Scott Rittet (weaponsinspector) on Iraq Reseda - 15.11.2002 13:11
Summary of Scott Ritter's talks on Iraq, Insight in America's strategy to justifie war. Scott Ritter Former (1991-1998) chief U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq 13/11/2002 1. The weapons inspections were very effective (unlike what many people think), the inspectors were very good. 90 to 95 % of Iraq's weapons of mass destructions and of the infrastructure for producing them were destroyed (verified) during his time there, 1991-1998. War was basically prevented during that period. In 1998 the inspectors were recalled by the U.S. Government (unlike what many people think), because it wanted to start bombing Iraq. 2. The resolution which was accepted yesterday does hardly alleviate the situation, although many people think so. It has set out a specific timeline: the Iraqi's have to come up with a complete declaration of their weapons of mass destruction within a month (Dec 8). Iraq already has said that it has no such weapons. Bush etc have said that they know that Iraq has them. This means that the declaration will most likely be declared false. Then the procedure is that the US goes to the UN security council, and it can declare war according to the resolution ("serious consequences"). The date of Dec 8 is because the US have a narrow time window in which they can conduct war (Dec-Mar). This is mainly because of the presence of four U.S. aircraft carriers in the Gulf. The U.N. Security Council will hardly have any ground to object anymore, but the U.S. will act unilaterally even if the SC does not aghree. 3. If Iraq has weapons of mass destruction, the best way to find out is to invade. Iraq will then have every right to use them. 4. Iraq may even appeal to the Security Council itself, saying that it has been invaded by a foreign country, an obvious breach of international law. 5. Why Iraq? Ritter thinks it is not mainly about oil. The Iraq government have offered a guaranteed oil deal to the U.S., oil for investments. Economcially this would really be the easiest way to go. Destroying the infrastructure and rebuilding it is much more expensive. Oil plays a role, but the leading issue is an ideological one. 6. Compared to e.g. North Korea, Iraq is an easy target. Saddam Hussein has been structurally demonised over many years, and the American public has been indoctrinated. It is now full of fear and anger, and therefore supports the war. 7. With the resolution as it is, weapons inspectors do not get any chance. He thinks that is a shame. The U.S. Government has no interest in letting weapons inspections succeed. If indeed the weapons are tracked down, and destroyed, and Iraq collaborates, it will become part of the international community again, and Saddam Hussein will stay in power. The U.S. only program is to remove Saddam Hussein from power. 8. There is no good evidence that Iraq indeed has weapons of mass destructions, so there is no solid ground for war. There is no proven link between Iraq and Al-Qaeda either. Bush keeps saying that there is evidence, but he does not mention any data. OK, maybe this is confidential. But for such information, there are the Congress overview committees. Ritter knows these people, and they tell him they have not seen any proofs. Bush is intimidating Congress by brutally proclaiming that any opposition is antipatriotic or obstruction. Dialogue and debate are being cut off. Basically, Ritter says, the U.S. is now a dictatorship. 9. War would take thousands of lives. War would be a great incentive for the Arab world to hate the U.S. for decades to come. Going to war against Iraq means losing the war on terror. 10. Instead, diplomacy would work. Sending a good diplomatic delegation will solve things within a matter of weeks. But the U.S. has dismissed that possibility by comparing Saddam Hussein with Adolf Hitler etc. 11. In the long run, the stupid way is to attack all potentially dangerous nations, as the U.S. is planning to do. To eradicate terrorism, you need to attack the roots. People hate the U.S., and partially rightfully so. The U.S. is stealing the resources and abusing people of other countries, and is depriving people in those countries from the possibility for a good existence. It has been calculated that an equal division would be 5 acres of land with resources per human being, but the U.S. consumes 25 acres per person. It is imperialism, and it will not stop. 12. Ritter has done a lot since he resigned as a weapons inspector (which he did because the U.S. was obstructing the fact-finding). He actually went to Iraq in September, to address the Iraqi Parliament, to speak with ministers, and convince them to allow weapons inspectors in. He also made a documentary about Iraq, because he felt the U.S. media were portraying the issue completely faultily. 13. Thousands of children die every month in Iraq because of the economic sanctions. He has seen this himself over there. The American government, and thus the American people, are killing these children. The economic sanctions must be lifted immediately. His book "Endgame: Solving the Iraq Crisis": http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0743247728/qid=1037296623/sr=8-2/ref=sr_8_2/103-0143393-9282234?v=glance&s=books&n=507846 (excellent reviews) A report of the talk: http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/Stories/0,1413,206%257E22097%257E989883,00.html |