HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

from
The New York Times

C.I.A. Warns That a U.S. Attack May Ignite Terror

October 9, 2002
By ALISON MITCHELL and CARL HULSE 

WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 - The Bush administration pushed
Congress today for a broad vote to authorize the president
to use force against Iraq. 

  But a new element was injected into the debate by a C.I.A.
assessment that Saddam Hussein, while now stopping short of
an attack, could become "much less constrained" if faced
with an American-led force. 

  The judgment was contained in a letter signed by the deputy
C.I.A. director, John McLaughlin, on behalf of George J.
Tenet, the director of central intelligence. It was alluded
to in a hearing of a Congressional panel investigating the
Sept. 11 attacks and then released tonight, after the House
opened its debate on Iraq. 

  The letter said "Baghdad for now appears to be drawing a
line short of conducting terrorist attacks" with
conventional or chemical or biological weapons against the
United States. 

  "Should Saddam conclude that a U.S.-led attack could no
longer be deterred, he probably would become much less
constrained in adopting terrorist action," it continued. It
noted that Mr. Hussein could use either conventional
terrorism or a weapon of mass destruction as "his last
chance to exact vengeance by taking a large number of
victims with him." 

  The letter dated Oct. 7 also declassified an exchange from
a closed Congressional hearing on Oct. 2 in which a senior
intelligence official judged the likelihood of Mr.
Hussein's initiating an attack in the foreseeable future as
"low." 

  Mr. Tenet said tonight that "there is no inconsistency"
between the C.I.A. views in the letter and those of the
president. He emphasized the Iraqi leader's use of such
weapons against his own citizens. 

  Senior administration officials insisted that the letter
did not contradict President Bush's assertions on the
imminent threat posed by Mr. Hussein. They pointed to
another section of the letter that noted that the
likelihood of Mr. Hussein's using weapons of mass
destruction "for blackmail, deterrence, or otherwise, grows
as his arsenal builds." 

  The letter also cited credible reporting that Al Qaeda
leaders sought contacts in Iraq who could help them acquire
weapons of mass destruction and that Iraq has provided
members of the terrorist group with training in the areas
of poisons, gases and bomb making. 

  One lawmaker on the intelligence committee, Senator Ron
Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, cited the letter today as he
registered his opposition to granting the president broad
authority to use force unilaterally. "I'm not convinced
regarding a clear and present threat," he said in Senate
debate. 

  Even so, his was a minority sentiment a day after President
Bush told the nation that Iraq "stands alone" as a threat,
armed with weapons of mass destruction controlled by a
"murderous tyrant." 

  Bipartisan approval of a resolution on force that President
Bush negotiated with Congressional leaders is now
considered all but certain. But administration officials
worked to expand their support so that the president would
be able to say that his backing was resounding when the
final votes are taken. 

  Secretary of State Colin L. Powell told Republican Senators
at a closed-door caucus that Congressional unity would help
him press his case at the United Nations for a tough new
resolution holding Iraq to account for its violations of a
raft of past United Nations resolutions. 

  "What I'm interested in seeing is solid, overwhelming
support as a signal of American determination," Mr. Powell,
flanked by Democrats and Republicans, told reporters. 

  Despite the administration's push there were strongholds of
dissent. A fervent minority of determined lawmakers in both
House and Senate argued in debate that it was a mistake to
give President Bush such broad authority for force. 

  Senator Robert C. Byrd, Democrat of West Virginia, also
served notice that he would use all the procedural weapons
at his disposal to slow debate - a move that could push off
a final Senate vote until next week. 

  Others also made their opposition known. Senator James M.
Jeffords, the Vermont independent whose change of parties
gave the Democrats control of the Senate last year, said
today that he could not open the door to a unilateral
military incursion by the United States. 

  "I fear that this administration is, perhaps unwittingly,
heading us into a miserable cycle of waging wars that
isolate our nation internationally and stir up greater
hatred of America," he said. 

  In the House, the sharp divide among Democrats was on plain
view, even as most Republicans who spoke supported the
president. And Democratic opponents of unilateral action
predicted that more than 100 members of Congress would vote
against the war resolution. 

  Speaker J. Dennis Hastert of Illinois opened 21 hours of
formal House debate, saying that before the Sept. 11
attacks Americans had lived in "splendid isolation," but
that the nation now realized it could be touched by those
in countries that formerly seemed distant. 

  "Is there a connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda?" asked
Mr. Hastert, who sought to bring the issue directly to
lawmakers, saying the Capitol itself had been a Sept. 11
target. "The president thinks so and based on what I have
seen, I think so also." 

  Democrats took pains to stress that any differences were
matters of conscience. "There is no party position on an
issue of this gravity," said Representative Martin Frost,
Democrat of Texas and party caucus chairman, who supports
the resolution. 

  Still, many House Democrats criticized the reach of the
current resolution and the broad latitude it would give the
president. "War with Iraq will not bring peace to the
Middle East," said Representative John Lewis, Democrat of
Georgia. "War is easy. But peace is hard. Peace is right,
and it is just and it is true." 

  Representative David E. Bonior, a Michigan Democrat who was
one of three lawmakers who traveled recently to Iraq,
asked, "By going it alone, what signal do we issue by
tossing aside diplomacy?" 

  Other Democrats clashed with Republicans over the extent of
American cooperation with Saddam Hussein in the 1980's,
saying previous administrations had provided the Iraqi
leader with the foundation of his biological weapons
program. 

  "Sure he has biological weapons," said Representative
Louise M. Slaughter, Democrat of New York. "We gave them to
him."
_______________________
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/09/international/middleeast/09IRAQ.html?ex=1035149905&ei=1&en=033da6f63e54d5a4
_______________________
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
http://www.nytimes.com/



__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos & More
http://faith.yahoo.com

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to