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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JDN who wrote (326023)12/5/2002 4:35:01 PM
From: Bald Eagle  Respond to of 769670
 
Bush Claims Evidence Iraq Has Weapons

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer

WASHINGTON (AP)--The Bush
administration said Thursday it has solid
evidence that Iraq has weapons of mass
destruction, setting the stage for urging the
U.N. Security Council to consider action
against Saddam Hussein.

The White House would not say what its
evidence might be. Saddam said in Baghdad
that Iraq wants to disprove the U.S. allegations, though he did not explicitly deny
having chemical, biological and nuclear weapons or a program to develop
long-range missiles.

The international inspectors in Iraq have detected little that was suspicious in their
first searches in nearly four years. Saddam said he had permitted the inspectors
to return in order ``to take our people out of harm's way.''

Even while mobilizing for war and preparing for diplomatic combat with skeptics in
the U.N. Security Council, President Bush declined to respond directly when
asked if the United States was heading toward war.

``That's a question you should ask to Saddam Hussein,'' he replied.

But in London, America's closest ally, Britain, sternly warned Baghdad that it
risked an attack if it gave inspectors a deceptive account of its weapons program
this weekend.

Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said, ``While this weekend will not be the moment
to declare Iraq either in breach or in compliance, a false declaration would make
clear to the world that Saddam's strategy is deceit.''

``We will not allow him to get away with it,'' Straw said.

And at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld indicated the United
States would refer damning evidence against Iraq to the Security Council for joint
action.

``They have to make a judgment as to whether or not the resolution that they
passed unanimously is being complied with,'' Rumsfeld said at a news
conference.

It would be a ``nice outcome'' if Saddam decided to leave Iraq, Rumsfeld said. If
the Iraqi leader remains in Baghdad, Rumsfeld said, ``he will either deal with the
problem of disarming or he will tell the world community that he is unwilling to.''

``And the next choice ... is with the United Nations and the members of the
Security Council,'' Rumsfeld said.

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer declined to describe the evidence he said
the administration had on Iraqi weapons. But he said the United States would
provide intelligence to U.N. inspectors.

``The president of the United States and the secretary of defense would not assert
as plainly and bluntly as they have that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction if it
was not true, and if they did not have a solid basis for saying it,'' Fleischer said.

On Wednesday, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz told ABC News ``we don't
have weapons of mass destruction. We don't have chemical, biological or nuclear
weaponry, but we have equipment which was defined as dual use,'' which means it
might be useful in weapons programs.

Fleischer responded: ``That statement is just as false as statements that Iraq
made in the late '90s when they said they had no weapons of mass destruction,
when it was found they indeed did. There is no basis to that.''

Bush addressed the Iraq crisis during a Cabinet Room meeting with the leaders of
Kenya and Ethiopia.

``For the sake of peace, he must disarm. There are inspectors inside the country
now and the inspectors are there not to play a game of hide and seek. They're
there to verify whether or not Mr. Saddam Hussein is going to disarm,'' the
president said.

The Security Council has called for a full weapons declaration by Sunday. A
senior Iraqi official in Baghdad has said the list would be turned over to U.N. and
International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors on Saturday.

After that, the resolution adopted unanimously by the Council on Nov. 8 requires
Bush to consult before taking any action. However, the president has made plain
he reserves the option of using force against Iraq if Saddam refuses to disarm.