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IRAQ LIBERATION ACT IMPLEMENTATION Hearing
of
the June 28, 2000
SEN.
SAM
BROWNBACK,
SEN. BROWNBACK: The hearing will come to order. Mr. Perle, Dr. Chalabi, delighted to have you here. Welcome again to both of you. I am very pleased to see you both here today to review U.S. policy towards Iraq and in particular to review the Clinton-Gore administration's progress in implementing the Iraq Liberation Act. As we have done this drill several times before, I think you will have some idea just how I feel about the administration's commitment to liberating Iraq. To put it as straightforwardly as possible, I cannot understand why President Clinton signed the Iraq Liberation Act when he had absolutely no intent of implementing the provisions of the law. It is hard for me to figure out why administration officials, from President Clinton and Vice President Gore on down, keep insisting that they are interested in ousting Saddam and yet not one official of this administration has been willing to take even the most minimal steps towards that end. Let me just review what the Congress, with complete bipartisanship -- and I emphasize that -- complete bipartisanship -- has done in trying to press forward on Iraq policy. Since 1998, I count nine House or Senate resolutions calling for democracy in Iraq nine: promoting a War Crimes Tribunal for Iraq; demanding compliance with U.S. resolutions. We have authorized tens of millions of dollars to support war-crimes research and for the opposition. The only arguments we have had are over how more can be done to promote the overthrow of Saddam and bring him and his cronies to justice. That's the only debate or argument we have done or had here is how more or what else we could do. As far as the administration is concerned, in the last two years alone, the Clinton-Gore team has presided over the abolition of UNSCOM, the end of the sanctions review for a significant number of products imported into Iraq; and a staggering -- a staggering erosion of international support for isolating the Saddam Hussein regime. This is not a complex matter, but the Clinton administration has failed to explain why it is imperative that sanctions remain on Iraq. They ought to explain that. They have failed to remind the world at large that Saddam Hussein has killed tens of thousands of his own people and that it is his choice, and his choice alone, whether sanctions are lifted. That's up to Saddam Hussein. They seem to forget that Saddam's devotion to amassing weapons of mass destruction is the only remaining obstacle to Iraq's rehabilitation. That's it. As far as the opposition is concerned, the administration has disbursed approximately $20,000 -- I want to emphasize that -- the administration has disbursed approximately $20,000 of the $97 million in available funds under the Iraq Liberation Act. I guess that's for a few fax machines; I am not sure. Of $10 million appropriated for the opposition and for the prosecution of war crimes in FY 2000, nothing -- nothing has been spent. On Monday, representatives from the Iraq National Congress, of which we'll hear from today, met with Vice President Gore. Miraculously, on Tuesday, the administration announced that 140 INC men would be trained under the ILA. Now, I am not sure trained for what. I hope we can hear a little bit about that today, exactly what's going to be trained on how to use those fax machines or if it's going to be on other things. They also announced they would support an amendment we have in this year's Foreign Operations Appropriations bill, giving $15 million to the INC for humanitarian deliveries into Iraq. This is the first time since the signature of the Iraq Liberation Act that we have seen someone in the administration galvanized to do something for the opposition. The usual routine we hear in Congress is: "Can't do it"; "Won't do it"; "Don't want to do it"; "Don't like them anyway." Most memorably, General Zinni, the soon-to-be-former commander of CENTCOM announced that the Congress was, quote in his words, "stupid" to support the opposition. Either Saddam is a long-term threat, or he is not. If he is, then we must do something short of invading Iraq. Once again, we must support the opposition. The opposition is not a group of Girl Scouts, nor is it a group of Jeffersonian democrats. It is an agglomeration of very different people in different groups, who have been crushed under Saddam Hussein's rule for decades. They are the people willing to work with the United States to overthrow Saddam Hussein. They are the people with the courage to come to us. They have been treated with complete contempt by this administration. To date, the vice president has done nothing for this group. Maybe this week's meeting will mark a turning point; I hope so. Maybe it's just politics as usual. We'll find out soon. I am pleased again to have both of you here. I hope we can get some further illumination from the meeting with the vice president, and some of your thoughts on this, Mr. Perle, as to what has taken place in the administration, what needs to take place, and what possibly might occur under future administrations. And with that, Mr. Perle, let me turn the floor over to you, and I appreciate again your attendance and presentation here at this meeting.
RICHARD
PERLE,
MR. PERLE: And thank you very much, Senator. Thank you for including me in these hearings and, perhaps more important, thank you for holding these hearings. It sometimes takes longer than we would wish to see policies adopted. And even when they are adopted and become the law of the land, it sometimes takes much longer than we wish to see them implemented. And that clearly is the situation we are now in with respect to the Iraq Liberation Act and the repeated expression by the Congress in both houses, in support of the strategy for the liberation of Iraq very different from the strategy that now constitutes administration policy. The word "policy" is probably an overstatement in describing the administration attitude toward Iraq; "paralysis" is probably more appropriate. The administration describes its policy as one of "containment." And on any number of occasions, administration spokesmen have expressed their satisfaction at a "policy that has kept Saddam" -- as they sometimes put it -- "in a box"; powerless, ineffective, unable to act. Now the evidence, however, is overwhelming that during the lifetime of this administration, Saddam's regime has become stronger and not weaker. It has exercised more independence of action than before. And while the administration is happy to describe the policy as "containment," it's fair to observe that what was once a regime inspected by international inspectors is a regime no longer so inspected. The inspections that provided the principal means by which we could judge Saddam's effort to acquire weapons of mass destruction has come to an end, despite the fact that the administration's own announced goal preceding a bombing campaign against Iraq was the restoration of inspections that were terminated unilaterally by Saddam Hussein in violation of U.N. resolutions. Saddam posed a clear and unambiguous challenge; we failed to meet that challenge. If we are able to resume inspections in Iraq, it will be the product of a negotiation with Saddam himself. And I can't help but observe that any inspection regime that is agreed by Saddam, in which he exercises a virtual veto over who is to do the inspecting and under what circumstances, cannot be effective. Saddam will not agree to an inspection regime that has any reasonable prospect of uncovering his covert program to acquire weapons of mass destruction. And the fact that he feels free to choose between this inspector and that, giving the approval to one who he believes will be pliable, and denying approval to one who he believes will not, is an indication of how weak and ineffective we have become. If anyone is in a box, it is not Saddam Hussein; it is the American administration. Not only has the inspection regime, which is vital to our comprehensive understanding of what programs Saddam has under way, been shattered -- and by the way, even if a reasonable inspection regime could be put in place, we have now -- owing to the long period in which no inspections have taken place -- we have lost much of the database upon which any reasonable intelligence operation must be based. Everything that could be moved has been moved; whatever knowledge we once possessed about where to look has now been taken from us. And we are now back, if we were able to return, looking for a very small object in a very large territory, and the prospects of success are very limited. But not only has the inspection regime been shattered, the political support that has sustained the one constant element of administration policy, which is the sanctions now in place, has been declining rapidly. The coalition that was once arrayed against Saddam is in a shambles. Among the former coalition partners, even some of our close allies now take the other side and are eager to see the sanctions lifted. And increasingly, the world has come to believe that the victim of the sanctions is not Saddam Hussein, but innocent civilians -- men, women and children -- in Iraq. I think it's very important to be clear on this point: Saddam has manipulated the perception of the impact of the sanctions. And he has it entirely within his power to bring significant relief to the civilian population of Iraq. And much of the money that has been made available for humanitarian purposes, has not been spent and will not be spent as long as Saddam can prevent it, in order to build pressure against the continuation of the sanctions by creating the impression that only the elimination of the sanctions can restore health to Iraqi women and children and deal with the humanitarian catastrophe that we're now seeing. So I would in no way relieve Saddam Hussein of responsibility for that humanitarian tragedy. But at the same time, I think it's important to observe that the sanctions themselves are of declining effectiveness. They are increasingly circumvented. Saddam has found ways around the sanctions in collaboration with others, including some of his former enemies. There is a steady flow of resources into Iraq that are at Saddam's disposal. And sanctions, among other things, have actually solidified his total control over the Iraqi economy. And so no one can argue that the sanctions are of such force and weight and effectiveness that we can count on them to bring down Saddam's regime. They simply won't, and any belief to the contrary is sadly mistaken.
But
in
any
case,
the
sanctions
won't
last
forever
because
support
for
them
is
eroding.
And
when
they
are
finally
lifted,
as
they
almost
surely
will
be,
Saddam
will
expect,
and
with
good
reason,
a
political
victory
of
enormous
proportions.
He
will
emerge
in
the
Gulf
as
the
leader
who
stood
up
to
the
United
States
and
the
Western
world
and
prevailed.
And
at
that
point,
I
believe
the
region
will
be
a
much
more
dangerous
place
and
the
manifest
failure
of
American
and
allied
policy
--
and
here
it's
largely
a
failure
of
American
leadership
--
will
be
evident
to
everyone.
But by then it will be too late. And I fear that the administration calculates that "too late" will come after the next presidential election. And the evidence is overwhelming that their short-term objective is to get past the election without a more visible catastrophe. And that's probably their long-term perspective, as well. Mr. Chairman, in contrast to this policy of drift, deterioration and ineffectiveness, the Congress has, in a series of actions that I believe are without precedent, empowered the administration to organize and assist the internal opposition to Saddam Hussein. As one would expect, a ruler like Saddam Hussein, who rules by terror, who rules by murder and assassination, has accumulated over the years a great many enemies. In fact, the number of victims are so large that they alone would constitute an inchoate revolutionary force. So the issue for the West, in my view, is how best to organize that opposition, to assist it, to forge it into an instrument by which Saddam's murderous regime might be brought down. The term "freedom fighters" is an entirely appropriate term. And the Iraqi National Congress has for many years been organized along lines expressing support for democratic principles. It has been comprehensively organized, reflecting all elements of Iraqi society. It deserves and has indeed received, the support of the Congress of the United States. And as you well know, as a leader in this effort, the Congress has appropriated money and other resources to assist the INC. We should be very clear about the administration's attitude toward this approach. It is one of opposition, flat-out unmitigated opposition. And at every turn, the administration has sought to frustrate the Congress -- the congressional intent by withholding the resources that you have offered to them to assist the Iraqi National Congress; and even, I am sorry to say, by acting in a manner calculated, not to unite the opposition, but even to divide it. And there is very substantial evidence that the administration and various elements of the executive branch, have actually worked to exploit those differences that one would expect to find in any coalition group, differences that make it more, and not less, difficult to achieve the goals of the Iraq Liberation Act, which is the formation of a coherent opposition. I know this because, like others in this small town, I frequently discuss this matter with officials from the administration, sometimes in rather formal debate and other times in casual conversation. And I think I can say to you that I have never had a conversation with any official of the administration, on this matter, in which those officials did not state that they thought the policy reflected in the Iraq Liberation Act was a mistake and should not be implemented. And they have given expression to that conviction by dragging their feet endlessly, by failing actually to do what the Iraq Liberation Act calls upon them to do. As you rightly observe, within the last 24 hours the vice president, a candidate for the presidency, has met with the Iraqi National Congress and once again, made pledges of support to the Iraqi National Congress. I don't know whether he took his earlier pledges of support off the word processor and changed the date or whether he drafted a new set of talking points. But I do know that in August of 1993, the same vice president, who was not then a presidential candidate, gave a very full expression of support to the Iraqi National Congress; and that preceded, by almost three years, a military operation by Saddam against the Iraqi National Congress in which a great many people working with the United States, who had placed trust and confidence in the United States, were executed by Saddam Hussein. And I don't recall the vice president on that occasion taking any action whatsoever to keep the commitment that was made then. And hope springs eternal, and maybe this time he means it. But it is still, it seems to me, a commitment that falls far short of the kind of vigorous program that would give the policy behind the Iraq Liberation Act a decent chance for success. Let me conclude by saying what I think is required in this case. It is the administration's conviction that attempting to assist the INC is unwise because the INC is incapable of taking on Saddam Hussein. They are weak and disorganized, according to officials in the administration, including officials who report directly to the vice president and others, always in private in the latter case. Let me say that all oppositions that lack external support, that lack a strategy with resources behind it, that give it a reasonable prospect of success, are by definition weak. So it means nothing to say that an organization lacking the fundamental support it needs is going to be weak. It's inevitable. As to the disorganization, I think the INC has come a very long way in organizing itself. And you see in this room a number of representatives of the INC from all elements of Iraqi society who have come together in what is a very impressive display of unity. Now, there are differences, to be sure, and the differences will always be larger when the prospects of success are smaller. The point is that it is well within the power of the United States, as a world leader and as the source of the resources necessary to mount an effective campaign against Saddam Hussein, it is within the power of the United States to assist this opposition in a way that will assist its achieving cohesion and effectiveness. And it is within our power to help them design the plans by which they can effectively challenge Saddam's regime. So the pessimism of the administration, the defeatism of the administration, the paralysis of the administration is, in fact, a self-fulfilling prophecy. If they say long enough and often enough that the opposition is weak and divided, if they withhold the support that the Congress has urged them to extend, then they can, of course, weaken the opposition and prevent it from achieving reasonable and attainable objectives. So I hope very much that we will see a change in administration policy. It will probably take a new administration to accomplish that. I'd be quite happy to see a new administration in any case, but one of the reasons for preferring a new administration is that we may look forward to one that implements the law now on the books that requires support for the liberation of Iraq by those people who have been willing to run the risks and organize themselves to bring that about. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you, Mr. Perle, for those thoughtful comments, and I look forward to some question and answer between the two of us.
Dr.
Chalabi,
I
am
pleased
to
see
you
again,
although
I
am
sorry
it's
here.
I
had
--
we
had
hoped
at
this
point
in
time
that
you
would
be
in
Iraq
organizing,
pushing
and
prodding
for
the
overthrow
of
the
Saddam
Hussein
regime.
It's
been
some
years
ago
that
you
first
met
with
members
of
Congress
and
we
first
expressed
our
support
for
your
efforts,
put
forward
resources
to
do
that.
And
we
certainly
all
thought
by
this
point
in
time
we
wouldn't
still
be
meeting
in
hearings
in
Washington,
D.C.,
but
that
we
would
be
pressing
forward
in
your
homeland
and
with
the
coalition
that
you
put
together.
Yet
we
are
here,
and
I
want
to
hear
what
you
have
to
say
about
the
progress
on
implementing
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act. You might also take a moment, if you would, to introduce the other people of the INC that are here and what groups that they represent so that we could have that for the record as well. Dr. Chalabi. AHMAD
CHALABI,
MR. CHALABI: Thank you, Senator Brownback. Let me first introduce my distinguished friends and colleagues, the leaders of the Iraqi National Congress. First I would start with Mr. Jalal Talabani. SEN. BROWNBACK: Please stand, if you would, General. MR. CHALABI: Mr. Talabani is a leader -- the leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, who has worked long and hard for the cause of democracy and human rights in Iraq and the rights of the Kurdish people in Iraq. He is a well-known leader internationally, and he has been of great support for the Iraqi National Congress, a tireless fighter. Mr. Riyad Al-Yawar is a man who has been an Iraqi diplomat and he is a man who has been working against tyranny and dictatorship in Iraq for over four years now, and he has worked tireless to help unite the INC. Saif Khalor al-Bapart (ph), who came yesterday from Iraq, is from the South, he is a leader of opposition, armed opposition to Saddam Hussein in the South, and he came here to put his case and the need for assistance before the American people. On my left, my very good friend and colleague in fighting Saddam Hussein -- in March '95 we were together in the battlefield -- Mr. Kossra Rassul (ph), who has been prime minister of Iraqi Kurdistan, and he has been fighting Saddam. He has personally suffered losses. His two children were killed by Saddam's bombs, and he, himself, suffers from wounds inflicted on him by Saddam. He has demonstrated a remarkable tenacity in continuing to fight Saddam, and his ability to do so is unchallenged. Dr. Latif Rashid. He is a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, and he has been working with the INC for a long, long time. He was a founding member and he has been of immense -- he has made immense contributions to our fight against Saddam Hussein. Mr. Hoshyar Zibari a member of the Democratic Party of Kurdistan. He is a founding member of the Iraqi National Congress. He has fought Saddam in battles for many decades now, and he has personally suffered family losses due to Saddam's activities, and he has been a person who has worked to help us unite the INC and restore its current united status. I am sorry to say that Sharif Ali Hussein (ph) and Sheikh Albuhyder (ph), Sheikh Mohammed, Mohammed Ali (ph), had to go for a TV interview with the Voice of America, but they, both of them, Sharif Ali is from the former royal family of Iraq, the Hashemite family, and his presence with us gives a sense for the people of Iraq that they look back with nostalgia to the days of the (monarchy ?), when there was much more freedom, much more democracy than now. And he has been working very hard with us as a colleague to restore democracy in Iraq. Sheikh Mohammed, Mohammed Ali, is a leader of the Islamic movement in Iraq, and he has been a victim of Saddam and he has worked -- he is a founding member of the INC, and he has worked very hard with us all those years. SEN. BROWNBACK: Very good. Welcome, all of you, and thank you for coming here. MR. CHALABI: Thank you, Senator Brownback. This is the third time that I have testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as a representative of the Iraqi National Congress and the Iraqi people. Each time, it is a great, greater honor. I am joined here today by the entire leadership of the Iraqi National Congress, and I am proud to bring you our united message to the United States government. Unfortunately, on this occasion I am the bearer of bad news. Since my last testimony a year ago, Saddam Hussein has become a greater threat to the Iraqi people, to the Middle East region and to the interests of the United States. Saddam's dictatorship is based on three pillars: money, foreign support and terror. On all three fronts, he is resurgent. Manipulation of the oil-for-food program, illegal smuggling of oil and extortion of the Iraqi people are now providing Saddam with billions in cash for internal repression and external aggression. His intelligence service is resurgent. In the past two weeks, General Najib Al-Saydahi (ph), a member of the Iraqi National Congress Central Council and a leading commander in the Iraqi army, has received a videotape of a rape of one of his relatives in Baghdad by the intelligence service, in an attempt to intimidate him. Many others have received that recently, but they have not chosen to speak out. He had the courage to do so, and I will bring -- I want to bring this to your attention now. There are now massive investments in nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs unrestricted by United Nations inspections. Saddam succeeded in throwing out UNSCOM. Foreign governments, including those of United States allies, such as Qatar, Bahrain and the UAE, have all restored full diplomatic relations with the Iraqi dictatorship in the past few weeks, providing Saddam's weapons acquisition and terror networks with unfettered access to the outside world. He has large-scale intelligence operations going on right now in the UAE, including procurement of prohibited materials and smuggling them into Iraq. Russia, France and other significant countries, such as Italy, are working for Saddam's interests on the international stage. Saddam's internal terror continues to destroy our people, and his abilities for external aggression are increased as a result of his increased funds and his increased foreign diplomatic access. Even so, however, Saddam remains vulnerable. Inside Iraq, he is continuously challenged by the Iraqi people, united in their hatred of his tyranny. In the North, in Iraqi Kurdistan, Saddam's authority is almost non- existent, extending only to intelligence operatives and paid agents. In the North, Iraqi National Congress member parties administer over 50,000 square kilometers of Iraqi territory independently and in opposition to Saddam. This was our base until Saddam attacked our base in August 1996 and killed our people. Southern Iraq is in a state of latent revolution, punctuated by increased armed rebellion against the regime. In the audience today is Saif Khalor Bapart (ph) a leader of the Iraqi National Congress southern resistance to Saddam's regime. He left Iraq this weekend to bring us news of the fighting and a plea for U.S. protection of support. In Baghdad, Saddam is continuously challenged, his security forces only able to suppress, not preempt, frequent and large-scale uprisings against his authority. It is this universal opposition to Saddam Hussein which the Iraqi National Congress embodies and which is the only avenue towards peace in Iraq, a peace which can only be secured by Saddam's overthrow and establishment of a new popular and democratic federal Iraqi government. The benefits from Saddam's overthrow are clear. The Iraqi people will be free, free to govern themselves, free to cherish their children, free to employ their talents for good. The region will be free, free from the fear of Saddam's warmaking, free from Saddam's terrorism, and free from the threat of Saddam's inhuman weapons of mass destruction. And the United States, as the sole superpower, will be free from its excessive military commitments arrayed against a megalomaniac dictator who survives only on the indecision and the contradictions of United States and international policies. Which leads me to my central point: Saddam's future, the future of the Iraqi people and the future of the Middle East are dependent on the actions of the United States. It is an indisputable fact, if the United States is committed to Saddam's overthrow and the establishment of an Iraqi democratic government, it can happen, and happen quickly. If the United States is not committed, our struggle for freedom will be long, painful and bloody, both for the Iraqi people and the world. The Congress of the United States has recognized this fact and moved decisively against Saddam. By overwhelming bipartisan majorities in both the House and the Senate, duly signed by the president, Congress has appropriated funds, provided constitutional authority and ordered military support to the Iraqi National Congress. The Iraq Liberation Act, the centerpiece of these congressional efforts, is historic legislation. In the ILA, for the first time the United States has overtly committed itself to the overthrow of an illegal dictatorship and to support for the establishment of a democratic government in its place. The Iraqi people are forever grateful. The Iraq Liberation Act is United States law. President Clinton signed the ILA on December -- on October 31, 1998. On November 15, 1998, he made the ILA the centerpiece of his Iraq policy. Yet, despite bold words and professed commitments, almost nothing has been done. There has been virtually no military drawdown, less than $20,000 from the ($7 million ?) authority. There has been virtually no financial support, less than $100,000 actually given to the INC. This inaction is, unfortunately, part of a bitter history for the Iraqi National Congress relations with the United States. In 1996, the Iraqi National Congress was abandoned to Saddam's invasion of Northern Iraqi despite U.S. guarantees of protection, not only to the INC but to the 3-1/2 million Iraqis living in the area. Since that time, the INC has been routinely disparaged by administration officials from the NSC, the CIA, the State Department and the Department of Defense. And, while blaming the victim may provide temporary political cover for betrayal of U.S. interests, ideals and commitments, it has done little for the confidence of the Iraqi people or Iraq's neighbors. Despite this record, the INC still looks to the United States for leadership, confident that the American people are with us against Saddam. And we are encouraged by the progress we have made in the last few days. Monday's meeting with Vice President Al Gore was very successful, continuing a long record of his support for the Iraqi people's interests. Senator Gore was one of the first U.S. officials to condemn Saddam's genocide against the Iraqi Kurds in 1988. I first met him in 1991, and he was instrumental in the development of U.S. support for the INC at that time. In 1993, he received the INC in Washington and again advanced our struggle against Saddam. Since that time, he has been one of the strongest voices for the interests of the Iraqi people in the United States and internationally. As he begins his presidential campaign, we welcome his clear calls for Saddam's overthrow and his forthright assertion that peace in the Middle East is impossible while Saddam remains in power. Similarly, we welcomed his actions this week as vice president. U.S. commitment to military training for the INC under the ILA authority is a promising step in the right direction, as is yesterday's announcements of U.S. support for the INC's humanitarian relief projects in Iraq. With Vice President Gore's sponsorship, we expect speedy progress and tangible results. Nonetheless, we cannot rely on rhetoric. Our task is too urgent, and the needs of the Iraqi people are too great. Our proposal for $8 million in FY 2000 State Department economic support funds appropriated to the INC is on the administration's desk, and has been since November. If it is approved before the end of this month, we can begin humanitarian relief projects within 45 days and begin broadcasting operations in less than 30 days. Our preliminary requests for material and training under the ILA have been submitted since February. If accepted by the end of this month, effective INC military units, intelligence teams and humanitarian aid workers can be operating in coordination with United States support by the end of August. We need these U.S. actions immediately, and we are counting on the word of the vice president to deliver them. The United States faces a clear choice. Sanctions, bombing and containment are not a sustainable policy. Either Saddam must go, and go quickly, or he must be accommodated. If he is accommodated, he will quickly develop nuclear weapons and become the dominant military power in the Gulf. If she's overthrown, Iraq can become the peaceful and prosperous country which is in the interest of its people, the region and the world. Thank you. SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you, Dr. Chalabi, for that strong statement. I have a vote that is on on the floor. I thought what we could do is have a couple of questions and exchange and take a short break and come back. I'm curious. You said that opposition actions in the south continue on a regular basis and are growing and that you had news directly from the south. Could the individual that's here from the south inform us of what's taking place there? Would it be possible for -- MR. CHALABI: Yes. Yes. (Inaudible) -- he can easily speak, senator, as you wish.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
Could
he
for
a
couple
of
minutes
here
before
I
go
to
vote,
and
then
we'll
take
a
short
break.
I
would
be
very
interested
to
hear
of
what's
taking
place
in
the
south
now.
We
get
regular
information
out
from
the
north
of
what's
occurring,
but
not
so
much
from
the
south.
If
you
would
identify
yourself
and
state
what's
taking
place
in
the
south
for
as
far
as
opposition
to
Saddam.
MR. CHALABI: He says he comes from el Bathar (ph) from the southern marshes. He identifies himself as a fighter amongst other fighters from the south. SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you. MR. CHALABI: Dr. Bussam (ph) will translate. IRAQI OPPOSITION MEMBER: (Through interpreter.) There is no secret in what Saddam is doing inside Iraq as far as crimes against humanity and against the Iraqi people. There has been no outrage in history that has not been committed by Saddam. It's Saddam's crimes against humanity and ecology and everything that's been created in this world. He has committed crimes against his neighbors as well as against his people and against humanity and against the world. The draining of the marshes in Iraq caused destruction both to the ecology, to the animal and feed stock as well as the fish, and the humans who are living there. SEN. BROWNBACK: Could I ask what is going on in opposition to Saddam in the south? IRAQI OPPOSITION MEMBER: All Iraqi peoples suffer from Saddam's actions and they are in opposition. We fight Saddam in the marshes of Iraq that have been drained but have been liberated. And the last battle was on the fifteenth of May, this year in the northern Rumayla (ph) area, near Basra. However, we fought alone and we did not get any aid to help us fight to destroy Saddam and his forces. I'm sorry to say that the United States government that has claimed support for human rights and humanity in the world, and has taken upon itself the responsibilities nobody forced it to, to protect the Iraqi people and even the Iraq Liberation Act. Unfortunately American aircraft fly over us as we are being continuously being bombarded by Saddam's forces. And that to us implies what is happening is not reality. We are in an uprising in Iraq and the whole Iraqi people are in opposition to Saddam, but we need weapons and other support, such as radio stations and food support. SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you very much for the updated information of what's taking place. I appreciate that greatly. We have a vote on the floor and I'm going to have to go over to vote. I'll be back in ten minutes. I'll be able to walk over and back in that period of time. If you could stay with us for a few minutes, Mr. Perle, Dr. Chalabi, I have a number of questions, particularly Dr. Chalabi, for how your meeting with the Vice President went and whether he pledged any new assistance, direct U.S. assistance, whether he made any specific offers of assistance and any timetable in which those offers of assistance would be forthcoming. I would like to know if there are any specifics that were promised at that meeting with the Vice President on Monday. So I will be back within ten minutes. So, we will stand in recess for ten minutes until ten after ten. (Bangs gavel.) (Recess.) SEN. BROWNBACK: We do have another vote scheduled shortly, and so what I want to do is try to get through a couple of key questions with Dr. Chalabi about the meeting with vice president, and Mr. Perle with any thoughts he might have on a future administration, if it's a Republican administration, if it's a Bush administration, how might they deal with Iraq and the INC and the Iraq Liberation Act. Dr. Chalabi, will you please illuminate us on the specifics from the meeting with the vice president and any particular pledges of assistance and timetables of that assistance to the INC? DR. CHALABI: The vice president -- we wrote him a letter. We wrote all the candidates a letter on January 21st requesting meetings. The vice president answered on February 8th, and we had the meeting on Monday, on the 26th of June. In that meeting the vice president made a very strong statement that he does not believe that there can be peace in Iraq or the Middle East while Saddam remains in power. He said that he is committed to the Iraq Liberation Act and it is the cornerstone of U.S. policy towards Iraq. He said that he will help us remove -- get rid of Saddam, and that is the United States position. We made some specific requests. We asked first that the United States would change the rules of engagement of American aircraft so that Saddam's forces poised to attack Iraqi civilians in the south and the north and the liberated areas of the north would become legitimate targets. This is especially poignant in light of the statement of Saif Khalor al-Bapart (ph) just before you now about the American aircraft flying without -- while Saddam is oppressing the people. We also requested that the United States would reverse their ecological disaster from the dying of the marshes. This can be done. We requested that the United States would help us to establish an international commission which would have access to the oil-for-food funds so that they can be spent for the benefit of the Iraqi people rather than sit in the bank as they are now. There are balances in the excess of $8 billion now. Saddam refuses to spend it. We want to take the idea of relief for the Iraqi people away from either -- give Saddam more resources or lift the sanctions. That is not the way to do it. Giving Saddam more resources is tantamount to more oppression and deprivation now. We also ask that the United States affirm what is in the Iraq Liberation Act that they would help the Iraqi people integrate into the international community and help lift the sanctions as soon as Saddam is removed and there is a democratic government. We asked for all those. The vice president -- and we asked of course for full implementation of the Iraq Liberation Act. The vice president said they will help us with training. We have submitted names, and they said they will help us with training speedily -- he said by the fall they would train all those people. Then -- SEN. BROWNBACK: Let me ask you about that -- train all those people -- there was mention about 115 -- DR. CHALABI: A hundred -- we have submitted two lists, one 21 and the other 120. SEN. BROWNBACK: And trained to do what? DR. CHALABI: The training is restricted to seven areas, all of them to non-lethal.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
So
it's
all
to
non-lethal
training
that
these
people
would
be
submitted
to.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
Why
was
he
resistant
to
the
lethal
training?
DR.
CHALABI:
We
don't
really
understand,
senator,
there
is
resistance
in
the
administration
to
provide
lethal
training.
We
have
some
theories,
but
we
don't
really
know
why.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
But
he
pledged
to
you
then
by
this
fall
that
there
would
be
some
140
INC
people
trained
in
non-lethal
areas.
Some
of
these
areas
you
would
find
useful;
others
you
don't
particularly
understand.
And
you
don't
understand
the
reason
for
the
resistance
to
lethal
training?
DR.
CHALABI:
We
don't,
because
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act
is
meant
to
liberate
Iraq.
You
cannot
liberate
Iraq
by
treating
wounded
people.
We
need
to
liberate
Iraq
by
fighting
Saddam,
and
that's
what
we
need.
I
mean,
we
need
all
the
assistance
we
can
get
in
terms
of
weapons,
because
there
are
tens
of
thousands
of
fighters
fighting
Saddam
or
confronting
Saddam
now.
In
the
north
Saddam
was
about
to
attack
the
area
in
late
May
this
year,
and
he
amassed
troops.
The
Kurdish
forces,
if
they
were
given
some
anti-tank
weapons
they
can
resist
that.
In
the
south
Saddam
bombards
them
with
artillery
and
he
attacks
them
with
tanks.
If
they
have
some
anti-tank
weapons,
if
they
have
any
kind
of
communications
equipment,
anti-tank
weapons
--
some
kind
of
weaponry
that
can
confront
the
superior
armor
and
artillery
of
Saddam,
he
will
lose
control
of
the
area.
The
Iraqi
army
is
not
fighting
really
in
the
south.
They
are
forced
and
coerced
into
making
these
movements,
but
there
are
many
generals
that
are
--
there
are
many,
many
generals
and
many
officers
who
left
Saddam's
army
and
are
now
sitting
in
the
liberated
areas
in
northern
Iraq
ready
to
join
training
for
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act
now.
But
they
are
sitting
there
with
no
assistance
and
no
prospect
of
going
anywhere,
and
they
are
wondering
why.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
What's
the
administration's
resistance
to
providing
any
sort
of
anti-tank
weaponry
to
the
Iraqi
National
Congress
or
to
the
people
that
are
fighting
against
Saddam.
Why
will
they
not
provide
that
equipment?
DR.
CHALABI:
Well,
it
is
lethal,
and
they
say
they
are
not
giving
lethal
equipment.
Senator,
it
seems
to
me
--
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
Did
they
give
you
a
specific
reason
as
to
why
they
would
not
provide
lethal
assistance?
DR.
CHALABI:
Yes.
They
say
that
we
do
not
want
you
--
you
are
not
ready,
and
we
don't
want
you
to
jump
into
confronting
Saddam
and
get
killed
in
the
process.
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
Yet
in
the
period
that
we
have
had
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act,
a
period
of
two
years,
that
they
have
said
you
are
not
ready,
they
will
not
provide
any
assistance
or
training
in
lethal
weaponry
or
any
assistance
or
training
at
all
yet.
DR.
CHALABI:
Senator,
the
idea
of
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act
is
to
enable
us
to
make
us
ready
to
fight
Saddam.
That
is
the
whole
purpose
of
the
Iraq
Liberation
Act,
and
to
enable
us
to
train
us
and
to
equip
us
for
this
purpose.
We
really
don't
understand
what
is
the
thing.
Now,
there
is
another
excuse
saying
that
the
regional
countries
object
to
this,
that
they
don't
want
us
trained.
But
our
experience
with
the
regional
countries
is
they
ask,
Why
isn't
the
United
States
serious?
Why
are
they
not
implementing
the
law?
SEN.
BROWNBACK:
I
ask
the
same
question.
How
long
have
we
had
this
available
to
you
to
be
trained,
to
provide
this
equipment
to
you,
and
it
has
not
occurred?
DR. CHALABI: Indeed I think we have now close to 18 months since the Iraq Liberation Act has been passed. We work very hard. We establish -- we demonstrated time and time again the unity of the Iraqi National Congress, and | ||||