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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

26 May 2002

Transcript: U.S. Again "Disappointed" over Pakistani Missile Tests, Powell Says

(Secretary of State interviewed May 26 on CNN's "Late Edition") (4150)
Secretary of State Colin Powell reiterated U.S. "disappointment" over
Pakistani missile tests May 26, hours after Pakistan announced that it
had launched the second test missile of recent days.
Interviewed on CNN's "Late Edition," Powell noted that Pakistan had
pre-notified surrounding countries of the test, and said "the Indians
seem to be taking it in stride," but added that "it's a very dangerous
situation. We've got to get back from the edge because they [Pakistan
and India] are nuclear-armed nations, and they also have huge
conventional forces, so a great deal of damage could be done if a war
broke out."
Powell said the first step in reducing the tension is to stop
Pakistani infiltration across the line of control separating the
Pakistani- and Indian-controlled sections of Kashmir. He noted that
Pakistan's President Musharraf has reaffirmed that he was taking
action to stop the infiltration, and that the Indians have indicated
that if the infiltration does stop then other steps are possible. "We
really do have to find a political solution," Powell said. "The stakes
are much too high to see a conflict break out in this part of the
world, especially with nuclear-armed nations."
On the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Powell reaffirmed that the Bush
administration regards Chairman Yasser Arafat as head of the
Palestinian Authority and the leader of the Palestinian people. "Now,
we believe he could be a better leader and could lead the Palestinian
Authority in a more effective way," he added. "So we are going to be
working with our Arab friends, we are going to be working with the
Palestinians, we are going to be working with others, to see if we can
transform the Palestinian Authority into a more effective
organization, working with Chairman Arafat, but working with other
Palestinian leaders as well.
Powell said the United States "will continue to press Chairman Arafat
and other Palestinian leaders to end the violence, get it under
control. And we think they can do more, although they probably can't
end it all; it's not all totally within their authority."
During the interview Powell also discussed the new U.S.-Russian arms
reduction agreement, and plans concerning Iraq.
Following is a transcript of the CNN interview:
(begin transcript)
Interview on CNN's Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer
Secretary Colin L. Powell
St. Petersburg, Russia
May 26, 2002
MR. BLITZER: Mr. Secretary, thanks so much for joining us from
beautiful St. Petersburg in Russia. I want to get to the whole
US-Russian agenda in a moment, but let's talk about what just occurred
only within the past few hours. The Pakistanis have launched a second
missile test. That seems to be a provocative step, given the tensions
with India right now. What is your read of that?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, I would rather they hadn't done that, and we
have expressed our disappointment that they are undertaking missile
tests at this very, very tense time. But they notified appropriately
all nations around Pakistan that they would be doing it, to include
the Indians. The Indians seem to be taking it in stride, but we were
disappointed that the Pakistanis decided to conduct these tests during
a time of high anxiety and tension.
MR. BLITZER: Do you believe they are trying to intimidate the Indians?
SECRETARY POWELL: I don't know if that's their purpose or not. They
seem not to have intimidated the Indians with this test, however. The
Indians, as I say, have taken it in stride. And it doesn't seem to
have caused the crisis to get any worse, but we just didn't need this
kind of activity at this time, in my judgment.
MR. BLITZER: Are more missile tests in the works, as far as you can
tell?
SECRETARY POWELL: I don't know how many they're planning to do. They
said they would be doing several, so I don't know if there will be
more in the next couple of days or not.
MR. BLITZER: I interviewed the Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld,
earlier this week. He was very, very gloomy and talking about the
potential -- God forbid -- of a nuclear confrontation between India
and Pakistan. I also want you to listen to what Chris Patten, the
European Union External Affairs Minister, had to say earlier in the
week. Listen to this: "The political situation is as hot as the
temperature. I think frankly we are on a knife edge, and there has to
be some movement, I think above all on the question of terrorism, in
order for as to see people pulling back from the brink. And that has
to come soon."
What, if anything, Mr. Secretary, can or should the United States be
doing to get these two countries back from the brink?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, the United States is doing a great deal. First
and foremost, we are working with the European Union and we have been
in touch with Chris Patten. We are also in touch with our friends in
the United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Jack Straw will be going in in a
few days time.
And as you heard President Putin mention yesterday in his appearance
at St. Petersburg University with President Bush, he hopes that at the
upcoming meeting in Alma-Ati in Kazakhstan, where both President
Musharraf and Prime Minister Vajpayee have been invited to attend,
perhaps an opportunity may arise for President Putin and other leaders
to talk to these two leaders directly about the level of tension that
exists, and see if we can get back from the brink.
I have been in constant contact with both nations. I have spoken to
President Musharraf four times in the last several days, and with
Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh of India. And so we are doing a lot. We
also have Deputy Secretary Armitage heading out to the region. So the
whole international community is seized with this problem.
As Don Rumsfeld mentioned and as Chris Patten alluded to, it's a very
dangerous situation. We've got to get back from the edge because they
are nuclear-armed nations, and they also have huge conventional
forces, so a great deal of damage could be done if a war broke out.
And it begins with stopping the infiltration across the line of
control. President Musharraf again yesterday reaffirmed that he was
taking action to match the words that he has been putting forth for
the last several months that that kind of action will stop. And now we
have to watch and see whether or not that action is truly stopped in a
manner that all of us can see and detect, and especially the Indians
can see and detect.
And the Indians have given us reason to believe that if that line of
control infiltration action stops, then it will be possible to take
other steps of a de-escalatory nature, and we can start to get our
hands around this crisis and not let it get any worse. We really do
have to find a political solution. The stakes are much too high to see
a conflict break out in this part of the world, especially with
nuclear-armed nations.
And I am encouraged that both sides are looking for a political
solution. At the same time however, the rhetoric is rather high and
the mobilization is at a high level, so anything could happen, and
this is the time for all of us to be engaged and we are engaged.
MR. BLITZER: And when you say anything could happen, obviously another
terrorist incident in Kashmir or someplace else could spark a
confrontation. Do you believe President Musharraf is doing everything
he possibly can to prevent terrorist actions against India right now
in Kashmir?
SECRETARY POWELL: He says he is, and we are looking for evidence that
the infiltration across the line of control has stopped. And I am not
yet satisfied that we have seen that yet, but we are looking very
closely. He has given me direct assurances and he has given the world
direct assurances again in recent days. And as I have said to him in
our recent conversations, I appreciate these assurances, but the only
thing that is really going to count is that the action across the line
of control does stop. And I hope he is doing everything in his power
to make sure that that is the case.
MR. BLITZER: How concerned are you that the Pakistani military may be
moving troops away from the Afghan border towards Kashmir, a move that
could undermine the US effort, together with Pakistan, to look for
Taliban al-Qaida forces in Afghanistan along the border with Pakistan?
SECRETARY POWELL: That is a concern we have. Obviously if a nation is
mobilizing again -- they had gone to a lower level of readiness, but
if they are mobilizing again and going to a higher level of readiness
and start to move troops or attention away from that western border
with Afghanistan, that would be of concern to us, and especially to
our military commanders in Afghanistan. We are encouraging President
Musharraf to do all he can to work on those tribal areas and to
continue to cooperate with the US and coalition forces. But the kind
of tension we see now and the increased readiness for conflict and
combat obviously starts to divert attention away from that border.
It raises another issue too, Wolf. We have US forces, US troops in
Pakistan, in addition to American citizens and our diplomatic
presence, and I hope both sides are taking this into account as they
make their different calculations about what might happen in the
future. All the more reason that the entire international community
must work with India and Pakistan to find a political solution to this
crisis. The stakes are much too high.
MR. BLITZER: When you speak about US troops in the region, spell that
out. I think I understand the point you're trying to make, but what is
exactly the point you're making?
SECRETARY POWELL: The point I'm making is that they could be in
danger, and I don't want either side to believe they're going to get
pulled into this one way or the other: either that they can be put at
risk by one side; or because they could be put at risk by one side,
the other side thinks that gives them greater freedom of movement.
That is the point I was trying to make: Don't think that the US troops
can be used on either side in any contingency that's coming up.
MR. BLITZER: As you know better than anyone, US and Russia signed this
historic arms reduction agreement reducing the number of nuclear
warheads, but there seems to be some concern that the Russians in
particular are going to be storing those warheads in areas that may
not necessarily be all that secure; possibly terrorists could get
their hands on them. How concerned are you about this warehousing, the
storing of these warheads, as opposed to the destruction of those
warheads?
SECRETARY POWELL: We would like to see all the warheads that are not
needed destroyed. We are doing it and the Russians are destroying
warheads. We are helping the Russians destroy warheads. We are
contributing almost a billion dollars a year to programs in Russia for
the destruction of nuclear warheads and the destruction of chemical
weapons, and also trying to take down the biological infrastructure
that had been built up in the days of the Soviet Union.
And so that in no way, though, should take away from the importance
and value of this treaty. The beginning of the destruction of warheads
is to get them off their launchers, and that is what this treaty does.
It takes us down from 6,000 deployed warheads roughly on either side
-- 6,000 for us, 5,000 for them -- down to 1,700 to 2,200. But as
those warheads come off and go into storage, they have to be secured
as each side determines how many you would need to keep for spares and
how many you are going to destroy and how many you keep for
modernizing systems as the systems become older. And so obviously we
are concerned to make sure that both sides -- we know we secure ours
well, and we want to make sure the Russians do the same thing.
Senator Lugar is in Russia today, and he and members of his party will
be exploring these issues with the Russians. And as you know, we have
supported Senator Lugar and Senator Nunn's initiative to provide money
for the Russians for this purpose. We don't want to see any of these
weapons get out.
And so far, in the ten years since the Soviet Union ended, roughly,
there is no evidence that they have been irresponsible with respect to
keeping these weapons under control, but there is a problem with the
weapons and fissile material that we still have to be concerned about.
And that is why we are making such an investment in protection of
these systems, helping the Russians, and we are looking at new ways to
help the Russians. There is a program that we will be discussing with
our NATO and European Union colleagues about how we can provide more
resources to the Russians to take care of this issue.
MR. BLITZER: Mr. Secretary, the Russians have rejected your request to
stop exporting nuclear technology to Iran, a founding member of the
President's "axis of evil." What else can we do about this?
SECRETARY POWELL: We will continue to discuss this issue with the
Russians. There was agreement between the two presidents that we don't
want to see Iran develop a nuclear weapon or weapons of mass
destruction. That is destabilizing for the region, and it is more of a
danger to the Russians, who are in the region, than it is for the
United States. So we have a common objective.
We have a disagreement about what it is the Russians are providing
them that would help them achieve that goal. The Russians say that
they are not providing that kind of technology or equipment to the
Iranians, and we have some evidence that they are. So we talk about
these issues candidly, and I look forward to continuing this
discussion with Foreign Minister Ivanov, and I know that Secretary
Rumsfeld will have similar discussions with Defense Minister Ivanov.
So it's an area of disagreement with respect to what they are doing,
but there is no disagreement with respect to our overall goal not to
see this kind of capability in the hands of the Iranians.
MR. BLITZER: And no immediate solution on the horizon, right?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, there are a number of ideas we are exploring
with the Russians that might lead to a solution, and that is why we
created this committee consisting of the four ministers -- the defense
ministers and foreign ministers of the Russian Federation and the
United States -- and we'll be working together to find a way forward.
MR. BLITZER: On the Iraq situation, I listened very carefully to what
President Bush said the other day in Germany with the German
Chancellor Schroeder. I want you to listen precisely to what the
President said, and then I'll have a question. Listen to this: "I told
the Chancellor that I had no war plans on my desk, which is the truth,
and that we have got to use all means at our disposal to deal with
Saddam Hussein."
Does that mean you -- the US Government is ratcheting back from the
potential of another Desert Storm-like invasion involving hundreds of
thousands of troops?
SECRETARY POWELL: I don't know that we had ratcheted up. What the
President said is what he has been saying repeatedly and what I have
been saying regularly, as has Don Rumsfeld and National Security
Advisor Condi Rice: The President has no war plans on his desk; his
advisors have not provided him a recommendation for military action
against Iraq.
And what the President specifically referred to is we're looking at
all options available to us. We have been working within the United
Nations to get the inspectors back in. We have gotten the goods review
list finished now within the Security Council of the United Nations to
control the technology and the equipment and the consumer goods that
go into Iraq in a more effective way. And obviously we are also
exploring political options as well as military options. But the
President does not have a recommendation before him for the simple
reason that his advisors -- and I am one of those advisors -- have not
provided him one.
MR. BLITZER: The goal is still, though, what you call regime change in
Baghdad, getting rid of Saddam Hussein one way or another; is that
right?
SECRETARY POWELL: Yes, that remains the United States' goal. And there
is an international goal of getting the inspectors in to make sure
that he complies with the obligations he entered into ten years ago to
not have any weapons of mass destruction. And that is what the
inspectors are all about, and that is what the Oil-for-Food program is
all about and the goods review list that we just completed with the
Security Council.
But we believe, as a United States position, that the region and the
people of Iraq would be better off with another leader, another
regime.
MR. BLITZER: Much more of my exclusive interview with Secretary Powell
right after this.
(Commercial Break.)
MR. BLITZER: Welcome back to Late Edition. We return now to my
exclusive interview with the US Secretary of State Colin Powell.
There is a headline in The New York Times this morning: "Debate on
Arafat Stalls US Policy, Aides to Bush Say." The article suggests that
the Bush Administration can't decide what to do with Yasser Arafat,
whether he should be the leader of the Palestinian Authority or
someone else should be brought in to take his place. What is the
position of the Bush Administration as far as Yasser Arafat's
leadership is concerned?
SECRETARY POWELL: I am not sure which anonymous aides were being
quoted, but this particular aide, the Secretary of State, has received
his instructions from the President. Chairman Arafat is the head of
the Palestinian Authority and he is the leader of the Palestinian
people.
Now, we believe he could be a better leader and could lead the
Palestinian Authority in a more effective way. So we are going to be
working with our Arab friends, we are going to be working with the
Palestinians, we are going to be working with others, to see if we can
transform the Palestinian Authority into a more effective
organization, working with Chairman Arafat, but working with other
Palestinian leaders as well.
Palestinian leaders are suggesting that there is a need for reform
within the Authority in order for them to do a better job. We will
continue to press Chairman Arafat and other Palestinian leaders to end
the violence, get it under control. And we think they can do more,
although they probably can't end it all; it's not all totally within
their authority.
And then we are also going to pursue ways to help them with their
security consultations with Israel and help them build a more
effective security force. And we are also interested in pursuing a
political track, as well as helping them with their economy and with
humanitarian needs that the Palestinian people have.
And so Assistant Secretary of State Burns will be heading back to the
region in the very near future, sometime this week, and Director of
the CIA George Tenet will also be heading in. We had hoped George
would be able to go earlier, but he's got a pretty broad portfolio and
he's had some other things he's had to deal with, but I expect him to
be heading in before the week is out.
MR. BLITZER: So both Burns and Tenet will be in the region by the end
of this week?
SECRETARY POWELL: Well, that is my hope and expectation. There are
lots of things that are going on in the world. We have talked about
some of them here this morning. And so George is a very busy Director
of the CIA, but I know that he has put together a plan of action to
follow, and I hope that he will be able to clear his schedule and be
in the region in the not-too-distant future, and my hope is by the end
of the week.
MR. BLITZER: We only have a little time left, Mr. Secretary, but is it
your hope also that there will be this international conference, this
regional conference on the Middle East, sometime this summer involving
the Israelis, the Palestinians, the US and the others?
SECRETARY POWELL: Yes. As you know, the Madrid Quartet, as we call it
-- the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and the
Russian Federation -- announced that they would want to put together a
meeting sometime in the summer, and we are still looking toward such a
meeting.
I think such a meeting is needed in order to pull the various threads
together that are out there -- the Arab League initiative, the various
UN resolutions, not only 242 and 338 from the old days, but some
recent UN resolutions that have been put forward. And I hope that as
Assistant Secretary Burns and Mr. Tenet travel through the region and
as we have more intense dialogue with the Arab leaders and with Israel
and with our European Union and United Nations colleagues, the pieces
will start to come together so that we can have this meeting during
the course of the summer.
The meeting won't be some grand summit; it will be done at a
ministerial level, meaning at my level, where we will start to see
what are the opportunities to go forward with respect to a political
process, with respect to humanitarian and economic aid, with respect
to transformation of the Palestinian Authority, with respect to
security. Sooner or later you have to bring these pieces together in
some forum, and we still see that as a potential forum if the parties
are willing to come and participate in a positive way. And so I still
have that as an objective for the summer.
It is really a continuation of what the President launched with his
very significant speech from the 4th of April outlining a vision for
the region -- two states living side by side in peace and security --
Palestine, and of course the state of Israel, a Jewish state. And as
we see the continuing problems in the region, the continuing suicide
bombings and Israeli self-defense actions in response to terrorist
activity, it just makes it more clear to me that the only way forward
is with a political dialogue. And if such a meeting can help foster
that dialogue and also deal with security and humanitarian and
economic issues, then it would be a useful meeting to hold.
MR. BLITZER: Mr. Secretary, I'm going to let you go, but one quick
follow-up. When you say a Jewish state, Israel, when I interviewed the
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat some 15 minutes, he finally did say
he would supporting living alongside a Jewish state called Israel. Do
you believe that the Palestinian leadership is committed to that
concept that you just enunciated?
SECRETARY POWELL: I don't know if all of them are committed to it, but
as you noted -- and I saw your interview with Chairman Arafat -- he
spoke for the Palestinian people in that moment. And I think he
realizes that the only way we will find a political solution is for
everyone to come to the realization, as the Arab League did in their
declaration in Beirut a few weeks ago, all 22 Arab nations joining
together to say that we have to find a political solution that will
allow the 22 Arab nations and the Palestinians to live in peace
alongside Israel. And Israel is and will remain and must remain a
Jewish state. So I hope that this new recognition on the part of all
of the Arab and Palestinian leaders gives us something to work with
and a basis to move forward.
MR. BLITZER: All right. Let's hope you're right, Mr. Secretary. Thanks
so much. Good luck to you on the rest of your mission. I know you've
still got a few more stops to go. We'll see you back here in
Washington.
SECRETARY POWELL: Thank you, Wolf.
(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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