From: Barry Stoller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [R-G] US still obsessed with Iraq


CNN. 6 October 2001. Hussein overthrow could be risky, lawmakers told.

WASHINGTON -- Overthrowing Saddam Hussein could cause problems for the
United States without strong evidence of an Iraqi connection to the
September 11 terrorist attacks, House lawmakers were cautioned this
week.

Without such evidence, one expert on Iraq told the House Subcommittee on
the Middle East and South Asia, the United States could have trouble
forming a coalition against Iraq's president.

At present there is only circumstantial evidence tying Hussein to the
deadly strikes on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and that's not
enough, said Geoffrey Kemp, who spoke with lawmakers.

"Anti-Americanism in the Muslim world is intense and pervasive," said
Kemp, who served in the first Reagan administration as senior director
for the State Department's Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs. "There is no
guarantee that any of Saddam's successors ... will be any less
anti-American than Saddam or that they will disband their weapons of
mass destruction programs."

"In the process, we could anticipate a severe backlash throughout the
Muslim world," Kemp said.

The House subcommittee has been scrutinizing Hussein's activities since
United Nations weapons inspectors pulled out of Iraq three years ago
ahead of U.S.-British air strikes. Iraqi officials say their nation has
eliminated its weapons of mass destruction and the means to produce
them, but lawmakers aren't convinced.

"There's no other way to fully and finally end the threat Iraq poses to
our national security," Rep. Benjamin Gilman, R-New York, the
subcommittee's chairman, said at a hearing Thursday.

"While we are striking at other terrorists, we should end the regime of
a master terrorist like Saddam."

Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, agreed. "If we're serious about ending,
destroying, stopping international terrorism, we absolutely have to
target Saddam Hussein," he said.

The United States should have ousted Hussein during the 1991 Gulf War,
added Rep. Tom Lantos, D-California. Failing to topple Hussein 10 years
ago was "one of the great policy mistakes of the end of the 20th
century," he said.

Once the international coalition against terrorism has finished its job
with suspected terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda
network, then "this nation and our willing allies will have to move on
to get rid of Saddam Hussein and other similar regimes," Lantos said.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews
with continuing coverage of WWIII



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