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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

06 April 2003

Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz on CBS's Face the Nation

(Report from Baghdad, Saddam Hussein-whereabouts/video, transition to
Iraqi government, providing basic services, European and UN roles,
Kosovo, Iraqi freedom/democratic change, Afghanistan model,
confronting terrorism, positive international change) (2720)
Following is a transcript of Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz's
appearance April 6 on CBS's Face the Nation:
(begin transcript)
NEWS TRANSCRIPT 
Department of Defense
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz 
April 6, 2003
(Television interview with Bob Schieffer, CBS Face The Nation. Also
participating were Dana Priest, Washington Post and Laura Logan, CBS
News)
Schieffer: Good morning again. We want to start with the situation in
Baghdad. Just a few minutes ago I talked with our CBS News
correspondent Laura Logan. She was in Baghdad before the war, left and
has now made her way back there. We asked her this morning to just
describe the situation.
Logan: There's been an artillery battle raging on the western
outskirts of the city. Today we've heard mortar, tank and artillery
fire as well as heavy machine guns and multiple rocket launchers. This
battle also continued through the night and there were air strikes.
One bomb landed just a short distance from the -- our position in the
center of Baghdad in the early hours of this morning. But throughout
the night and throughout the day fighting has continued. Iraq's
information minister today held a press conference just a short time
ago in which he talked about American tactics. He said what the Iraqis
have observed is that the Americans when they're pounded by Iraqi
forces are retreating and as soon as the Iraqis stop -- they're
sending small teams forward to areas like the airport where they're
allowing themselves to be filmed for propaganda purposes only. He said
-- Mohammed Sahid Al Saha, dismissed this as being meaningless
military tactics and he said they were leaving the roads open for the
Americans to do this so they could hit their forces when they did.
Schieffer: Have you had any sign of Saddam Hussein himself today?
Logan: Not today. But Iraqi television showed pictures of the
president on television last night meeting with his two sons and other
military commanders. There was also two statements read out on the
Iraqi television and radio from Saddam Hussein. One of them was a
message to the Kurdish people in the north not to support the
coalition and to stay with the Iraqi people. The other was a message
to the Iraqi people themselves warning them not to talk about things
that they were unsure of because the statement said that it may appear
they were spreading propaganda so they should be sure of things before
they talk about them. The Iraqi government took journalists today to
the southern outskirts of the city and area there where they had
destroyed one U.S. tank that we were able to see. They claimed to have
destroyed five others as well but they've been taken away so they
could be used by Iraqi forces.
Schieffer: And there you have Laura Logan just a few minutes ago, Mr.
Secretary. And joining us is Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz from the
Pentagon. Dana Priest of the Washington Post is with us again this
morning.
Priest: I would start out by saying having reporters on the ground,
able to transmit pictures back to us sort of puts the lie to what we
hear from these spokesman for the Iraqi government, does it not? I
mean it's almost laughable to see him make these statements and then
see what we're seeing on television.
Schieffer: I know. If it weren't a war and all the tragedy of war
you'd almost think this is a Saturday Night Live skit. He's really the
minister of propaganda and he believes half of what he is saying then
he's really out of touch with reality. How, Mr. Secretary, would you
sum up the situation in Baghdad now? Are we in control? Who appears to
be running the Iraqi side now?
Wolfowitz: Well, if I could for a minute, just to put a little
perspective on this.
Schieffer: Sure.
Wolfowitz: I think Americans have started to think of wars as short
events. The last Gulf War was only six weeks. The Afghanistan War was
only nine weeks, the war in Kosovo was only eleven weeks. That's not
historical experience but we're only in the third week of this war.
There's been a lot of progress made. We have troops on the outskirts
of Baghdad. We've now twice conducted armed reconnaissance inside the
city. One tank, in fact, did break down and we had to destroy it. But
we are establishing control over a large part of the country. But
there -- this is a serious, dangerous business and some of the
greatest dangers are still possibly ahead of us, particularly the
danger of use of chemical or biological weapons.
Schieffer: Well, do you think -- are we in control of most of the
capital now, are we in control of the airport.
Wolfowitz: Oh no, but we are in control of the airport and contrary to
the minister of propaganda and we're not surrounded at the airport. We
control the airport. That's a very important strategic position.
Schieffer: Do you have an idea at this point who's running the Iraqi
side of things?
Wolfowitz: There's uncertainty about that. There are arguments back
and forth about this latest tape as to whether it's the real thing.
It's unusual, I must say, for Saddam Hussein to expose himself to his
people that way.
What does seem, as best as we can observe it and you only can make
guesses here, there doesn't seem to be any very effective functioning
of strategy. Iraqi forces are moved in ways that make them targets for
the coalition, they're not well coordinated in their moves and
frankly, what is really tragic is this horrible regime is sending
young Iraqis out to die for no reason whatsoever.
Priest: Do you expect to set up an interim government in the places in
the south that you've already or are going to assume have under your
total control?
Wolfowitz: Again, let me -- if I could say, I mean there's a lot of
discussion about this. I think it helps to have some context. There
are two things we're trying to balance here: One is, from day one we
want to make sure that people have food and water and medicine and
that the electricity functions. We've started some very significant
steps in that direction, the areas on the south that we've got control
of now. And that's got to be a coalition responsibility at least
initially.
But our goal is eventually to transfer everything to a government that
represents Iraqi people and we have discussed with our coalition
partners and with elements of the Iraqi opposition the idea of an
interim authority that would be the bridge from this coalition
administration to eventual Iraqi government. Those discussions are on
going. The point at which we can establish an interim authority I
think is going to depend on when there is a feeling, particularly
among Iraqis, that those people that are still not yet free to speak
up and express themselves, though more and more of them are, can join
the ones who have been able to for many years now.
Schieffer: Obviously there are discussions going on even within the
administration about this and certainly in other countries about
perhaps we should move as quickly as we can to internationalize this
situation, to bring the UN in and operate under their umbrella. Is
that a good idea or what is -- where do you think -- how do you think
it ought to be organized?
Wolfowitz: Well, I think the right goal is to move as quickly as we
can, not faster than we can, but as quickly as we can to a government
that is, if I can paraphrase Abraham Lincoln, of the Iraqis, by the
Iraqis for the Iraqis, not to make them a colonial administration or a
UN administration or run in any way by foreigners. But it's going to
be a partnership of the coalition countries. The UN has an important
role to play in that, not only the UN functional agencies, I think,
but also the UN as a mechanism for mobilizing international support.
And I think there's going to be a lot of international support for the
effort of the Iraqi people to rebuild their country and to build a
free country.
Schieffer: What should be France and Germany's part in all of this?
Wolfowitz: I think like everyone else they should see that there's an
opportunity here to help one of the most talented people in the Arab
world -- peoples in the Arab world -- to demonstrate to the whole
world that Arabs are capable of establishing free and democratic
government. And I think we all have a stake in the success of that.
Schieffer: And we'll welcome their help and we'll invite them to come
in?
Wolfowitz: Yes, and I think more importantly the Iraqi people need
their help. Priest: Can you conceive of a UN-run interim government
like we have in Kosovo and we've had in other places or do you think
the US needs to remain in charge until you can pass it to Iraqis?
Wolfowitz: Well, Kosovo is a strange example because we're not quite
sure how to treat Kosovo politically but it's not a model we want to
follow of a sort of permanent international administration.
I think there's some relevant experience here, I don't want to
overstate it, but in 1991 after the Gulf War, a month after the Gulf
War, we went in with a coalition force that was US, British, French,
quite a few other European countries, clear the Iraqi army out of the
northern third of the country and left six months later and left it in
the hands of the northern Iraqis, who've done a reasonably credible
job of managing their own affairs.
The country as a whole is bigger and more complicated, it will
undoubtedly take longer. But that should be the goal is to enable
these people who as I said are talented, they're educated they -- it's
a real country. It's not Kosovo, which has never been a country, it's
not Bosnia, which was sort of patched together and it's in everyone's
interest, particularly that of the Iraqi people to be standing on
their own feet as soon as possible.
Priest: So you imagine the US will stay in charge until you can pass
it to an interim Iraqi government.
Wolfowitz: Well, there are two kinds of in-charge, I think. One kind
of in-charge is, you know, waters and sewers and food and medicine and
we want to make sure those things are delivered to the Iraqi people
effectively and we'd like it as quickly as possible to be done by
Iraqis, but we want to make sure it's done and we'll do it until we're
sure that they can do it.
But the other part of in-charge is determining the constitution of
Iraq and how elections should be held and who the leaders should be
and we're not in charge of that, no foreigners can be in charge of
that. That has got to be a process that involves Iraqis. And we've had
millions of Iraqis who have been free in the north, some 4 million who
have been free and in exile, but there are some 20 million Iraqis who
still live under the boot of this regime. And until they're free to
express themselves we can't know who represents the Iraqi people.
Schieffer: As you know there is some criticism that perhaps we have
sort of picked out some Iraqis to run this government and that we
intend to sort of install them there. Will that have any credibility
with the rest of the Arab world or with the Iraqis themselves and if
in fact is that the policy of the United States?
Wolfowitz: Absolutely not. I mean we can't talk about democracy and
then turn around and say we're going to pick the leaders of this
democratic country. We have been in touch with many, many different
leaders of the Iraqi opposition. There are some very courageous people
who've been fighting for the freedom of Iraq in northern Iraq and
living abroad and we're finding more and more people in the south --
the southern parts of Iraq who were leaders in the fight against
Saddam over the years. It's got to be for the Iraqi people to pick
their leaders and our goal is to try to create the conditions,
particularly the security conditions where they can do that freely.
Priest: But you're putting yourself in the position right now to
choose an interim government. So who are you choosing for that interim
government? It may be upon you in a couple of weeks, if not sooner.
Wolfowitz: Well, we're not choosing and it's an important difference
between interim authority, which is a transitional arrangement and
even interim government, even if you put the word interim on it.
The other somewhat parallel situation is Afghanistan -- I don't want
to say similar because Afghanistan is such a different country -- but
once Afghanistan was liberated it was possible to hear from a wide
range of Afghans and eventually in their own more traditional way with
this Loya Jerga process expressed a consensus on, I think, a way
forward. I think we're already starting to see some of that same
process. As a matter of fact, we saw some of that process even before
this war began in the way in which opposition elements began to
organize. But, it's more than just the opposition that we've known
before, it's also people that we're just getting to know now. The
senior religious leaders in the Shia holy city of Najaf have just gone
back and have started issuing what they call Fatawas, but these are
Fatawas saying oppose Saddam and support the coalition. Those people
are clearly going to have a voice in the future.
Schieffer: Mr. Secretary, let me ask you something, because this is a
question that I'm getting. Is our focus here to disarm Saddam Hussein,
to find these weapons of mass destruction and then consider this a
unique and grave danger that has been posed to this country and that
we are there to remove that danger or is this step one in the wider
war, what some people are calling World War IV, where we would
confront the rest of the Arab world? What is our purpose here?
Wolfowitz: I think the president has been clear from September 12th,
basically, of 2001, since the horror of the World Trade Center and the
attack on the Pentagon, that we've got to confront terrorism in a way
we've never thought about it before and particularly this danger of
the connection between terrorist networks and states that support
terrorism and have weapons of mass destruction. And it's a new
problem, it's got to be approached strategically, but I don't think it
can be approached on a purely military basis. There's a lot that's
unique about Iraq, including the unique circumstances -- 12 years of
defiance of the terms and conditions of the cease-fire that was
supposed to have ended the first Gulf War. So we need a way forward.
But it's also important, I think, to say that we would not be at war
in Iraq if we didn't think there was a danger to the United States.
But now that we are at war in Iraq, our goal needs to be more than
just dismantling those weapons of mass destruction. I think if the
Iraqi people can succeed in creating a government that represents them
and demonstrates this possibility of freedom and democracy in the Arab
world, it's going to have a -- I think it's going to be an inspiration
for other countries in a way that's very positive. Not necessarily
military at all. The power of the idea -- we've seen it in East Asia,
the power of democracy in Japan has spread across Asia in places that
had no use for the Japanese.
Schieffer: Well, I hope you're right. Mr. Secretary, thank you for
being with us.
(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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