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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DebtBomb who wrote (75598)6/6/2002 7:27:51 PM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 99280
 
Iraq threat requires 'decisive response' - Cheney

By Randall Mikkelsen
WASHINGTON, June 6 (Reuters) - Vice President Dick Cheney
said on Thursday there was a growing danger of terrorist groups
acquiring weapons of mass destruction from Iraq or other
countries and that this required a decisive response.
"This gathering danger requires the most careful,
deliberate and decisive response by Americans and our allies,"
Cheney said in a speech to the National Association of
Homebuilders.
His comments added to a drumbeat of U.S. signals of
potential new military action in the U.S.-led war on terrorism.
But they went a step further in singling out Iraq than U.S.
President George W. Bush's statement last Saturday that
Americans must be ready for "preemptive action" against threats
to the country.
Bush did not mention Iraq, which he has labeled as part of
an "axis of evil" bent on acquiring weapons of mass
destruction, in those comments at the U.S. Military Academy, at
West Point.
Cheney reiterated U.S. concerns over the possibility
militant groups such as al Qaeda, blamed for the Sept. 11
attacks on the United States, would "link up" with governments
developing weapons of mass destruction.
"In the case of (Iraqi President) Saddam Hussein, we have a
dictator who is clearly pursuing these deadly capabilities,"
Cheney said. "Saddam has also shown that he's willing to use
weapons of mass destruction."
"A regime that hates America and everything we stand for
must never be permitted to threaten America with weapons of
mass destruction," he said. Cheney has used similar language in
recent speeches, but coupled with Bush's call for preemptive
action they underscore the U.S. determination against Iraq.
"As President Bush said the other day up at West Point, in
the world we have entered, the only path to safety is the path
of action. And this nation will act," Cheney said.
European NATO allies, led by France and Germany, have been
reluctant to endorse military action against Iraq, while Arab
nations insist that a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict must come first.
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in Brussels on
Thursday NATO cannot wait until it has absolute proof of a
threat to act against terrorists aggressively seeking
biological, chemical and nuclear weapons.
He told NATO it must improve its protective measures and go
on the offensive because a terror attack could occur at any
time.
"Absolute proof cannot be precondition for action," Rumsfeld
told NATO defense ministers at a closed-door meeting in
Brussels, according to an outline of his presentation.
The ministers discussed specific countries that Washington
says are developing weapons of mass destruction and could pose
a threat to allies. They included Iran, Iraq, North Korea,
Cuba, Libya and Syria, a senior U.S. defense official said.
"The only way to defend against individuals or groups or
organizations or countries that have weapons of mass
destruction and are bent on using them against you ... is to
take the effort to find those global networks and to deal with
them as the United States did in Afghanistan," he said.
Bush was to announce later on Thursday his proposal for a
cabinet department of homeland security.
"It's all part of going from a peacetime society to a
society mobilizing for war," said White House spokesman Ari
Fleischer.
((Washington newsroom 202 898-8300, fax 202 898 8383, e-mail
Washington.bureau.newsroom@reuters.com))
REUTERS
*** end of story ***