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3/5/2003 Colin Powell Center for Strategic and
International Studies http://www.state.gov/secretary/former/powell/remarks/2003/18307.htm SECRETARY
POWELL: Well, thank you
very much, Zbig, for that short and generous introduction. I am deeply honored
as a former National Security Advisor to be introduced by yet another former
National Security Advisor, somebody who almost hired me once to work for him
when he was National Security Advisor and I was a Brigade Commander in the
famous 101st Airborne Division. And I showed up for the interview wearing my
green uniform and jump boots, which clearly indicated to Dr. Brzezinski that I
really did not want to come to the NSC at that time. (Laughter.) But I
subsequently did return to the NSC in another capacity. And I am very
pleased to be here at CSIS and look around the room and see so many, many old
and dear friends, and especially David Abshire. And this gives me a chance to,
once again, thank CSIS for all the work that it has done over the years to
research issues of interest to Americans, of interest to people around the
world; and, through the hard work of the many people who have been here over
the years, produce products that have helped shape the times in which we live.
So it's a great pleasure to be back at CSIS, and, in that regard, then, it
makes it the perfect place, really, to discuss the issue of the day, to address
the grave and growing danger posed by Saddam Hussein and his continued pursuit
of weapons of mass destruction. Let me put the
question to you directly and clearly in the simplest terms that I can. The
question simply is: Has Saddam Hussein made a strategic political decision to
comply with the United Nations Security Council resolutions? Has he made a
strategic political decision to get rid of his weapons of mass destruction?
That's it, in a nutshell. The question is not how much more time should be
allowed for inspections. The
question is not how many more inspectors should be sent in. The question simply
is: Has Saddam Hussein made a strategic decision, a political decision, that he
will give up these horrible weapons of mass destruction and stop what he's been
doing for all these many years? That's the
question. There is no other question. Everything else is secondary or tertiary.
That's the issue. It's an issue that's been on the table
for 12 years. It's the issue that was put to Saddam Hussein in 1991 after the
Gulf War. And over a period of years, and resolution after resolution after
resolution, the same question was put to him, the same challenge was given to
him, the same instruction was given by the international community, by the
Security Council, to Saddam Hussein: Disarm, give up these weapons of mass
destruction, stop threatening your people, let your neighbors live in peace, no
longer fearful of these kinds of weapons. And for 12 years, Saddam Hussein has
given the same answer back repeatedly: No, I will not. On September
12th of last year, President Bush took the issue, once again, to the United
Nations, and before the General Assembly on that day, the 12th, he challenged
the world community to act, to act in a definitive way to deal with this threat
to international peace and security that was being posed and had been posed for
so many years by Saddam Hussein and his regime. We then went
into a spirited debate for the next seven weeks after the President's speech to
come up with a resolution that would lay it out clearly once and for all. It's
interesting to note that as soon as this debate began and Saddam Hussein
recognized that something might come out of it, he started to respond. Within a
few days after the President's speech, he said, oh, I'll let the inspectors in,
after years of saying, no, you can't come back in, after he caused them to
leave in 1998. Was he doing
that because he had suddenly made a strategic decision to comply or disarm? No.
He was doing it because he began to feel the pressure. And once again, he
started to play the game that he had been playing for the last 11 or so years,
to divert attention, to distract, to throw chaff up, to confuse, to cause us to
lose our way in applying our will. Nevertheless,
the debate went forward, even though there were people who said, well, gosh,
why do we need a new resolution? We have all these other resolutions, and he's
now going to let the inspectors back in. But we went right ahead. We ignored
all of that. We ignored the letters that went back and forth between he and the
United Nations and the inspectors as he tried to see if he could derail a new
resolution. And he failed. And after some
seven weeks of the most intense negotiations, intense diplomacy imaginable,
last November, the Security Council unanimously, 15 to zero -- people thought
it couldn't be done -- 15 to zero, the Security Council unanimously passed
Resolution 1441. And let's be
clear what Resolution 1441 is all about. It's not just a bunch of meaningless
words. Every one of those words was fought over. It's not about inspectors.
It's not about an inspection regime. It is about Saddam Hussein, in the first
instance, in the first part of that resolution, being found guilty again,
reaffirming his guilt over the preceding 11 years of possessing and developing
with the intention of having and potentially using weapons of mass destruction. That
resolution, in the first instance, was about Saddam Hussein continuing to be in
material breach of multiple previous resolutions, 16 of them, that demanded his
disarmament. It was about giving Saddam Hussein, in the next instance, one last
chance to come clean and disarm. That was the clear purpose of the resolution.
One last chance. You have been in material breach. You have been guilty. You
still are guilty. We're giving you one last chance to make that strategic
choice, make that political decision to give up these horrible weapons that
threaten humanity, to give them up, come into compliance. Once again, join with
your neighbors in trying to build a better neighborhood. Come into compliance,
one last chance. But the drafters of that resolution and all of the ministers
and ambassadors who worked on it knew who we were dealing with. We have seen
the record of the past 11 years. So we made it
clear that there had to be certain other elements in the resolution. One of the
other elements had to be an inspection regime that would be tough, demanding,
that would allow the inspectors to go anywhere, anytime, anyplace. It also said
that Hussein had to provide them everything they needed to do their job, had to
cooperate, provide people for interviews, all the other things that you have
heard discussed. That was an essential part of the resolution. And then the
final element of that resolution, so that there could be no doubt about what
would follow in the absence of compliance, it made it clear that if he missed
this one last chance, if he committed new material breaches, then serious
consequences would follow. Nothing we
have seen since the passage of 1441 indicates that Saddam Hussein has taken a
strategic and political decision to disarm; moreover, nothing indicates that
the Iraqi regime has decided to actively, unconditionally and immediately
cooperate with the inspectors. Cooperate for the purpose of showing everything
they have, not cooperate for the purpose of seeing how little we can show them. Process is not
performance. Concessions are not compliance. Destroying a handful of missiles
here under duress, only after you're pressed and pressed and pressed and you
can't avoid it, and you see what's going to happen to you if you don't start
doing something to deceive the international community once again, that's not
the kind of compliance that was intended by UN Resolution 1441. Iraq's too
little, too late gestures are meant not just to deceive and delay action by the
international community, he has as one of his major goals to divide the
international community, to split us into arguing factions. That effort must
fail. It must fail because none of us wants to live in a world where facts are
defeated by deceit, where the words of the Security Council mean nothing, where
Saddam and the likes of Saddam are emboldened to acquire and wield weapons of
mass destruction. Saddam's
response to Resolution 1441 is consistent with his answers to all the previous
resolutions. He has met each one of them with defiance and deception, with
every passing year since 1991 and with every passing day since the adoption of
Resolution 1441. Saddam, as a result, has taken Iraq deeper and deeper into
material breach of its international obligations. It was
precisely because of his long history of defiance and deception when the
Security Council's members voted to pass Resolution 1441, we were expecting to
see this all again. And we carefully included in the resolution some early
tests to see whether or not we were wrong. Maybe he had changed. Maybe this
time it would be different. One of those
early tests was 30 days after the passage of the resolution we wanted to see
from Saddam Hussein something we were supposed to have seen back in 1991, but
didn't, and that was a current, accurate, full and complete declaration of its
banned programs. The Iraqi regime was to give inspectors immediate, unimpeded
and unrestricted access to any site and any person to help them do their job of
verifying whether Iraq was disarming. In that first 30 days, wait for the
declaration, see if this kind of access was granted. 1441 spelled
out very clearly that false statements or omissions, and failure to cooperate
with these inspectors, as they started to do their work, these two elements
combined, would constitute a further material breach, a further finding of
guilty, not complying. No one has
seriously claimed that Iraq provided a currently accurate, full and complete
declaration on December 8th when they met the 30-day schedule. No one has stood
up to defend them. So many of my colleagues, unfortunately, on the Security
Council don't even want to remember that. Well, that was back in December. We
know we don't have to think about that now. Well, that was December. That's not
worry about that now. Let's not discuss that at our next meeting. Let's just
let bygones by bygones. Let's see what we can get him to do today that might
make us feel a little better. It's not going
to work. We cannot ignore it. The things that are not in the declaration are
things that we have to know about. Instead, we got a mixture of lies and
deceit, falsities. Chief UN Inspector Blix and International Atomic Energy Head
ElBaradei both told the Council on December 19th that there was not much new in
that Iraqi declaration, and we shouldn't have been surprised. Indeed, the
12,000-page document that they tried to pass off as the whole truth was nothing
but a rehash of old and discredited material, with some new lies thrown in for
good measure to make it look fresh. Fresh lies on top of the old lies. It repeated
the biggest lie of all, the claim that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction,
thereby setting the stage for further deception of the inspectors as they went
about their business. You know, it's
illustrative just to look at a couple of examples. You take VX nerve agent. VX
nerve agent is the most deadly chemical weapon imaginable. Horrible to
contemplate. As a soldier, I had to contemplate it, both as a battlefield
commander, as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and it was a weapon that I
never wanted to see used in battle, I would never like to see used in a
terrorist operation, I would never like to see used against any human being. A
few drops and you're dead. Back in 1991,
Iraq was required then to declare and destroy its arsenal of all these kinds of
materials and VX. And what did Iraq do back in 1991? It denied it had any. And
it stuck to that denial for four long years, all the way through 1995. Inspectors
were all over the country. Inspectors were there looking. Inspectors were doing
what inspectors are supposed to do: verify what they have been told. And they
were told there was no VX. In 1995 or
thereabouts, Saddam Hussein's son-in-law, who knew a lot, defected, and he
spilled the beans. He let it be known that the Iraqi regime had VX. And as a
result of what he told the international community, what he told the
inspectors, the Iraqi regime was forced to admit it. Forced to admit that it
had produced large amounts of this terrible, terrible poison. If it hadn't
been for that cueing from his son-in-law, who subsequently paid with his life
when he foolishly went back home, if you have any doubts about the nature of
this regime, if it hadn't been for the cueing that he provided, who knows where
Saddam Hussein might be today with VX? The fact of the matter is, we don't know
where he is today with VX because the latest declaration is still inadequate. Even now,
eight years after that discovery, he continues his deception. He still claims
that Iraq has never weaponized its VX stocks. He wants us to believe that while
he has had some VX, he can't use it. The inspectors
aren't buying it. Dr. Blix reported to the Security Council on January 27th
that there are indications the Iraqis have made more progress on weaponizing VX
than they have admitted. Just a few
days ago now, the Iraqis suddenly have come forward and said they will provide
a report on their VX, where he's going to look for a new report to come in a
week or so, they said. I'm not going to hold my breath. We've been waiting for
these reports to come for years and they have not come. Why do they come now?
They are trying to get out of the glare of the light. They're trying to get off
the stove. They're trying to, once again, put us off the case. How many lives
would you risk, innocent lives would you risk on the veracity of such a report
coming from Saddam Hussein? He still hasn't made the strategic choice to comply
and disarm. The saga of
Iraq's prohibited missile programs offers another example of how he weaves his
web of deceit. Missiles in and of themselves are not weapons of mass
destruction, but they can deliver such warheads. Shortly after the end of the
Gulf War, in order to contain Saddam Hussein and as part of that early series
of resolutions, missiles with ranges of more than 150 kilometers were banned,
were banned from Iraq by Security Council Resolution 687. He's not supposed to
have missiles that will go beyond 150 kilometers, but he does. In its
voluminous declaration of December 8th, Iraq flatly stated that it had no such
missiles. We don't have any. But data from flight tests for two missiles, the
al-Samoud II and the al-Fatah, showed that they traveled more than 150
kilometers. They were clearly trying to upgun these missiles so that they go
far beyond their prohibited range. And why would one want to do that? To reach
out, that's why they wanted to do it. So Iraq
quickly shifted tactics and said, well, you know, that's really not the case,
let's talk about this, let's show you why you've got the wrong data, and they
tried to throw the inspectors off the track. But the inspectors insisted, Dr.
Blix insisted, that these missiles be destroyed. You should see
the first letter that came back from the Iraqis, when Dr. Blix's letter went to
them. It was an attack, once again, saying well, you know, you shouldn't be
doing this, it's wrong, we're innocent. Once again, denial. Once again, trying
to deceive. Once again, only going along with the destruction because they were
trying to keep us divided, keep us confused, and try to delay what might well
be heading their way. Nobody should
be quick to declare a victory for compliance in the missile department. And
from recent intelligence, we know that the Iraqi regime intends to declare and
destroy only a portion of its banned al-Samoud inventory and that it has, in
fact, ordered the continued production of the missiles that you see being
destroyed. Iraq has brought its machinery that produces such missiles out into
the daylight for all to see. But we have intelligence that says, at the very
same time, it has also begun to hide machinery it can use to convert other
kinds of engines to power al-Samouds II. Once again, he
plays the double game. Even as he orders some to be destroyed, he is continuing
with activities that will allow more to be produced. We can see no real
improvement on substance. Iraq is far from disarming. But what about
process? People talk about process. Shouldn't we be pleased about the
cooperation we have seen with the inspectors? Unfortunately, we don't find
Baghdad's performance much better in that regard. Since my
presentation to the Security Council on February 5th, we have received further
intelligence from multiple sources showing that Iraq is continuing in its
efforts to deceive the inspectors. Much of this intelligence from a variety of
sensitive sources, many of these sources I cannot share with anyone in any
greater detail than I am here today, but it's reliable and shows that the Iraqi
regime is still moving weapons of mass destruction materials around the country
to avoid detection. Why should we
be surprised? This has been his pattern. This has been what he's been doing for
12 years. For example, we know that in late January, the Iraqi Intelligence
Service transported chemical and biological agents to areas far away from
Baghdad, near the Syrian and Turkish borders, in order to conceal them, and
they have concealed them from the prying eyes of inspectors. In early
February, fearing that UNMOVIC had precise intelligence about storage
locations, the Iraqis were moving prohibited materials every 12 to 24 hours.
And in mid-February, concerned about the surveillance capabilities of the U-2
overflights that they finally were going to permit, Iraq was transferring
banned materials in old vehicles and placing them in poor, working class
neighborhoods outside the capital. If Baghdad
really were cooperating, if they really wanted to comply, if it really was
disarmament that they were interested in, they would be bringing all of these
materials out, not scattering them for protection. We also know
that senior Iraqi officials continue to admit in private what they continue to
deny in public, that Iraq does, indeed, possess weapons of mass destruction. A
senior official stated in late January that Baghdad could not answer UNMOVIC's
questions honestly without causing major problems for Iraq. Another senior
official said that allowing UNMOVIC to question Iraqi scientists outside of
Iraq would prove disastrous. Why? Because free of intimidation, free from the
risk of loss of life, they might tell the truth. And we also know that Saddam
Hussein has issued new guidance to key officials saying everything possible
must be done to avoid discovery of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. If Iraq was
serious about disarming, it would encourage, it would order, it would tell all
of its scientists: Step forward, those of you who know anything about what we
have been doing for the last 10 years. come forward so that information can be
made available so we can convince the international community of our claims. That is not
what is happening. Instead, Saddam's security officials have been working
aggressively to discourage or to control interviews between Iraqi scientists
and inspectors and we should not be deceived because a few, a few have made
themselves available without minders. Last month, a
senior Iraqi official told an Iraqi scientist not to cooperate with the UN
inspectors. He threatened the scientist with grave misfortune if the scientist
did not obey. Iraqi security officials have required scientists who have been
invited to interviews with the inspectors to wear concealed recording devices.
Hotels where the interviews are being conducted have been bugged. Resolution
1441 was meant to end this kind of action. It was intended to end 12 years of
deceit and manipulation. It was intended to give him one last chance to comply.
And that's why the Security Council demanded full and immediate compliance, not
piecemeal gestures of cooperation, not more documents of deception, not more
half-measures and half-truths. The inspectors
are very, very dedicated professionals. I've gotten to know Dr. Blix and Dr.
ElBaradei very, very well and I've met with some members of their teams. These
are terrific people. We should be so thankful that there are international
civil servants such as they who are willing to undertake these kinds of
missions under difficult circumstances, and I give them all the credit for
their willingness to do this. None of this that I am talking about is of any
fault of theirs. They are
working hard. But unfortunately, the inspection effort isn't working. Why?
Because it was never intended to work under these kinds of hostile circumstances.
It was intended to help the Iraqis comply. They were not intended to be
detectives that went around seeking out things in the absence of genuine Iraqi
cooperation. Inspections cannot work effectively as long as the Iraqi regime
remains bound and determined to hold on to its weapons of mass destruction
instead of divesting itself of these terrible items. In recent
weeks, we have seen a dribbling out of weapons -- a warhead there, a missile
there -- giving the appearance of disarmament, the semblance of cooperation.
And in recent days, they have promised more paper, more reports. But these
paltry gestures and paper promises do not substantially reduce Saddam's
capabilities, they do not represent a change of heart on his part, and they do
not eliminate the threat to international peace and security. Nor do they
come because Saddam is worried about hordes of additional inspectors being sent
into Iraq armed with work plans and benchmarks. They have everything to do,
these process efforts on their part, they have everything to do with the fact
that Saddam faces an ever nearer prospect of defeat by overwhelming military
force. It is the threat of force -- and no one will deny this -- it is the
threat of force that is causing him to comply, not the threat of inspections or
the threat merely of resolutions. In the absence of his willingness to do what
he has to do, it is only the threat of force that is getting him to do anything
at all. If, at this
late date, Saddam were truly to decide to come clean and comply with 1441, the
current number of inspectors could do the job of verifying Iraq's disarmament
and they wouldn't need an enormous amount of time in which to do it. Inspectors
have said so. The amount of time needed to verify all this is a function of how
much cooperation and the willingness there is to comply with the resolutions,
not the number of inspectors. What is now needed is that strategic and
political decision which we have not seen over the past 12 years. Remarks at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies - Photo Courtesy of Sonia Samee
of CSIS Inspections will amount to little more than casting at shadows unless
Iraq lifts the fog of denial and deception that prevents inspectors from seeing
the true magnitude of what they're up against. It is for Iraq to prove to the
Security Council and to the world that it has disarmed. We know that
true disarmament looks like. We saw it with South Africa. We saw it with the
Ukraine. The leaders of both of those countries made solemn political
commitments to disarm and they worked with the international community. And
even then it took a lot of time, but at least you knew that they were in union
with you to disarm. Those two nations did everything possible to ensure
complete cooperation with inspectors, and an expeditious, rigorous, transparent
disarmament process was put in place. What would it
look like in Iraq? Instead of letting the inspectors grope for answers in the
dark, Iraq would bring all of its documents out and all of its scientists into
the light to answer the outstanding questions. Indeed, Iraq would be besieging
the inspectors with information. Mobile labs would be driven up and parked
outside of UNMOVIC headquarters. All of the missiles of the al-Samoud variety
would be destroyed immediately. They wouldn't be hesitating. They would go and
find the infrastructure for these missiles and what machinery they have hidden
to produce more and make them available for destruction. I return to
the fundamental question: Is he complying? That's it. Is Iraq complying with
1441? And the only reasonable answer is no. Last November,
when 1441 was passed, the international community declared Saddam Hussein a
threat. In four months since, that has not changed; he is still a threat. He
was given one last chance to avoid war. If Iraq complies and disarms, even at
this late hour, it is possible to avoid war. He is betting,
however, that his contempt for the will of the international community is
stronger then the collective resolve of the Security Council to impose its
will. Saddam Hussein is betting that some members of the Council will not
sanction the use of force despite all the evidence of his continued refusal to
disarm. Divisions among us -- and there are divisions among us -- if these divisions
continue, will only convince Saddam Hussein that he is right. But I can assure
you, he is wrong. So those who
say that force must always be a last resort, I say that I understand the
reluctance to use force. I understand the hesitation to undertake human --
human -- to take human life. I have seen the horrors of war. I have been where
the dying is done. I agree with those who say that lives must only be
sacrificed for the greatest of causes. We should do everything possible to
avoid war. We have done that, and no one believes that more deeply than
President Bush. That's why he went to the United Nations. That's why he
persuaded all 15 of us on the Security Council to give Saddam Hussein one last
chance. It is always a
hard thing for citizens to accept the prospect of war, and it should be. But
consider the chilling fact that Saddam Hussein also knows what war is like. He
has used war and weapons of mass destruction against his neighbors and against
thousands of his own citizens. And in this post-September 11th world, getting
those appalling weapons out of his hands is the only way to guarantee that he
won't use them again, or he won't make common cause and pass them on through
his terrorist connections for use practically anywhere in the world. Consider what
could happen if Saddam Hussein, a tyrant who has no scruples and no mercies,
concludes that the governments of the world will not condone military action
under any circumstances, even as a last resort, as at least one member of the
Security Council feels. Under those circumstances, he will never comply with
his obligations. All he has to do is wait us out. And a terrible message will
go far and wide to all those who conspire to do harm, to all those who seek to
acquire weapons of mass destruction. It is now for the international community
to confront the reality of Iraq's continued failure to disarm. The Security
Council resolution put forward last week by the United Kingdom, Spain and the
United States says precisely that: "Iraq has failed to take the final
opportunity afforded it in Resolution 1441." That is a simple statement of
fact, as well. Iraq has refused to disarm and cooperate. It serves the interest
of no one for Saddam to miscalculate. It doesn't serve the interest of the
United States or the world or Iraq for Saddam to miscalculate our intention or
our willingness to act. By passing this new resolution, the Council will remove
any doubt that it will accept anything less than Iraq's complete disarmament of
its weapons of mass destruction and full cooperation with the inspectors to
verify its compliance. If Saddam
leaves us no choice but to disarm him by force, the United States and our
coalition partners will do our utmost to do it quickly, do it in a way that
minimizes the loss of civilian life or destruction of property. We will do our
utmost in such circumstances, should they be forced upon us, to meet the
humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people. And we would take responsibility for
the post-war stabilization of that country. We would be responsible for
establishing and maintaining order, destroying Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction once and for all. Dismantling
terrorist networks with nodes in Iraq would also be a priority. And soon after
these immediate needs are met and internal security is established, we would
want to move as quickly as possible to civilian oversight of the next stages in
the transformation of Iraq, working with the many coalition partners we will
have, working with all the elements of the international community that would
be willing to play a role in such an effort. Then, legitimate Iraqi
institutions representing all Iraqis, representing the people, can be raised
up; institutions created and a formal government put in place that will make
sure the nation does not rearm, that the treasure that exists in Iraq in the
form of its oil is used for the benefit of the people of Iraq. The United
States has a superb record over the past 50 or 60 years of helping countries
that we found it necessary to do battle with or in, put themselves on a better
footing for a brighter future. To be sure
that there will be lots of work to do. The work of reconciliation and
rehabilitation and reconstruction will be a long and hard one, but we are up to
the task. But the true test of our collective commitment to Iraq will be our
efforts to help the Iraqi people build a unified Iraq that does not threaten
international peace, one that is a welcome presence among the nations of the
world, not an international pariah. For 30 years,
Saddam has fed off the blood, sweat, and tears of his people. He has murdered,
tortured, and raped to stay in power. He has squandered Iraq's vast oil wealth
on lavish palaces and secret police and weapons programs. The United
States and the international community want to help free the Iraqi people from
fear, freedom from want. We in the world community desire to help Iraqis move
their country toward democracy and prosperity. We want to help the Iraqi people
establish a government that accepts principles of justice, observes the rule of
law and respects the rights of all citizens. In short, we want to see an Iraq
where people can look to the future with hope, and not be seen as a pariah on
the world stage. We aren't just
thinking about that famous day after. We know it's not going to be just one day
after, but many days after a long, formidable challenge that will lie ahead of
us and our coalition partners, until such time as Iraqis are prepared to govern
their own land. Even as the
Iraqi people are liberated, we are determined to do all we can to renew hope in
other parts of the region. To strive for peace between Israelis and
Palestinians. President Bush has recently again emphasized his own personal
commitment to achieving the vision of two states, Israel and Palestine, living
side by side in peace, security and dignity, and to implementing the roadmap,
the Quartet roadmap, that will help make that vision a reality. We stand ready
to lead the way to this better future. To get there, all those in the region
who yearn for peace -- the Palestinians, the Israelis, and their Arab neighbors
-- will have to fulfill deep commitments and make difficult compromises. But
the tough choices will be worth it. While the process of peacemaking poses
obligations for all, the benefits of peace will be felt for generations to come
by millions of people. But if the
international community wants the hopeful prospects for the days, months and
years ahead to materialize for Iraq, we must confront the reality of Saddam
Hussein's intransigency. We must confront that reality here and now. We must
face the reality that Saddam's Iraq is Exhibit A of the grave and growing
danger that an outlaw regime can supply terrorists with the means to kill on a
massive scale. Last November,
the entire Security Council declared his weapons of mass destruction to be that
threat to international peace and security. And if that threat existed last
November when we voted for 1441, it certainly exists now. If the international
community was resolute then, it must be resolute now. Resolution
1441 was not just President Bush and the United States saying Saddam is a
menace to the world. It was France, Britain, Russia, China, Syria and all the
rest of the Security Council going on record saying so. We spent seven weeks
working over and weighing every single word of that resolution. All of the
members of the Council knew when they passed 1441 that the time might come when
we would have to meet our responsibility to use force in the absence of Saddam
Hussein's strategic decision to disarm and comply. For the past
four months, he's been trying to avoid the consequences of his noncompliance,
to escape the moment of truth. Now is the time for the Council to come together
once again to send a clear message to Saddam that no nation has been taken in
by his transparent tactics. Now is the time for the Council to underscore its
unanimous conclusion that Saddam remains in material breach of his obligations. Now is the
time to tell Saddam once and for all that the clock has not been stopped by his
machinations, that the clock continues to tick, and that the consequences of
his continued refusal to disarm will be very, very real. The goal of
the United States remains the Security Council's goal: Iraq's disarmament. One
last opportunity to achieve it through peaceful means remains open to Saddam
Hussein, even at this late hour. What we know for certain, however, is that
Saddam Hussein will be disarmed. The only question before us now is how. The
question remains as it was at the beginning: Has Saddam Hussein made that
strategic choice? He has not and we will see in the next few days whether or
not he understands the situation he is in and he makes that choice. And that is
the argument we will be taking to the Security Council. Thank you very
much. (Applause.) Remarks at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies - Photo Courtesy of Sonia Samee
of CSISSECRETARY POWELL: Thank you very much. I have a few moments to take a
couple of questions before I have to get to a meeting, if there are any
questions. There shouldn't be after that presentation. (Laughter.) Anyone? Yes,
sir. QUESTION: Sir,
if the case was that you wanted to make the Security Council resolution as you
said, now what the Security Council is saying, they do not see this suitable.
So why don't you want to respect the will of the Security Council in this? SECRETARY
POWELL: At this point, we are respecting the will of the Security Council.
There's a lot of speculation about what the Council might or might not do when
it meets next week. I think that's when it is more than likely that action will
be taken on a resolution, if that seems like the appropriate step after we hear
from Dr. Blix and Dr. ElBaradei. But at the
same time, we have also made clear that we believe that the threat is so great
that if the Security Council is unable to take action, despite our best efforts
to work with it, we must, in the interest of our own safety and, we believe,
the safety of the region and the world, reserve the option to act with a
coalition of willing nations if the Council does not act. We believe the
situation is that clear and the situation is that dangerous. QUESTION: Mr.
Secretary, you said at the beginning, you pointed out that 1441 demonstrated in
its 15-0 vote a common perspective on what needs to be done to disarm Iraq. Yet
right now we seem to be perceiving a completely different sense of the
imminence of the threat between those very same members of the Security
Council. How do you explain the difference in the perception of the imminence
of the threat that seems to have emerged right now? SECRETARY
POWELL: There was always a difference in the perception of the threat. Some of
my colleagues in the Council have never quite seen it as strongly as we have
seen it and that was the case during the seven weeks of the debate and before
the debate. There are even some members of the Council who argue most
vociferously now for delay or something else, who were anxious to see sanctions
go away years ago when it was clear there was something still going on in Iraq. The one thing
that we all agree upon is that there is no doubt that Iraq has weapons of mass
destruction and the capability to develop them, or else I don't think we would
have gotten a 15-0 vote. The debate really is, well, how much should we be
concerned it, how much should we worry about it? What we came
together and said in 1441 is that they're in breach, continue to be in breach,
they have not accounted for so much of this horrible material that they have,
they have not allowed the inspectors in to verify the claims that they have
made, and that this is a threat to the security of the region. We believe
what highlights the threat, at least in our eyes, is the nexus that now exists
in the post-9/11 world that it was one thing, and it was a bad enough thing for
Saddam Hussein to have these weapons of mass destruction available to him, but
if, per chance, he also served as a source for these weapons of mass
destruction, either accidentally or deliberately putting them in the hands of
terrorists, we would all look back on this moment in time and feel awful if, at
some future moment in time, a horrible attack took place and we discover one of
these weapons was used, and when we had the chance to do something about it and
we had the obligation to do something about it, we didn't do something about
it. But there
certainly is a difference in perspective among the members, some of the
members, as to the seriousness of this threat. And many of my colleagues agree
with us on this issue. Some of my colleagues, three of whom I was watching on
television earlier today, believe that the problem is there, the threat is
there, but the solution to it is just, oh, let the inspectors keep going. What I didn't
hear in their press conference today is for how long, and how many more
inspectors do you think will do, will do what the number of inspectors there
are unable to do. And there was very little comment from them today or in
earlier days about the basic fact that you still don't have somebody who is
complying. He is not -- he has not made that strategic choice. And I don't
think any one of them would argue that he has. One final,
then I do have to go. Steve*. QUESTION: You
just said that you didn't hear your colleagues be very concrete on what needs
to be done. Suppose they were to agree with you and others to set a series of
very specific benchmarks with very specific deadlines, almost in the form of
ultimatum, focusing on specific items, such as the VX, or the anthrax, or the biological
labs, with the presumption that if there is not a concrete response on these
specific items, as to some extent there has been on the rockets, then there
would be common action for the purpose of disarming Iraq? SECRETARY
POWELL: I'm not sure that even some of them would find that, or if we laid out
such a series of benchmarks now, and a month or two or three months later we
found some of them had been met and others had not been met, we'd be right back
in the same boat, in my judgment. Let's give them some more time. I don't think
it's a question of additional benchmarks. All of these benchmarks have been out
there for years. Some of the benchmarks that are spoken of and some of the
elements that I'm sure we'll be hearing about later in the week are not new
elements. They have been there all along. They have been the basis of previous
resolutions. They've been there all along. And it is not
the need for new specific benchmarks to measure Saddam Hussein. I think we have
a lot to measure with -- against -- with him -- to measure him with already. As
a result of his lack of performance on the declaration, his lack of answering
the basic questions that people have been asking repeatedly with respect to VX,
with respect to botulinum toxin. He doesn't need to have these benchmarks
repeated. He knows what they are, and he has not demonstrated a willingness to
answer the questions that have been out there for so many, so many years. And that's our
-- that's the reason we are reluctant to yet see another resolution come
forward that starts listing benchmarks in that resolution as a new measure of
merit. We've given him enough measures of merit and I think we can pretty much
judge now that he is not compliant, not made that decision, and is not
cooperating in a way that would verify if he had made that decision. I do regret
that I have to get to a meeting, so thank you very much. |