in a Baghdad hotel are private and not
monitored. Certainly every one of the Iraqis who was interviewed in
those hotels would assume that every room was bugged and monitored by
Iraqi intelligence.
I said earlier, "punishments worse than death." Americans may have
difficulty comprehending what it means for these men to be interviewed
in circumstances where they had every reason to expect that the
slightest misstep on their part would be picked up by Iraqi
intelligence agencies. The possible consequences are unimaginable,
thank heavens, to us.
Saddam Hussein heads a regime to name one example -- that forces
doctors to cut off the ears and sometimes even the tongues of people
who have disobeyed the regime or spoken out against it. They don't
merely punish individuals; they punish their families. There are
credible reports that the families of Iraqi nuclear and chemical and
biological scientists have been moved to special locations to ensure
that their knowledgeable relatives are intimidated into silence. To
put it mildly, these are not the actions of a regime that is actively
cooperating with the requirement that it disclose all of its weapons
of mass destruction.
More important, these are not the actions of a regime that has any
legitimate claim to be ruling the Iraqi people. The fact is, that
while people march peacefully in Europe and here in the United States
and elsewhere against war, and while diplomats speak in the Security
Council about their desire to avoid war, Saddam Hussein is waging war
on his own people.
He has been doing so for decades, sometimes on a large scale,
sometimes on a smaller scale. But if it becomes necessary to use force
to remove his regime, it will not be a war against Iraq, it will be a
war to liberate Iraq. [Applause]
As events have unfolded, our President has not flinched. He has been a
model of moral courage. During his press conference last week, he was
crystal clear: "The only acceptable outcome," the President said, "is
the one already defined by a unanimous vote of the Security Council:
total disarmament." The choice is not ours. It is Saddam Hussein's. If
he will not disarm voluntarily, we will do it for him by force, and
his regime will join the Taliban in the dustbin of history. [Applause]
As we sit here, a quarter-of-a-million U.S. and coalition troops are
on the scene and ready to get the job done. They are prepared to
demonstrate once again that America's greatest asset is what General
George Marshall called "the best damned kids in the world." [Applause]
In the event that force must be used, our deployment will have the
support in one form or another -- of a formidable coalition. The
number of countries involved will be in the substantial double digits.
I might say that some of them would prefer not to be named now, but
they will be known with pride in due time.
No doubt you have heard a great deal about governments that are NOT
part of our coalition. We still have hopes that they too will finally
realize what is at stake and that time is of the essence. But whether
those countries join our coalition or not, they should understand one
thing: The United States of America has the ultimate responsibility to
act to ensure the peace and security of our country and our people.
[Applause]
Vice President Cheney spoke to your convention last summer, and he
said, "The entire world must know that we will take whatever action is
necessary to defend our freedom and our security."
Of course, we would like to have the unanimous support of all nations
of good will. And it is important for the United Nations to
demonstrate that it means what it said when it passed Resolution 1441
its 17th resolution on Iraq since the Gulf War.
We do not want to see the credibility of the U.N. go the way of the
League of Nations, which failed to act to stop the slide into World
War II. Many of you served in that terrible war. You know firsthand
what it cost the U.S. in terms of lives and treasure. You saw what it
cost others around the world ... 40 to 50 million dead, cities
destroyed great nations laid waste.
Near its conclusion, President Roosevelt asked Winston Churchill how
the Second World War should be remembered. Churchill replied that it
should be called "the Unnecessary War." Unnecessary, Churchill
explained, "because there never was a war more easy to stop."
For years, the world had allowed the Nazis to build a war machine in
direct violation of international agreements. For years, nothing was
done despite the warnings of Churchill and others, and in spite of the
fact that courageous leaders could easily have put a stop to that
threat when it was still small and building.
Of course, there were those in the 1930s who fearing war, as any
sensible person must do, and eager for peace -- opposed taking a firm
stand. Tragically, their actions paved the way to a much larger war.
Today we hear calls to give Saddam Hussein more time. But we should
ask: How long should we wait? And what are we waiting for? Should we
wait until the frontline members of our coalition are breaking under
the strain of standing up to Iraq?
Should we wait until the people inside Iraq who are ready to help us
give up hope? Or should we wait until Saddam Hussein finishes
preparing weapons of mass terror -- weapons that will further endanger
our troops, or which he can use on the Iraqi people as he has in the
past?
Those very weapons are the source of our concern. The issue is not
about Iraqi oil. If the United States had wanted access to Iraqi oil,
we could have dropped our whole policy 12 years ago, lifted the
sanctions, and let Saddam Hussein keep his weapons of mass
destruction. No, if there is going to be a war, it will be a war to
disarm Saddam's weapons of mass terror. But it will also be like wars
that you've fought in, a war of liberation, a war to secure peace and
freedom not only for ourselves, but for the Iraqi people who have
suffered so long under one of the world's most brutal tyrannies.
Two weeks ago, I was privileged to spend an afternoon with hundreds of
Iraqi-Americans in Dearborn, Michigan. I wish you could hear some of
their stories, so you could appreciate what those people and their
families have gone through and how much they and their relatives back
in Iraq want to be freed of Saddam Hussein and freed of the offensive
weapons that threaten to terrorize the Middle East and the world.
Over and over, we hear reports of Iraqis here in the United States who
manage to communicate with their friends and families in Iraq, and
what they are hearing is amazing. Their friends and relatives want to
know what is taking the Americans so long. When are you coming?
In a meeting last week at the White House, one of these
Iraqi-Americans said: "A war with Saddam Hussein would be a war for
Iraq, not against Iraq." Another leader at that same meeting, Emad
Dhia, told us, "Please stop the war that is going on inside Iraq the
war that Saddam Hussein has been waging against the Iraqi people for
years!"
His plea reminds us of something John F. Kennedy another VFW member
and a hero of World War II said: "The mere absence of war is not
peace."
The Iraqi people understand what this crisis is about. Like the people
of France in the 1940s, they view us as their hoped-for liberator.
They know that America will not come as a conqueror.
Our plan as President Bush has said is to "remain as long as necessary
and not a day more." The Iraqis also recognize that the economic and
political reconstruction of their country will be difficult. It will
take their best efforts, with the help of the United States and our
coalition partners. But they are driven by the dream of a just and
democratic society in Iraq.
In conclusion, I would like to ask for your continued support. The war
on terrorism is a tough and dangerous business. It is a war we did not
seek, but it is also a war we cannot avoid. I would ask you to keep
our men and women in the Armed Forces in your prayers. You have been
there. You know the risks. You also know the stakes. Winning this war
will require courage on the part of many.
Courage is a virtue that enables some people to go above and beyond
the call of duty the courage to act without regard to one's own
safety, even in the face of mortal danger.
General Omar Bradley described it as "the capacity to perform properly
even when scared half to death." In truth, as you know much better
than most, courage is the capacity to overcome fear, not the absence
of fear. And I can tell you this: The young people in the U.S. Armed
Forces today are as courageous and dedicated and well trained as any
men and women who have worn the uniform of the United States.
I want to assure you that, like the predecessors they admire -- namely
many of you they are prepared to act with extraordinary courage. They
showed the world what they are made of in Afghanistan. If asked, they
will take the fight to Saddam Hussein. They will get the job done. I
would ask you and all Americans to give them your full support and let
them know that the people of the United States are with them, today
and every day. We owe it to them. And as you know from your own days
in uniform, they need to know the country is behind them.
I thank each of you for what you have done in the past and for being
here today in a show of solidarity. May God bless you. May God bless
our men and women in uniform. May God bless America. Thank you.
[Applause]
(end transcript)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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