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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (47333)9/26/2002 8:26:32 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Oil companies waiting to pounce in Iraq

27.09.2002
By ANDREW BUNCOMBE

WASHINGTON - Oil companies around the world are manoeuvring themselves for the multibillion-dollar bonanza that would follow the ousting of Saddam Hussein.

Russia is so concerned that it has been holding secret talks with the Iraqi Opposition to shore up its economic interests in the country, which still owes Moscow US$7 billion ($15 billion) from Soviet times.

With the second-biggest proven oil reserves of any country, Iraq's underdeveloped oil fields have become a key negotiating chip and a backdrop to continuing talks between the United States and the other permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, all of which have major economic stakes in regime change in Iraq.

It has also given fuel to critics of the United States' war plans, who say the desire to topple Saddam is at least partly driven by economics.

Oil industry experts say there is growing concern that the United States would dominate the Iraqi oil scene post-Saddam.

As a result, a number of oil companies have reportedly held talks with members of the Iraqi Opposition to try to ensure involvement in any future deals.

The Independent has learned the concern is such that the Russian Government - which is still friendly towards Iraq - recently dispatched a diplomat to hold talks with a senior official from the Iraqi National Congress (INC), the US-backed Iraq Opposition umbrella group.

At that meeting in Washington on August 29 - the first for seven years - the Russian diplomat expressed worries that his country would be kept out of the oil markets by the US.

James Woolsey, a former director of the CIA and a regular commentator on the relationship between oil and global security, told the Washington Post: "It's pretty straightforward. France and Russia have oil companies and interests in Iraq.

"They should be told that if they are of assistance in moving Iraq toward decent government we'll do the best we can to ensure that the new Government and American companies work closely with them.

"If they throw in their lot with Saddam it will be difficult to the point of impossible to persuade the new Iraqi Government to work with them."

Iraq has oil reserves of 112 billion barrels, second only to Saudi Arabia, with perhaps double that in undiscovered reserves.

With sanctions in place, the current production is just 2.8 million barrels a day, a capacity it struggles to reach because of deteriorating equipment. Under the UN oil-for-food programme, it exports about a million barrels a day.

Since 1998, two subsidiaries of Houston-based Halliburton, the company previously headed by US Vice-President Dick Cheney, have done $24 million worth of business to repair Iraqi oil pipelines under the UN programme.

Experts say that given sufficient foreign investment, Iraq could be producing six million barrels a day within five years, making it the world's third-biggest producer behind Russia and Saudi Arabia.

But which companies will benefit from these rich pickings? Since the end of the Gulf War companies from more than a dozen nations, including Britain, have had discussions with Iraq about developing fields.

In 1997, Russia's Lukoil negotiated a $8.5 billion deal to develop the West Qurna oilfield, and last year another Russian company, Slavneft, signed a $42 million deal to drill in Tuba. The French Total Fina Elf company has negotiated the rights for the vast Majnoon oilfield near the Iranian border.

It is unclear whether such deals would be honoured by a post-Saddam Government.

INC official Faisal Qaragholi said all such deals would be reviewed.

"If the deal [helps] the Iraqi people it will be carried on. If it does not it will be renegotiated," he said.

INC chairman Ahmed Chalabi believes the US should head a consortium to develop Iraq's oil.

Such views horrify the Russian Government, which as a major exporter of oil has much to lose should the US assume a dominant position in Iraq's oil industry.

Thane Gustafson, senior director with consultants Cambridge Energy Associates, said the issue was almost certainly a factor in Russia's ongoing talks with the US about a new UN resolution over weapons inspectors.

"Oil is bound to be on [President Vladimir] Putin's mind because of the importance of oil exports ...

"He would probably prefer things pretty much as they are now."

Russia's concern led it to dispatch diplomat Andrew Kroshkin to hold talks with the INC's Washington director, Entifadh Qanbar.

Qanbar said that during the meeting Kroshkin said Russia's Iraq policy was "100 per made by money".

"He told me that he had been told that if the Americans overthrow Iraq they will not let the Russians do business in Iraq," he said.

"We have seen this in the Balkans. He wanted to say that Russia's dealings with Iraq are based on historical and economic relations, not on relations with Saddam."

The importance of Iraqi oil will also be discussed next week at a US-Russian energy summit in Houston.

In this environment, it is likely that most leading oil companies are actively trying to position themselves to operate in Iraq if Saddam is overthrown.

US oil giants ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco both refused to say if they had been holding talks with the Iraqi Opposition. But both said they would be interested in operating in Iraq if sanctions permitted them.

A spokesman for Royal Dutch Shell, the British-Dutch company that held discussions with Saddam about developing the Ratawi oilfield several years ago, said it had not approached the INC but that if sanctions were lifted the company would be interested in dealing with Iraq.

James Lucier, an oil analyst with Prudential Securities, said: "There's no real upside for American oil companies to take a very aggressive stance at this stage.

"There'll be plenty of time in the future."

nzherald.co.nz



To: JohnM who wrote (47333)9/27/2002 12:02:55 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Charles Krauthammer, radical

I think Krauthammer tends to be reasoned. His points here about Gore Ignoring Clintons lack of response to the Taliban are certainly on target. You may like Gores speech because he came out against Bush, but it certainly did have a lot of holes in it, IMO.

Gore's Glass House

By Charles Krauthammer

Friday, September 27, 2002; Page A23

A pudding with no theme but much poison. Such was the foreign policy speech Al Gore delivered in San Francisco on Monday. It was a disgrace -- a series of cheap shots strung together without logic or coherence. Most of all, it was brazen. It was delivered as if there had been no Clinton-Gore administration, no 1990s.

The tone of the speech is best reflected in Gore's contemptuous dismissal of the U.S. victory in Afghanistan as "defeating a fifth-rate military power." If the Taliban were a fifth-rate military power, why didn't the Clinton-Gore administration destroy it and spare us Sept. 11?

It is not as if, during Gore's term, al Qaeda had not declared itself or established its postal address. It declared war on the United States, blew up our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and attacked the USS Cole. What did Gore's administration do? Fire a few missiles into the Afghan desert and a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory, then wash its hands and leave the problem to its successors.

Why didn't the Clinton-Gore administration go after this fifth-rate military power? This is a question that even Russian President Vladimir Putin has asked. In an interview with the German newspaper Bild shortly after Sept. 11, Putin recounted having talked to the Clinton administration about Osama bin Laden: "They wrung their hands so helplessly and said, 'The Taliban are not turning him over, what can one do?' I remember I was surprised: If they are not turning him over, one has to think and do something."

They did nothing. Gore now scorns the success of the man who did something. Considering the glass house he inhabits, Gore's attack on Bush is remarkably ad hominem. He implies, first, that the president is going after Iraq to distract attention from not finding Osama bin Laden. And second, that Bush is doing this for electoral purposes.

Interesting charges. On Aug. 17, 1998, Gore's president, the one he declared "will be regarded in the history books as one of our greatest presidents," made his Monica confession on national TV and then slinked away to Martha's Vineyard, Mass., for penance and isolation. Then, less than three days later, he returned from oblivion with that ostentatious commander-in-chief walk from Marine One to the Oval Office to announce his response to the African embassy bombings: his useless cruise missile salvo against Afghanistan and Sudan.

Then, that December, another bombing spasm, a three-day affair against Iraq that similarly achieved nothing. Operation Desert Fox occurred right in the midst of the House debate on impeachment. The timing was so wag-the-dog precise that it actually caused a postponement of the vote, with some Democrats suggesting that with the country now in crisis the impeachment proceedings should be canceled altogether and the whole mess left to the next Congress.

Gore should be careful about leveling charges about presidents getting combat-happy to distract attention from other problems. Yet what is most remarkable about Gore's speech is that for all its poison, it is profoundly unserious. Take Gore's repeated characterization of the Bush policy on postwar Afghanistan as "this doctrine of wash your hands and walk away."

Walk away? Our current policy is to secure Kabul, retrain the army, protect the new president and establish a small central government that can, over time, expand its political and geographic reach. This is a serious commitment. Our soldiers trying to fulfill it are being shot at regularly. Tell them they're walking away.

There is a serious question about how deeply involved in Afghanistan we ought to be. Are we more likely to bring stability by continuing Afghanistan's long history of decentralization and allowing warlords to act in their traditional areas of influence, or by sending an imperial army to go around imposing order in places where outsiders -- the British and the Soviets most notably -- have not had much luck imposing their own order?

One can argue either way, but the burden of proof is on those urging the more onerous and risky MacArthur regency. If Gore were a serious man he would make the case. But he doesn't. He doesn't even try to. He is too thin. And too cynical.

The New York Times reports that Gore wrote the speech "after consulting a fairly far-flung group of advisers that included Rob Reiner." Current U.S. foreign policy is the combined product of Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Paul Wolfowitz and the president. Meanwhile, the pretender is huddling with Meathead.

Had it not been for a few little old ladies baffled by the butterfly ballot in Palm Beach, Fla., American foreign policy today would be made by Gore-Reiner instead of the Bush brain trust. Who says God doesn't smile upon the United States of America?

washingtonpost.com



To: JohnM who wrote (47333)9/27/2002 12:37:54 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Hey, John, there is a very interesting political situation in Missouri that I was not aware of. It really "tightens the Knickers" on Daschle.

September 23, 2002, 10:15 a.m.
Focus on Talent
Missouri contest could tip the Senate to the GOP, at least temporarily.

After months of obstructing President Bush's agenda, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D., S.D.) is finally kicking things into high gear. What has finally spurred the South Dakotan into action? James Talent.

Talent's bid for the Senate from Missouri, which in many respects is similar to tight contests nationwide, has one very important distinction: His victory alone could hand the GOP a temporary majority. The race is a special election, to fill the remainder of Mel Carnahan's term, who died before beating John Ashcroft two years ago. The Democratic governor (who defeated Talent that same election) appointed Carnahan's widow, Jean Carnahan, to fill the seat until this November's special election.

Since the Talent-Carnahan race is a special election, Talent would become senator immediately upon winning, instead of in January like other newly elected members. The Talent addition would put the GOP back into the majority (with 50 senators and Vice President Cheney) for any lame-duck session at the end of the year, regardless of which party controls the Senate come January.

Lame-duck speculation has heated up recently because Talent has. Although the race is officially a dead-heat in published numbers, the Republican challenger is up four to seven points in internal tracking polls, and even a prominent Democratic pollster concedes that Talent is trending upward.

Buzz inside the Beltway. which often amounts to nothing more than gossip, on the "Talent scenario" has become palpable in the past week. And Democrats are bracing for the worst.

Daschle is threatening to keep senators in town until October 18, two weeks before Election Day, even working weekends. Some Republicans, however, are convinced that Daschle is all talk. "They have more vulnerable incumbents than us, so Daschle's not going to trap them here on the weekends," notes a senior Republican Senate staffer.

In recent weeks, Daschle has moved closer to the Republican position of passing a long-term continuing resolution to put federal funding on autopilot until February or March. Although he has not yet publicly embraced that plan, he may have no other option to avoid a potential GOP-controlled lame-duck session.

The Senate has only passed three of thirteen appropriations bills to fund the government for the fiscal year starting in less than a week, and President Bush has yet to receive even a single one for his signature.

While making public threats about forcing senators into overtime, Daschle has been working furiously behind the scenes for the best way to avoid a post-election session.

One Senate Republican leadership aide crowed, "We just find the whole thing pretty funny; it's as if they're planning for a Doomsday scenario."

Given the history of appropriations, there's not even a remote possibility that 13 separate bills could make their way to the president's desk before the election. That means the only avenue for avoiding a lame-duck gathering is a long-term continuing resolution, something Republicans have wanted all along, because it ups the odds that spending will be kept in check.

Democrats publicly insist that they're not worried about a lame-duck session where they're in the minority, because they'd still control the committees due to parliamentary maneuvering. However, a senior Republican senator notes, "Daschle knows that we'll just Rule 14 everything to the floor."

"Rule 14" is a parliamentary procedure by which a majority vote can remove bills bottled up in committee, allowing the full body to vote on the legislation on the Senate floor.

A titular GOP majority could also bypass the Democrat-controlled committees for Bush's nominees being held hostage with a move called a discharge petition.

But, as is the nature of the Senate, Democrats could conceivably filibuster until January. Such a Democratic blockade, however, would not be politically painless.

Since filibusters require members to effectively vote on each bill or nominee, Democrats who are vulnerable come 2004 could be placed in the unenviable position of having to oppose the new Department of Homeland Security or Hispanic judicial appointee Miguel Estrada.

Of course, all of this could be wishful GOP thinking if, say, Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R., R.I.)-an unpredictable moderate who has praised Sen. James Jeffords's party-switching move-changes parties himself or simply refuses to be a team player. Daschle is not counting on Chafee's charity, however.

With neither side particularly eager to chance a lame-duck session, the new battleground likely will be how to structure a long-term continuing resolution (CR). Since CRs essentially take the previous year's spending levels and add on a few percent for inflation, the big debate will be whether or not to count the post-9/11 $40 billion spending spree as the one-time expense that it was, or something that needs to be repeated next year.

Considering the less-than-sterling record Republicans have in battling government largesse in recent years, it may take more than just a little Talent for the GOP to win this spending fight.
nationalreview.com



To: JohnM who wrote (47333)9/27/2002 3:55:22 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 281500
 
Well, here is the last column in the "Nation" by Hitchens. I must say it is temperate, (For Him).

This article can be found on the web at
thenation.com

Minority Report by Christopher Hitchens
Taking Sides

[from the October 14, 2002 issue]

I suppose I can just about bear to watch the "inspections" pantomime a second time. But what I cannot bear is the sight of French and Russian diplomats posing and smirking with Naji Sabry, Iraq's foreign minister, or with Tariq Aziz. I used to know Naji and I know that two of his brothers, Mohammed and Shukri, were imprisoned and tortured by Saddam Hussein--in Mohammed's case, tortured to death. The son of Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz was sentenced to twenty-two years of imprisonment last year; he has since been released and rearrested and released again, partly no doubt to show who is in charge. Another former friend of mine, Mazen Zahawi, was Saddam Hussein's interpreter until shortly after the Gulf War, when he was foully murdered and then denounced as a homosexual. I have known many regimes where stories of murder and disappearance are the common talk among the opposition; the Iraqi despotism is salient in that such horrors are also routine among its functionaries. Saddam Hussein likes to use as envoys the men he has morally destroyed; men who are sick with fear and humiliation, and whose families are hostages.

I don't particularly care, even in a small way, to be a hostage of Saddam Hussein myself. There is not the least doubt that he has acquired some of the means of genocide and hopes to collect some more; there is also not the least doubt that he is a sadistic megalomaniac. Some believe that he is a rational and self-interested actor who understands "containment," but I think that is distinctly debatable: Given a green light by Washington on two occasions--once for the assault on Iran and once for the annexation of Kuwait--he went crazy both times and, knowing that it meant disaster for Iraq and for its neighbors, tried to steal much more than he had been offered.

On the matter of his support for international nihilism, I have already written my memoir of Abu Nidal, the murderous saboteur of the Palestinian cause ["Minority Report," September 16]. I have also interviewed the senior Czech official who investigated the case of Mohamed Atta's visit to Prague. This same official had served a deportation order on Ahmed Al-Ani, the Iraqi secret policeman who, working under diplomatic cover, was caught red-handed in a plan to blow up Radio Free Iraq, which transmits from Czech soil. It was, I was told (and this by someone very skeptical of Plan Bush), "70 percent likely" that Atta came to Prague to meet Al-Ani. Seventy percent is not conclusive, but nor is it really tolerable. Meanwhile, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan holds several prisoners from the Ansar al-Islam gang, who for some reason have been trying to destroy the autonomous Kurdish regime in northern Iraq. These people have suggestive links both to Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. It will perhaps surprise nobody that despite Kurdish offers of cooperation, our intrepid CIA has shown no interest in questioning these prisoners. (Incidentally, when is anyone at the CIA or the FBI going to be fired?) People keep bleating that Saddam Hussein is not a fundamentalist. But he did rejoice in the attacks on New York and Washington and Pennsylvania, and he does believe that every little bit helps.

I am much more decided in my mind about two further points. I am on the side of the Iraqi and Kurdish opponents of this filthy menace. And they are on the side of civil society in a wider conflict, which is the civil war now burning across the Muslim world from Indonesia to Nigeria. The theocratic and absolutist side in this war hopes to win it by exporting it here, which in turn means that we have no expectation of staying out of the war, and no right to be neutral in it. But there are honorable allies to be made as well, and from now on all of our cultural and political intelligence will be required in order to earn their friendship and help isolate and destroy their enemies, who are now ours--or perhaps I should say mine.

Only a fool would trust the Bush Administration to see all of this. I am appalled that by this late date no proclamation has been issued to the people of Iraq, announcing the aims and principles of the coming intervention. Nor has any indictment of Saddam Hussein for crimes against humanity been readied. Nothing has been done to conciliate Iran, where the mullahs are in decline. The Palestinian plight is being allowed to worsen (though the Palestinians do seem to be pressing ahead hearteningly with a "regime change" of their own). These misgivings are obviously not peripheral. But please don't try to tell me that if Florida had gone the other way we would be in better hands, or would be taking the huge and honorable risk of "destabilizing" our former Saudi puppets.

Moreover, it's obvious to me that the "antiwar" side would not be convinced even if all the allegations made against Saddam Hussein were proven, and even if the true views of the Iraqi people could be expressed. All evidence pointed overwhelmingly to the Taliban and Al Qaeda last fall, and now all the proof is in; but I am sent petitions on Iraq by the same people (some of them not so naïve) who still organize protests against the simultaneous cleanup and rescue of Afghanistan, and continue to circulate falsifications about it. The Senate adopted the Iraq Liberation Act without dissent under Clinton; the relevant UN resolutions are old and numerous. I don't find the saner, Richard Falk-ish view of yet more consultation to be very persuasive, either.

This is something more than a disagreement of emphasis or tactics. When I began work for The Nation over two decades ago, Victor Navasky described the magazine as a debating ground between liberals and radicals, which was, I thought, well judged. In the past few weeks, though, I have come to realize that the magazine itself takes a side in this argument, and is becoming the voice and the echo chamber of those who truly believe that John Ashcroft is a greater menace than Osama bin Laden. (I too am resolutely opposed to secret imprisonment and terror-hysteria, but not in the same way as I am opposed to those who initiated the aggression, and who are planning future ones.) In these circumstances it seems to me false to continue the association, which is why I have decided to make this "Minority Report" my last one.



To: JohnM who wrote (47333)9/27/2002 4:31:19 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Here is Pollock's NYT article. I will have the book in a few days.

September 26, 2002
Why Iraq Can't Be Deterred
By KENNETH M. POLLACK

WASHINGTON, As the United States moves closer to war with Iraq, some have suggested relying instead on deterrence to deal with the threat Saddam Hussein poses. Those who favor deterrence acknowledge that the containment regime that constrained Iraq during the 1990's has frayed beyond repair, but argue that Mr. Hussein can still be kept in check by American threats to respond to any new Iraqi aggression with force, including nuclear bombardment, if necessary.

Certainly war should be a last resort, and deterrence is a seemingly reasonable alternative; after all, it worked with the Soviet Union for 45 years. Unfortunately, however, those who seek to apply it to Iraq base their views on a dangerous misreading of Mr. Hussein, and so fail to recognize how risky such a course is likely to be.

Proponents of deterrence argue that Mr. Hussein will not engage in new aggression, even after he has acquired nuclear weapons, because he is not deliberately suicidal and so would not risk an American nuclear response.

But what they overlook is that Mr. Hussein is often unintentionally suicidal, that is, he miscalculates his odds of success and frequently ignores the likelihood of catastrophic failure. Mr. Hussein is a risk-taker who plays dangerous games without realizing how dangerous they truly are. He is deeply ignorant of the outside world and surrounded by sycophants who tell him what he wants to hear.

When Yevgeny M. Primakov, a Soviet envoy, went to Baghdad in 1991 to try to warn Mr. Hussein to withdraw, he was amazed to find out how cut off from reality Mr. Hussein was. "I realized that it was possible Saddam did not have complete information," he later wrote. "He gave priority to positive reports . . . and as for bad news, the bearer could pay a high price." These factors make Mr. Hussein difficult to deter, because his calculations are based on ideas that do not necessarily correspond to reality and are often impervious to outside influences.

In 1974, for example, he attacked the Kurds even though Iran had been arming and supporting them (with American and Israeli support). He believed, for reasons unknown, that Iran would do nothing to help its proxies. The shah responded decisively, sending troops into Iraqi Kurdistan, mobilizing his army and provoking clashes along the border. To stave off an Iranian invasion that he feared would end his regime, Mr. Hussein was forced to sign the humiliating Algiers accord, which gave Iran everything it wanted from Iraq, including contested territory.

This pattern has been repeated many times since, and it is fair to say that Mr. Hussein's continued survival is far more attributable to luck than it is to any prudence on his part. Thus in 1980 he attacked Iran under the misguided assumption that the new Islamic Republic was so unpopular that it would collapse after one good shove. In so doing, he embroiled Iraq in a war that nearly destroyed his own regime.

In 1991, rather than withdrawing from Kuwait and heading off a war, he convinced himself that the American-led coalition would not attack and that even if it did, his army would emerge victorious. By confidently pursuing this path he again nearly destroyed himself and his regime.

The best evidence that Mr. Hussein can be deterred comes from the Persian Gulf war, when he refrained from using weapons of mass destruction because of American and Israeli threats of nuclear retaliation. But a closer look at the evidence provides more ominous lessons.

When Secretary of State James Baker met with Tariq Aziz in Geneva on the eve of the war, the letter he presented from President Bush to Mr. Hussein threatened the "severest consequences" if Iraq took any of three actions: use of weapons of mass destruction, destruction of the Kuwaiti oil fields or terrorist action against the United States.

The first point to make is that this did not stop Mr. Hussein from destroying the oil fields or dispatching hit squads to the United States, so the notion that he is easily deterred is dubious. Mr. Hussein did not use chemical munitions against coalition ground forces because he initially believed that he did not need them to prevail. Nevertheless, he did keep stockpiles farther back from the front, suggesting he planned to use them if the battle did not go as he expected. Whether he would have used these weapons is an open question, because the coalition ground advance was so rapid that Iraq's forces never had a chance to deploy them.

A better case can be made that Mr. Hussein was deterred from launching Scud missiles tipped with chemical or biological agents at Israel for fear that the Israelis would retaliate with nuclear weapons, but even here the evidence is hardly perfect. After the war, United Nations weapons inspectors reported that the Iraqi engineers knew that their warheads were awful and probably would have done little damage. For this reason, Mr. Hussein might have considered the conventionally armed Scuds to be the most potent arrows in his quiver.

After the gulf war, moreover, United Nations inspectors and Iraqi defectors revealed a set of secret plans and orders, issued by Mr. Hussein, that are disturbing at best. First, he had set up a special Scud unit with both chemical and biological warheads that was ordered to launch its missiles against Israel in the event of a nuclear attack or a coalition march on Baghdad. Since no one outside Iraq knew at the time about this unit and its orders, it was clearly intended not as a deterrent but simply as a force for revenge.

Second, in August 1990 ? after he realized that the United States might challenge the invasion of Kuwait ? Mr. Hussein ordered a crash program to build one nuclear weapon, which came close to succeeding. (It failed only because the Iraqis could not enrich enough uranium in time.) His former chief bombmaker has said that Mr. Hussein intended to launch the bomb as a revenge weapon at Tel Aviv if his regime started to collapse. His former chief of intelligence has said that he believes that Mr. Hussein wanted to build a nuclear weapon in order to deter the United States from launching Desert Storm.

Third, Iraqi defectors and other sources report that Mr. Hussein told aides after the war that his greatest mistake was to invade Kuwait before he had a nuclear weapon, because then the United States would never have dared to oppose him.

What all this suggests is that if Saddam Hussein is able to acquire nuclear weapons, he will see them as tools to achieve his goals ? to dominate the Arab world, destroy Israel and punish America. He might not launch such weapons immediately in pursuit of these aims, but that is cold comfort. There is every reason to believe that he would brandish them to deter the United States from interfering in his efforts to conquer or blackmail neighboring countries.

With 1990's-style containment fading quickly and unlikely to be revived, both of the remaining Iraq policy options ? invasion and deterrence ? carry serious costs and risks. But a well-planned invasion, one that mustered overwhelming force and the support of key allies, could keep those risks to a minimum.

On the other hand, staking our hopes on a policy of deterrence would cost little now (except a loss of face), but it would run the much greater risk of postponing the day of reckoning to a time of Iraq's choosing. Given Mr. Hussein's history of catastrophic miscalculations and his faith that nuclear weapons can deter not him but us, there is every reason to believe that the question is not one of war or no war, but rather war now or war later ? a war without nuclear weapons or a war with them.

Kenneth M. Pollack, a former C.I.A. analyst of the Iraqi military, is director of research at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy. He is author of "The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq."
nytimes.com