[iwar] [fc:Demand.For.Iraq.Inspections.Could.Be.Ploy.For.Attack]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-11-29 06:23:37


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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Demand.For.Iraq.Inspections.Could.Be.Ploy.For.Attack]
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Los Angeles Times
November 29, 2001
News Analysis
Demand For Iraq Inspections Could Be Ploy For Attack
By Ronald Brownstein, Times Political Writer 
WASHINGTON -- In demanding the resumption of U.N. inspections inside Iraq,
President Bush is advancing a solution that many experts consider incapable
of preventing Saddam Hussein from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. 
Indeed, national security analysts are so pessimistic that renewed
inspections could effectively deter Iraq that many believe Bush is hoping
Hussein will continue to reject the offer--and thus provide a justification
for a military strike against his regime. 
"We may be laying the groundwork here for actions against Iraq," said Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.). 
Bush's call earlier this week for renewed inspections has drawn praise from
some Middle East experts, who maintain that the United States must offer the
Iraqi president a chance to cooperate now if it is to build a coalition for
tougher steps against him later. 
Others worry that Hussein--who so far has unequivocally rejected Bush's
demand--may outfox the United States by eventually accepting it. That could
begin another round of inspections that probably would prove inconclusive
while preempting any effort to assemble support for military action to
overthrow him. 
"The folks in the administration who are supportive of going after Saddam
are taking somewhat of a risk in that the focus becomes inspections, which
implicitly leaves Saddam as the legitimate government," said Gary J.
Schmitt, executive director of the Project for a New American Century, a
hawkish think tank. 
Yet the demand for inspections offers the administration a way to further
isolate Hussein while delaying decisions on possible military action until
the campaign in Afghanistan is closer to completion. "What it gets us is
showing that we are prepared to work with the international community to try
to deal with the threat of Saddam," said James B. Steinberg, the deputy
national security advisor under President Clinton. 
The difficulty the Bush administration would face in achieving international
backing for military action against Iraq was underscored Wednesday when
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher, during an appearance in Washington,
said his government has been given an understanding that the United States
does not intend to launch such a campaign. Maher did not specify the source
of his information. 
The history of the international efforts to uncover and destroy Iraqi
chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs in the decade since the
Persian Gulf War is a story of virtually unremitting frustration. 
The United Nations imposed the inspections in the resolutions ending the war
in 1991. But from the start, investigators faced relentless Iraqi resistance
that undermined their efforts. 
While the inspections did produce some important discoveries over the years,
the larger lesson of the experience was that "when a determined criminal
flouts international law under cover of the principle of state sovereignty,
the world system, as currently constituted, appears unable or unwilling to
stop him," said Richard Butler, the former chief U.N. weapons inspector, in
his memoir "The Greatest Threat." 
Iraq used an assortment of tactics to block the investigators. It ignored
U.N. mandates to provide an accurate roster of weapons facilities. It began
a systematic program of revealing portions of its weapons programs and
concealing the rest--a ruse that was unearthed when one of two Hussein
sons-in-law who defected in 1995 revealed details about the policy. 
Frequently, Iraqi officials simply stalled inspectors at the gates of a
facility while other Iraqis raced from the site with documents, literally in
view of the investigators. Later, Iraq unilaterally barred inspectors from
"presidential sites" such as palaces that the investigators believed were
hosting weapons research. 
Khidhir Hamza, who directed Iraq's nuclear weapons program before defecting
in 1994, said at a forum last year that Hussein's regime had grown expert at
hiding its biological weapons program from inspectors. "Much of the work was
being moved specially during the inspections. . . . [It] would move around
in hospitals, factories, military areas, bunkers, anywhere," he said.
"They've learned to do it with smaller units working in more or less mobile
situations." 
Finally, in December 1998, the obstruction reached the point that Butler
reported to the U.N. that the commission he headed was no longer able to
verify the status of Iraq's weapons programs. The United States and Britain
launched several days of airstrikes against Iraqi facilities believed to be
producing weapons of mass destruction and other military targets. 
No international inspectors have been allowed back into Iraq since, though
the U.N. demanded their return in a December 1999 resolution. Earlier this
month, Bush National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice said the only reason
Hussein could be blocking the return of inspections was "so that he can
build weapons of mass destruction." 
Given the bleak history of weapons inspections, few analysts are optimistic
such efforts would prove more effective now. 
Even Steinberg, the former deputy national security advisor, who is a
persistent skeptic as regards unilateral military action against Hussein,
agrees that inspections are unlikely to stop Iraqi weapons programs. 
"I'm not confident at all that they can," he said. "If you take for granted
[Hussein] is going to preserve some capacity [for weapons of mass
destruction] as part of his regime survival strategy, he is only going to
let the inspectors do that which doesn't interfere with his ability to do
that." 
Further complicating the equation, Butler and other experts believe that the
monitoring system the U.N. called for in December 1999 would allow Iraq even
greater leeway to block inspections than it had before. "The new proposed
[inspection program] is not as intrusive, at least on paper, as [the old
one] was," said Geoffrey Kemp, a former National Security Council aide under
President Reagan who co-chaired a recent commission on Iraq policy.
"Inspectors are needed in Iraq, but if they have even less access . . . it
will become a farce." 

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