> From: The Fool <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/2661207.htm
> 
> No military strike is imminent, but Bush has concluded that Hussein and
> his nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs are such a threat
> to U.S. security that the Iraqi dictator must be removed, even if U.S.
> allies do not help, said the officials, who all spoke on condition of
> anonymity. 
> "This is not an argument about whether to get rid of Saddam Hussein.
That
> debate is over. This is . . . how you do it,"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,649917,00.html

Pentagon and CIA making plans for war against Iraq this year 

Julian Borger in Washington and Ewen MacAskill
Thursday February 14, 2002
The Guardian 

The Pentagon and the CIA have begun preparations for an assault on Iraq
involving up to 200,000 US troops that is likely to be launched later
this year with the aim of removing Saddam Hussein from power, US and
diplomatic sources told the Guardian yesterday. 
President George Bush's war cabinet, known as the "principals committee",
agreed at a pivotal meeting in late January that the policy of
containment has failed and that active steps should be taken to topple
the Iraqi leader. 
But, according to a US intelligence source familiar with CIA
preparations, the plans for a parallel overt and covert war only landed
on the president's desk in the past few days. 
"I will reserve whatever options I have. I'll keep them close to my vest.
Saddam Hussein needs to understand that I'm serious about defending our
country," Mr Bush said yesterday. 
Since the principals committee decision, Colin Powell, the secretary of
state and the dove of the administration, has pointedly added his voice
to the calls for a "regime change". 
"We are looking at a variety of options that would bring that about," he
told the Senate budget committee. 
The blueprint for a campaign against Iraq has evolved from a contingency
plan drawn up by the joint chiefs of staff that envisaged the use of a
200,000-strong US force, the bulk of which would invade from Kuwait. 
However, it may be that the actual force used will be less numerous,
relying more on covert and special forces operations. 
Central Command has already set up forward headquarters in the Gulf from
which each of the component services will be able to coordinate the war. 
The air force headquarters (Afcent) is at the Prince Sultan air base in
Saudi Arabia. The army headquarters (Arcent) is in Kuwait, while the navy
(Navcent) is in Bahrain. 
Central Command's marine component (Marcent) is also expected to move to
Bahrain in the next few days, weeks after the main marine force left
Afghanistan. 
The US, Israel and Turkey were due to hold joint exercises codenamed
Anatolian Eagle this year, but in another sign of accelerated
preparations there will be three such exercises in the next few months,
based at the Turkish air force base at Konya. Once upgraded, Konya could
be used alongside Incirlik as a base for air strikes on northern Iraq. 
The Pentagon's military planners are reported to have agonised over the
Iraq plan because of the significant risk that Saddam - aware that unlike
during the Gulf war his own life is at stake this time - would use
chemical and biological weapons against US troop concentrations and
Israel. 
The danger would be minimised by intensive bombing of missile launchers,
but the generals reportedly remain extremely concerned that the risks
cannot be eliminated entirely. 
The CIA's covert war would involve arming and training Kurdish fighters
in northern Iraq and Shi'ite forces in Kuwait. CIA trainers and special
forces troops have already been dispatched to Kuwait for that purpose,
and may already have begun work. 
Meanwhile, CIA and special forces will launch a campaign of sabotage and
information warfare in the next few months. 
The CIA puts very little faith in the military capacity of the main
opposition movement, the Iraqi National Congress, but it has begun
intensive consultations with INC officials about the logistics of
training and arming the movement's supporters. 
The trigger could be the expected row over weapons inspections in three
months' time. America's allies are clinging to the hope that US military
action will be forestalled by Baghdad's acceptance of unconditional and
unfettered weapons inspections when the international sanctions regime
comes up for review at the United Nations in May. 
However, Iraq's vice-president, Taha Yassin Ramadan, said yesterday there
was no need for "spies" from the UN weapons inspection teams to return to
the country. 
A US state department official said he thought it very unlikely that the
Iraqi regime would be prepared to accept the stringent programme of
inspections the US will demand. As the American intelligence source put
it, the White House "will not take yes for an answer", suggesting that
Washington would provoke a crisis. He added that he expected the war to
begin soon after the May ultimatum. 
US allies in the Middle East have been informed that a decision to attack
Iraq has already been taken, and diplomats from the region said yesterday
they were resigned to the inevitability of a war that may threaten the
stability of a string of Arab regimes. 
"It is a nightmare situation for us," said one Arab diplomat in
Washington. "We feel the Americans will take very drastic action and we
have to be prepared for such a reality. But the public opinion in the
street will not see this as a benign attempt to restore order, but as
American imperialism." 
France, Germany and others in the European Union have been queuing up to
make clear to Mr Bush that they will not support him in military action
against Iraq. 
The German foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, this week joined the French
foreign minister, Hubert V�drine, by expressing publicly his concern
about US policy towards Iraq. 
But Tony Blair and the foreign secretary, Jack Straw, have refused to
join the public outcry. A Foreign Office official said yesterday that
military action was not imminent, but would be "a question of months". 
A Foreign Office spokesman later said: "The prime minister has made it
clear from the outset that the campaign would have two phases: the first
focusing on Afghanistan and the second looking at different aspects of
international terrorism. In that context, we have to look at issues such
as weapons of mass destruction." 
There are regular exchanges between the US state department and the
Foreign Office on strategy for tackling Iraq. The Foreign Office
spokesman said: "We will proceed in consultation with our allies and the
precise methods of action will be for consultation in due course." 
In the months after September 11, the Foreign Office repeatedly ruled out
military action against Iraq, other than the regular bombing along its
border with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Its line at the time was that there
was no evidence linking Iraq to terrorist activity. 
Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Turkey, all US allies neighbouring Iraq, expect
to sustain significant economic and political damage from a new conflict.
Jordan believes it stands to lose $800m (�500m) from the interruption of
deliveries of cheap Iraqi oil, and has already begun to hint at the need
for compensation. 

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