Top Bush aide savages 'selfish' Chirac
White House adviser Richard Perle tells David Rose that France's 'cosy
relationship' with Saddam means it will veto a second UN resolution
Sunday February 23, 2003
The Observer

A leading adviser to President Bush last night launched a savage attack on
President Chirac's diplomatic campaign to block war with Iraq, saying that
it was merely the product of French commercial interests masquerading as a
moral case for peace.

In an exclusive interview with The Observer, Richard Perle, chairman of the
Pentagon's Defence Policy Board and a central figure in the circle of hawks
around Bush, went well beyond US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's recent
criticism of 'old Europe', warning that war without the further approval of
the UN Security Council was now imminent.

'I'm rather pessimistic that we will get French support for a second
resolution authorising war,' Perle said. 'I think they will exercise their
veto, and in other ways obstruct unified action by the Security Council:
they're lobbying furiously now.'

Perle agreed that support for war in Britain and America would rise if there
were a second resolution, and that the UN was 'a symbol of international
legitimacy'. But in words that will serve only to deepen the transatlantic
rift over Iraq, he added: 'These five countries, the permanent members of
the Security Council, are not a judicial body. They're not expected to make
moral or legal judgments, but to advance the respective interests of their
countries.

'So if the French ambassador gets up and expresses the position of the
government of France, what you are hearing is the moral authority of Jacques
Chirac, whatever that may mean.

'What you're hearing is what the French President perceives to be in the
interests of France. And the French President has found his own way of
dealing with Saddam Hussein. It would be counter to French interests to
destroy that cosy relationship, and replace it with a hostile one.

'So how much legitimacy attaches to a French veto? At some point, people are
going to have to start asking themselves that question.'

In Perle's view, the French position against regime change in Iraq is
fatally undermined by its multi-billion-dollar oil interests negotiated
since the last Gulf war: 'There's certainly a large French commercial
interest in Iraq, and there are contracts that a new government in Iraq may
not choose to uphold, partly because they're so unfavourable to the people
of Iraq. Saddam has been prepared to do deals to keep himself in power at
the expense of the people.

'My understanding of the largest of these deals, which is the French
Total-Fina-Elf contract to develop certain oil properties in Iraq, is that
it is both very large and very unfavourable to the Iraqis.'

Perle added that he found the claim that America wished to topple Saddam for
the sake of its own oil interests bizarre.

'The US interest is to buy oil cheaply on the world market. And the best way
to increase the supply of Iraqi oil, and so cut prices, would have been to
abandon sanctions in 1991 and urge the expansion of Iraqi exploration and
development.

'When you consider that there is now a prospect that the oilfields may be
destroyed by Saddam, if what we really wanted was more oil, not only should
we not be supporting Saddam's removal, we should be working with him.'

Perle denied claims widely reported on both sides of the Atlantic that the
Bush administration intends to rule Iraq directly through a military
governor for an extended period, and that it envisages no role for the Iraqi
opposition. He was scathing about the 'conventional wisdom' among the
foreign policy and intelligence establishment, which holds that the Iraqi
opposition groups are hopelessly divided and the country far too fractious
for meaningful democracy.

'This is a trivial observation and a misleading one, both by CIA officials
and MI6,' Perle said. 'They're simply wrong about this. They don't
understand the opposition. They say they're divided. Are they more divided
than the Labour Party? I rather doubt it. Are they more divided than the
Tories? I certainly doubt that.'

His own long-term dealings with Ahmad Chalabi, leader of the Iraqi National
Congress, and key figures in the main Kurdish groups, had convinced him and
other leading US policymakers that 'Iraq is a very good candidate for
democratic reform'.

'It won't be Westminster overnight, but the great democracies of the world
didn't achieve the full, rich structure of democratic governance overnight.
The Iraqis have a decent chance of succeeding under the leadership that has
developed in the diaspora caused by Saddam's seizure of power.'

Reports claiming that a US military governor would keep most of Saddam's
Baath Party officials in place and run the country on existing
administrative structures were inaccurate and absurd, Perle said. 'The idea
that the US would simply issue orders to the same mob that served under
Saddam is ridiculous. This is not simply about switching one mafia family
for another. American policy after Saddam's removal will be to assist the
Iraqis to move as quickly as physically and practically possible into
positions of power.'

As Assistant Defence Secretary under President Ronald Reagan, Perle was one
of the key architects of the 1980s aggressive policy towards the Soviet
Union, which Reagan dubbed an 'evil empire' and did much to undermine. He
said he found it dismaying that many in Europe now found it 'politically
incorrect' to describe regimes such as Iraq and North Korea as evil now:

'What we discovered from the victims of the Soviet empire, once they were
free to speak, was that they agreed with us: evil was exactly the word they
chose. I suspect that's the word that would be chosen by most of those
forced to live in North Korea under Kim Jong Il, under the Iranian mullahs
and Saddam Hussein.'

Reply via email to