Published on Friday,
August 16, 2002 in the New York Times
by Todd S. Purdum and Patrick E. Tyler
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 — Leading Republicans from Congress, the
State Department and past administrations have begun to break ranks
with President Bush over his administration's high-profile planning
for war with Iraq, saying the administration has neither adequately
prepared for military action nor made the case that it is needed.
These senior Republicans include former Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger and Brent Scowcroft, the first President Bush's national
security adviser. All say they favor the eventual removal of Saddam
Hussein, but some say they are concerned that Mr. Bush is proceeding
in a way that risks alienating allies, creating greater instability
in the Middle East, and harming long-term American interests. They
add that the administration has not shown that Iraq poses an urgent
threat to the United States.
At the same time, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, who summoned
Mr. Kissinger for a meeting on Tuesday, and his advisers have decided
that they should focus international discussion on how Iraq would
be governed after Mr. Hussein — not only in an effort to assure
a democracy but as a way to outflank administration hawks and slow
the rush to war, which many in the department oppose.
"For those of us who don't see an invasion as an article of
faith but as simply a policy option, there is a feeling that you
need to give great consideration to what comes after, and that unless
you're prepared to follow it through, then you shouldn't begin it,"
one senior administration official involved in foreign policy said
today.
In an opinion article published today in The Wall Street Journal,
Mr. Scowcroft, who helped build the broad international coalition
against Iraq in the Persian Gulf war, warned that "an attack
on Iraq at this time would seriously jeopardize, if not destroy,
the global counter-terrorist campaign we have undertaken."
An attack might provoke Iraq to use chemical or biological weapons
in an effort to trigger war between Israel and the Arab world, he
said.
His criticism has particular meaning for Mr. Bush because Mr. Scowcroft
was virtually a member of the Bush family during the first President
Bush's term and has maintained close relations with the former president.
Senator Chuck Hagel, Republican of Nebraska said that Secretary
Powell and his deputy, Richard L. Armitage, had recently told President
Bush of their concerns about the risks and complexities of a military
campaign against Iraq, especially without broad international support.
But senior White House and State Department officials said they
were unaware of any such meeting.
Also today, Lawrence S. Eagleburger, who was briefly secretary
of state for Mr. Bush's father, told ABC News that unless Mr. Hussein
"has his hand on a trigger that is for a weapon of mass destruction,
and our intelligence is clear, I don't know why we have to do it
now, when all our allies are opposed to it."
Last week, Representative Dick Armey, the House majority leader,
raised similar concerns.
The comments by Mr. Scowcroft and others in the Republican foreign
policy establishment appeared to be a loosely coordinated effort.
Mr. Scowcroft first spoke out publicly 10 days ago on the CBS News
program "Face the Nation."
In an opinion article published on Monday in The Washington Post,
Mr. Kissinger made a long and complex argument about the international
complications of any military campaign, writing that American policy
"will be judged by how the aftermath of the military operation
is handled politically," a statement that seems to play well
with the State Department's strategy.
"Military intervention should be attempted only if we are
willing to sustain such an effort for however long it is needed,"
he added. Far from ruling out military intervention, Mr. Kissinger
said the challenge was to build a careful case that the threat of
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction calls for creation
of a new international security framework in which pre-emptive action
may sometimes be justified.
Through his office in New York, Mr. Kissinger relayed a message
that his meeting with Secretary Powell had been scheduled before
the publication of his article and was unrelated. But a State Department
official said Secretary Powell had wanted Mr. Kissinger's advice
on how to influence administration thinking on both Iraq and the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Scowcroft wrote that if the United
States "were seen to be turning our backs" on the Israeli-Palestinian
dispute "in order to go after Iraq, there would be an explosion
of outrage against us."
He added: "There is a virtual consensus in the world against
an attack on Iraq at this time. So long as that sentiment persists,
it would require the U.S. to pursue a virtual go-it-alone strategy
against Iraq, making any military operations correspondingly more
difficult and expensive."
Richard N. Perle, a former Reagan administration official and one
of the leading hawks who has been orchestrating an urgent approach
to attacking Iraq, said today that Mr. Scowcroft's arguments were
misguided and naïve.
"I think Brent just got it wrong," he said by telephone
from France. "The failure to take on Saddam after what the
president said would produce such a collapse of confidence in the
president that it would set back the war on terrorism."
Mr. Perle added, "I think it is naïve to believe that
we can produce results in the 50-year-old dispute between the Israelis
and the Arabs, and therefore this is an excuse for not taking action."
Senator Hagel, who was among the earliest voices to question Mr.
Bush's approach to Iraq, said today that the Central Intelligence
Agency had "absolutely no evidence" that Iraq possesses
or will soon possess nuclear weapons.
He said he shared Mr. Kissinger's concern that Mr. Bush's policy
of pre-emptive strikes at governments armed with weapons of mass
destruction could induce India to attack Pakistan and could create
the political cover for Israel to expel Palestinians from the West
Bank and Gaza.
"You can take the country into a war pretty fast," Mr.
Hagel said, "but you can't get out as quickly, and the public
needs to know what the risks are."
He added, "Maybe Mr. Perle would like to be in the first wave
of those who go into Baghdad."
For months, the State Department's approach has been to focus on
how to build a government in Iraq.
After meetings here last week involving Iraqi opposition groups
and administration officials, one official said today that there
was now consensus in the State Department that if more discussion
was focused on the challenge of creating a post-Hussein government,
"that would start broaching the question of what kind of assistance
you are going to need from the international community to assure
this structure endures — read between the lines, how long
the occupation will have to be."
Such discussions, the official added, would have a sobering effect
on the war-planners.
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
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