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Politics : Attack Iraq? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AK2004 who wrote (2441)10/12/2002 12:31:08 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
Bush Bids to End Impasse at U.N., Outlines Iraq Plan



URL: washingtonpost.com



By Dana Milbank
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, October 12, 2002; Page A01

Buoyed by congressional approval of an attack on Iraq, the Bush administration attempted yesterday to break an impasse over a toughened weapons inspections regime at the U.N. Security Council and began to talk publicly about American plans for Iraq -- including the possibility of U.S. military rule -- should President Saddam Hussein be overthrown.

In negotiations at the United Nations, the administration, faced with continued opposition from France and Russia, offered to drop its demand that any Security Council resolution specifically authorize military force if Iraq does not disarm. A compromise resolution would instead threaten unspecified "consequences" for Iraq if its defiance continues -- language that the administration believes would give it sufficient authority to attack Iraq.

The administration is calculating that the language concession, combined with the lopsided votes in the House and Senate authorizing a strike on Iraq, will increase pressure on the Security Council to adopt a new resolution governing renewed U.N. inspections of Iraq's chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs. The Senate, by a 77-23 vote early yesterday, approved the use of force, following a similar House vote Thursday afternoon.

The White House hailed the votes as an "outstanding and overwhelming bipartisan show of support." But lawmakers in both parties cautioned against reading them as an embrace of war. Senate Majority Leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) said the "overwhelming consensus" of lawmakers is "that we have to be very careful about the employment of military personnel and weaponry; that while that may be necessary, we're not there yet."

Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) said, "The United States must lead the diplomatic high ground and use a multilateral approach to disarmament with the support of friends and allies."

Though U.S. negotiators were optimistic a compromise could be reached at the Security Council, there was no immediate sign of progress. Russia's deputy foreign minister, Yury Fedotov, said the administration's original proposal -- automatically authorizing force if Iraq does not comply -- "can't be accepted," according to Russia's Interfax news agency. Russian President Vladimir Putin, after meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, said he would not "exclude the possibility" of agreeing on a new resolution, but he continued to emphasize a return of weapons inspectors.

The initial French response, conveyed to Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, was said to be discouraging. Powell relayed the new language proposal in a phone conversation with French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin, and it was also floated at United Nations missions in New York on Thursday night. Diplomats said the revised U.S. draft still contains requirements for inspections that other Security Council members have rejected.

The administration's hard line received a rebuke from the chairman of the Nobel Committee, who, in awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to former president Jimmy Carter, said the award "can and must also be seen as criticism of the line the current U.S. administration has taken on Iraq." Carter used the occasion to say he would have opposed the congressional resolution authorizing force.

President Bush avoided a public celebration of the congressional votes giving him authority to wage war if efforts at the U.N. prove fruitless. The White House issued a written statement after the 1 a.m. Senate vote, and Bush did not mention the vote in public yesterday. But in a sign of its growing confidence, the administration began to talk openly about its plans for Iraq should Hussein be removed -- an answer to critics who argued that Bush has not devoted enough thought to the daunting task of rebuilding Iraq.

A senior official told reporters Thursday that the administration was contemplating an ambitious military occupation. Powell echoed that view yesterday, saying the U.S. military would likely have an extended presence in Iraq.

"Should it come to that, we would have an obligation really to put in place a better regime, and we are obviously doing contingency planning," Powell said in an interview with National Public Radio. "And there are lots of different models from history that one could look at -- Japan, Germany -- but I wouldn't say that anything has been settled upon."

But White House press secretary Ari Fleischer objected to characterizations that the administration was considering a military occupation. Speaking of the model used by the United States in post-World War II Japan, he said: "That's not what's envisaged."

Fleischer said the administration is "looking at the possibility of U.S. civil affairs units of the military having an involvement in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq." He said the administration planned "to work with our international coalition, to work through the U.N., to work through our military, to make certain that there is stability in the region."

While U.S. military control of Iraq is considered likely if Hussein is toppled, much will depend on the situation in Iraq and status of the Iraqi opposition. One model gathering momentum, officials said, is a three-phase process that would begin with a U.S. military operation, move to a civilian occupation and shift to Iraqi control after local and national elections.

Rule by U.S. military authorities would be a significant departure from the situation in Afghanistan after the Taliban was ousted. In the Afghan case, U.S.-led troops have played a limited role in the country's security, and civilian responsibilities were turned over to an Afghan government almost immediately. "We're working on the basic theory that if there's military action, there's going to have to be a military boss for some time," a senior U.S. official said yesterday.

Though not mentioning Iraq, the president yesterday spoke of Afghanistan as a model for American action. "As we stay in Afghanistan, it will be important for other brave people, whether they live in Muslim countries or in the Middle East, people who stand for tolerance and the rule of law and equal rights and freedom of expression, to see our commitment to freedom," said Bush, speaking at a White House event celebrating U.S. support for Afghanistan.

A fact sheet distributed by the White House noted that the United States has spent $588 million in the past year for humanitarian and reconstruction aid to Afghanistan, and the fact sheet noted that Congress is considering $1.45 billion more over four years. "Working together, America's private and public sectors have staved off starvation, immunized children, built schools, restarted agriculture, and improved health care in Afghanistan over the past year," the fact sheet said.

International aid organizations have been critical of the administration's commitments to rebuilding Afghanistan. Though the government has exceeded an aid pledge of $297 million it made in January, the aid officials say that has been used almost entirely for emergency services such as food, rather than for rebuilding.

"I'd like to see some real presidential leadership on that issue and explicit backing," said Peter Bell, president of the relief organization Care. "In many respects, the reconstruction is just barely getting underway. I'm not sure the Afghans or the Americans yet have a fully put-together strategy."

Bell said the administration did not spend millions of dollars Congress authorized to be spent on Afghanistan in the 2002 fiscal year, and he said Bush made no request for Afghan reconstruction funds in his budget for the fiscal year that has just begun.

Staff writers Karen DeYoung, Colum Lynch and Peter Slevin contributed to this report.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company



To: AK2004 who wrote (2441)10/12/2002 12:37:21 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 8683
 
White House Plans Post-Saddam Iraq
URL: washingtonpost.com

By Pauline Jelinek
Associated Press Writer
Friday, October 11, 2002; 11:53 AM

WASHINGTON –– The Bush administration is working on postwar plans for Iraq that could include using American and other foreign troops as a stabilizing force until a new government is formed, the Pentagon said Friday.

"Clearly, security would be a concern in the early months," after the overthrow of President Saddam Hussein, said Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke.

Any plan would include a Defense Department role in finding and securing any weapons of mass destruction, she said.

"The United States will not cut and run," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said. "The United States and our allies are committed to find a way to help preserve the stability and maintain the peace of the region and particularly Iraq as a unified country in the event military force is used."

He said the United Nations might be called upon to help stabilize a post-Saddam Iraq, and did not rule out U.S. forces behind part of an international effort.

Secretary of State Colin Powell has told foreign governments the United States was committed to assisting postwar Iraq develop a democratic government, but had not taken up any specific plan with them, a senior U.S. official said, on condition of anonymity.

President Bush says he has not definitely decided on a military invasion to achieve his goal of ousting Saddam Hussein. But among a range of proposals being developed is the Pentagon's role and, for instance, whether a force might be American, comprised of whatever coalition joins in a war against Iraq, devised by the United Nations, and so on, they said. There also have been suggestions that an Iraqi government-in-exile be set up before any invasion so it could be ready to take over sooner.

The plan is being developed by a number of U.S. government agencies.

Clarke said it was "way too soon" to say what plan would eventually be approved.

One plan being considered by the White House is based on the occupation of Japan following World War II and includes installing a U.S. commander to administer Iraq, perhaps U.S. Central Command head Gen. Tommy Franks in the role taken by Gen. Douglas MacArthur after Tokyo surrendered in 1945, The New York Times said in its Friday editions.

U.S commanders would oversee the beginnings of democratic transformation, The Washington Post quoted unnamed sources as saying in a similar story.

But officials said later Friday that such a plan is among the least likely to be approved of those being considered.

"That's not what's envisioned," Fleischer said.

A senior White House official said that while there are people in the government studying the idea of a military occupation, Bush and his foreign policy team "are not looking seriously at this."

He said Bush is committed to helping the Iraqi people establish a broad, democratic government.

Fleischer said military civil affairs units may help rebuild Iraq's infrastructure.

"The point is we want to very quickly transfer governmental power to the Iraqi people both from inside Iraq and outside Iraq," he said.

Some have warned that American military control of Iraq would enflame Iraqis and Muslims in other countries.

"I am viscerally opposed to a prolonged occupation of a Muslim country at the heart of the Muslim world by Western nations who proclaim the right to re-educate that country," former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said during Senate hearings last month.

"Some kind of peace force is absolutely critical, but peacekeeping is very different from having a viceroy or some kind of commission," Anthony Cordesman, Iraq expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Friday.

"Given Iraq's history, nothing could be resented more than if someone from outside, particularly from a Western state, takes over and dictates to Iraq" what they should do, he said.

Some officials suggested the occupation option may have been leaked by lower-level planners who wanted to kill it.

Others suggested that the idea is being floated publicly by some in the administration as the latest effort in a psychological campaign aimed at Saddam's generals. That is, they said, it suggests to them that they should join in the U.S. effort to topple Saddam or face being controlled by foreign military forces.

Officials have repeatedly warned in recent weeks that Saddam's forces should refuse orders to use chemical or biological weapons in any invasion. They also have suggested in public speeches and press conferences that the population revolt and Saddam and his family and inner circle voluntarily go into exile.

Official also have said previously that any postwar plan would also probably include war-crime trials for Iraqi leaders.

The Senate, early Friday, joined the House in passing a resolution granting Bush the powers to use the U.S. military to enforce United Nations orders that Saddam dispose of his weapons of mass destruction. The resolution, which now goes to the president, encourages Bush to seek U.N. cooperation in such a campaign but does not require it.

© 2002 The Associated Press



To: AK2004 who wrote (2441)10/12/2002 8:35:26 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
Agreed... that so called peace prize is really the booby prize ever since those morons gave it to arafart, the nobel peace prize is a joke...

GZ