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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

07 April 2003

U.S. Wants to Exit Iraq "As Soon As Possible," Armitage Says

(Interview with CNN's American Morning) (1210)
Following is the transcript of the interview of Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage with Paula Zahn on CNN's American Morning April
7:
(begin transcript)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
April 7, 2003
INTERVIEW
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
With Paula Zahn of CNN's American Morning
Washington, D.C.
April 7, 2003
(Aired 9:05 a.m. EDT) 
QUESTION: Good to see you again, sir. Thank you very much for joining
us this morning.
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE:  Good morning, Ms. Zahn.
QUESTION: Once the fighting stops, how long do you think American
Forces will need to stay in place in Iraq?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: I don't think anyone knows the answer to
that. We have to stay long enough to exploit potential WMD sites and
clearly to establish stability through the country, but we want to
stay not a day longer than that.
QUESTION: We had heard some suppositions from some folks in the Bush
administration that at least six months before you can even get a
transitional government underway. Does that sound like a fair
assessment?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: Well, I think that was referring to the six
months that were required to bring a level of democracy to the Kurdish
areas, and certainly that has lasted ten years, but I think it's very
difficult to pin an exact timeframe, but you can be assured that we
want to be able to get out of Iraq as soon as possible.
QUESTION: Let's talk a little bit about what the administration
envisions. Senior officials have told CNN immediately after the
conflict ends; the White House wants a military force commanded by
General Tommy Franks and a civilian administration headed by retired
Army Lt. General Jay Garner who will report to Donald Rumsfeld.
Now, there is a piece in the L.A. Times today saying that some members
of Congress are complaining that that actually gives Donald Rumsfeld
too much control in this process. What do you think?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: Well, I can't speak for members of
Congress, but it certainly occurs to me that there's going to have to
be a very close relationship between the Office of Reconstruction and
Humanitarian Affairs and General Franks as he provides security, under
which those activities can be conducted.
General Garner will report to General Franks, and further, to Security
Rumsfeld. He will be trying to provide in the initial days a modicum
of goods and services to the Iraqi people and he and his colleagues
are very much in the business of working themselves out of a job.
QUESTION: What do you think of some of the suggestions out there by
those who feel that the U.S. is increasingly losing its battle to
convince Iraqi citizens because of the destruction and the ongoing
campaign that, in fact, they are liberators, not invaders?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: I think your own broadcast this morning has
put lie to that -- the fact that our forces are being welcomed with
open arms. This is something we cherish and we'll do our utmost to
continue to deserve. You see jubilance in many of the streets and I
think it will continue. This is not something, however, that will last
forever. We have to make sure that our follow-on actions are
absolutely consistent with those things, which will win the favor of
the Iraqi people.
QUESTION: I want to talk a little bit more about the creation of this
transitional government. Senator Joseph Biden, the Ranking Democrat on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said the issue of forming this
transitional government is a very tenuous one and cautioned the
administration to tread lightly. Let's listen to what he had to say
yesterday.
(A video excerpt of Senator Biden was shown as follows:)
SENATOR BIDEN: "...but the real key here is we get one real shot at
starting off a transition government here. And whatever that
government is, that transition government, if it looks like it's
imposed by us, if it looks like we sat down, hand-picked the leaders,
put them in place, it will not have any legitimacy with the Iraqi
people ..."
QUESTION: So Mr. Armitage, what he suggested is that you must
internationalize this process, particularly at the front-end of the
game.
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: Well, certainly he's correct in that if we
put our thumb on the scale, or our British friends put their thumb on
the scale then this will not be viewed as a legitimate government by
all Iraqis, so we have to have a government, which is of, for and by
Iraqis. Now the question of how you form it, it seems to me that the
administration is on the right track by trying to develop an interim
Iraqi authority, which will be developed by Iraqis, themselves, in
close consultation with coalition members who, after all, have shed
their blood and expended their treasure to bring about the liberation
of Iraq.
QUESTION: Finally, we know that the President and the Prime Minister
of Great Britain are holding some very important meetings in Northern
Ireland over the next couple of days and there seems to be a little
bit of a disconnect on the issue of what role the UN should ultimately
play in the process, the Prime Minister of Great Britain wanting a
larger role for the UN in a post-war Iraq, what do you think? What's
the right formula here?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: Well, I suspect when our two leaders issue
their final communiqués from Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland,
Great Britain, that you'll find that there's less difference than
perhaps you might have thought. Clearly there will be a role for the
United Nations and many of the functional activities the United
Nations engages in, WHO and World Food Program and UNICEF, et cetera,
will have great roles in Iraq, but finding the appropriate role for
the United Nations after the coalition members have been the ones who
did all the heavy lifting is exactly what our leaders are going to be
talking about.
QUESTION: Finally, another question about the balance of structures
and how you worked this all out. National Security Advisor Condoleezza
Rice says that the Pentagon should control reconstruction and
humanitarian efforts in post-war Iraq, but there are members of
Congress that say that job should fall to the State Department. Who
should do it? And why?
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE: Well, clearly the President has decided
that he would like the monies that are available in the supplemental
appropriation to be provided to the office of manpower and budget and
further disbursed to the agencies who will be doing the work on the
ground. And the agencies' work will be developed through J. Garner.
He's the one on the ground with colleagues from the Department of
State, Justice, Commerce, et cetera, so we're very much comfortable
with the President's submission.
QUESTION: Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, always good to
see you. Thank you again for spending some time with us this morning.
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE:  Thank you.
QUESTION:  We appreciate your perspective.
(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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