[Peace-discuss] blair
Dlind49 at aol.com
Dlind49 at aol.com
Tue Sep 24 10:22:41 CDT 2002
Blair outlines Iraq evidence
Prime Minister Tony Blair has warned of the urgent need to act after the
publication of the UK's long awaited dossier of evidence against Iraq.
Mr Blair said the 50-page report, based on intelligence and United Nations
inspectors' reports, showed Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programme was
"active, detailed and growing".
The dossier claims Iraq has:
Continued to produce chemical and biological agents.
Drawn up military plans for the use of chemical and biological weapons.
Tried to acquire from Africa material and technology for the production of
nuclear weapons.
Illegally retained up to 20 al-Hussein missiles with a range of 650km,
capable of carrying chemical or biological warheads.
Begun developing ballistic missiles with a range of more than 1,000km.
Learnt how to conceal equipment and documentation from weapons inspectors
Mr Blair told an emergency session of the UK Parliament: "Our case is simply
this - not that we take military action come what may, but that the case for
ensuring Iraqi disarmament as the UN has stipulated is overwhelming.
"I defy anyone on the basis of this evidence to say that is an unreasonable
demand for the international community to make."
The Iraqi Culture Minister, Yousif Hummadi, told a news conference in Baghdad
that the dossier was "baseless".
Mr Hummadi accused Mr Blair of taking part in what he called a Zionist
campaign against Iraq.
: Dossier at-a-glance
Iraq and weapons of mass destruction
The dossier is part of the build-up of pressure which includes a new United
Nations resolution "within days" calling for Iraq to re-admit weapons
inspectors and abandon any weapons of mass destruction.
I believe this issue to be a current and serious threat to the UK national
interest
Tony Blair
US President George Bush has said it would be a resolution "to disarm Saddam
Hussein... before he threatens civilisation".
Writing in the dossier's foreword, Mr Blair says: "It is unprecedented for
the government to publish this kind of document.
"But in the light of the debate about Iraq and weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) I wanted to share with the British public the reasons why I believe
this issue to be a current and serious threat to the UK national interest."
He says he has become "increasingly alarmed" in recent months by the evidence
from inside Iraq that "Saddam Hussein is continuing to develop WMD, and with
them the ability to inflict real damage upon the region and the stability of
the world".
Click here to download the dossier
Mr Blair claims that, despite sanctions, the "policy of containment" employed
towards Iraq has not worked.
He said weapons inspectors must be allowed back in to Iraq "to do their job
properly" and if Saddam refuses, the international community "will have to
act".
The dossier's publication came as former US presidential candidate Al Gore
accused President Bush of squandering the good will of the world towards
America.
UK debate
The UK Parliament's emergency one day session will not include a vote on a
specific anti-war motion after rebel Labour MPs' were denied their request.
The (UN weapons) inspectors are the only people who can be trusted with this
information - not people with a propaganda interest in drawing up dossiers
George Galloway. Labour MP
They are still expected to record opposition to military action without UN
backing in a procedural vote on the adjournment of the House.
In a passionate attack on those who supported military action, Labour's
George Galloway said: "The (UN weapons) inspectors are the only people who
can be trusted with this information - not people with a propaganda interest
in drawing up dossiers."
Labour former cabinet minister Chris Smith also urged the government not to
act without UN backing.
Iraqi missile ranges according to Blair's dossier:
1. Al-Samoud - 150 km
2. Ababil - 150 km
3. Al Hussein - 650km
4. Al Abbas - 900km *
5. Planned MRBM - 1,200 km *
* Project active pre-Gulf War; could be retrieved.
Mr Blair's statement was welcomed by Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith,
who told MPs Saddam Hussein "has had ten years of second chances. Now surely
is the time to act".
But Charles Kennedy, for the Liberal Democrats, said the emphasis should be
on getting UN weapons inspectors back into Iraq.
An ICM poll for Tuesday's Guardian newspaper suggests 37% of Britons would
support military action, with 46% against and 18% undecided.
: Who backs war?
Where the world stands on Iraq
Iraq is likely to be high on the agenda when Mr Blair meets German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder later on Tuesday.
It was a major issue in the German election after the chancellor voiced
emphatic opposition to military action - upsetting US Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld who said it had "poisoned" relations between the two
countries.
Tony Blair is due to visit Moscow in October to try to persuade President
Vladimir Putin to support the American and British position on Iraq.
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The Iraq Dossier in full
Click here for the document
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