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[casi] FW: "There's no telling how many wars it will take to securefreedom in the homeland"




thanks to Rick Rozoff of Stop NATO, f.

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/08/06/1028157935758.html

Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)


White House unable to see beyond toppling Saddam
August 7 2002


A determined George Bush is giving US allies the
jitters. Analysis by Marian Wilkinson.


Shortly before US President George Bush met his senior
military commander, Tommy Franks, on Monday for an
extensive update on Iraq, he made it clear his resolve
to remove Saddam Hussein was not faltering.

Speaking in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, close to where
the fourth hijacked aircraft crashed on September 11,
Mr Bush said: "We must not allow the world's worst
leaders to blackmail the United States and our friends
and allies with the world's worst weapons."

In a message that rebuffed Iraq's offers to the United
Nations and members of the US Congress to visit
Baghdad for talks on the country's suspected weapons
sites, Mr Bush told Americans to be prepared for a
series of wars against terrorism.

"There's no telling how many wars it will take to
secure freedom in the homeland," he said.

His words will dismay many allies who have warned the
US not to launch a military campaign against Iraq
while Afghanistan and the Middle East are in turmoil.
Jordan's King Abdullah, in Washington last week, urged
the US to step up its efforts to restore the peace
process between Israel and the Palestinians rather
than declaring war on Iraq.



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A member of the Kuwaiti royal family, quoted by The
New York Times, put the concerns more bluntly: "Just
open a map," he said. "Afghanistan is in turmoil, the
Middle East is in flames and you want to open a third
front in the region?"

The split between the US and its allies over the
Middle East comes after a wave of suicide bombers and
gunmen have killed scores of Israelis in recent days.

But while the daily toll mounts, the White House and
the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, have
maintained their focus on plans to topple Saddam
Hussein and destroy his potential to produce weapons
of mass destruction.

The frustrations over the US policy in the Middle East
are highlighted by a former Lieutenant-Colonel with
the Israeli Defence Force, Gal Luft. Writing in the
latest issue of Foreign Affairs, Colonel Luft says the
recent terror campaign by Hamas and the Islamic Jihad
has killed as many or more Israelis than Saddam
Hussein's Scud missile attack on Israel during the
Gulf War.

Many more Palestinians have died in Israeli assaults
and nearly 1 million have been living under military
curfew which has led to widespread hardship and
malnutrition as the economy collapses.

The White House insists there is still no war plan for
Iraq but Mr Bush has urged the Congress to pass the
new defence funding bill, the largest increase in
spending since Ronald Reagan's time.



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