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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

09 April 2003

Coalition Efforts to Provide Aid, Restore Services in Iraq Continue

(State Department Report, April 9) (980)
By Jane Morse
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington -- Plans to "win the peace" in Iraq continue to move
forward, says State Department Spokesman Richard Boucher.
"Just as we've been planning carefully for military victory, we've
been planning to win the peace, and that has been an ongoing process,"
Boucher told reporters during the daily State Department briefing
April 9.
"Our initial effort, after the military secures the situation, is
being led by the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance,
headed by Jay Garner and done in cooperation with other members of the
coalition," he said. "Their focus is to help restore services, to help
restore immediate services, basic services, to the Iraqi people. And
then, as early as possible, we want to get to work on an Iraqi interim
authority."
Plans are now under way for a meeting with liberated Iraqis from newly
freed areas of Iraq as well as members of the free Iraqi opposition
who have been overseas, Boucher said. The location and the date of the
meeting have not yet been determined, but Special Presidential Envoy
Zalmay Khalilzad will lead a U.S. delegation to the meeting.
"We expect this to be the first in a series of regional meetings that
will provide a forum for Iraqis to discuss their vision of the future
of Iraq and their ideas regarding the Iraqi interim authority,"
Boucher said.
The U.S. hope, he said, is that these meetings will culminate in a
conference to be held in Baghdad, which will then establish the Iraqi
interim authority. "That Iraqi interim authority, of course, will
serve as a temporary authority during a transition period, until fully
representative elections can be held and a new government formed,"
Boucher said.
He emphasized: "It's been a very consistent position of the United
States that the future of Iraq needs to be decided by the Iraqi people
and needs to be decided by a very wide range of Iraqi people so that
all the different groups, all the different regions, all the different
areas and cities of Iraq are represented in the transition and then
the Iraqi people get their own chance through elections to decide who
their representatives will be."
Regarding humanitarian assistance to Iraq, Boucher said progress is
being made on allocating shipping, and prepositioning and delivering
emergency supplies and food. U.S. money allocated to this effort for
immediate relief already comes to $874 million, he said.
He noted that the British supply ship Sir Galahad is already in Iraq's
port at Umm Qasr. Food, water and medical help are also arriving from
Spain; and a ship carrying 700 metric tons of food and water from the
United Arab Emirates is expected to reach Umm Qasr April 10. The
Kuwaiti Joint Relief Committee convoy carrying water, food and
blankets was expected to arrive in an Nasiriyah April 8.
Local community representatives will distribute the British aid, along
with that from the World Food Program starting April 12, he said.
"There are pockets of need in Iraq, particularly as the destruction of
regular distribution systems has occurred with the fighting," Boucher
said. "But there are also people, frankly, who are benefiting from
city services, who are benefiting from supplies that they couldn't get
under the previous Saddam Hussein regime." He said that at least some
of the poverty suffered by Iraqis has been caused by "the intentional
discrimination of the Saddam Hussein regime against certain groups and
minorities."
Regarding the current plight of overflowing Iraqi hospitals, Boucher
said: "We have made very clear that we have made every effort possible
to avoid civilian casualties in this conflict. Nonetheless, we know
that those casualties do occur."
He added: "We feel great sympathy for the people that may be harmed in
the course of the fighting either because ... they were in the wrong
place at the wrong time or because the Iraqi government, as we've
seen, has intentionally put civilians in harm's way."
To help alleviate the medical needs of the Iraqi people, the coalition
has delivered medical supplies to local hospitals in areas now
controlled by the British, the spokesman said.
"The U.S. government pre-positioned 97 World Health Organization kits
in the region," Boucher said. "Each of these kits is designed to serve
10,000 people for approximately three months. Kits contain a basic and
a supplementary unit. The basic kit contains 12 non-injectable drugs,
as well as medical supplies. The supplemental kit, to be administered
only by professional health-care workers or physicians, contains more
drugs, including injectables.
"Yesterday the Kuwaiti Ministry of Health medical supply convoy of 12
refrigerated trucks arrived to restock hospitals in Umm Qasr, Safwan,
Al Zubair. Medical personnel will remain at Umm Qasr to assist the
hospital until the convoy returns from the other cities.
"Medical teams are also prepared to enter Northern Iraq with
additional staff, volunteers and medicine. Medical supplies from the
International Committee of the Red Cross reached hospitals near Basra
on April 4th, and the organization has also begun trucking water to
the three main hospitals in Basra and to a neighboring town."
The spokesman also noted that coalition military units have been
caring for civilians.
Regarding Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, Boucher reiterated the
U.S. belief that Iraq's "whole weapon capability was well hidden" and
noted that evidence uncovered so far by coalition forces clearly shows
that "Iraqi forces have been prepared for a chemical environment."
"There is no doubt that there are weapons of mass destruction. Iraqi
forces have been prepared to use them," he said.
Finding all these weapons will take time, he acknowledged, but may
become easier when Iraqis feel free enough to talk about where these
weapons are stored.
(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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