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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Bush Signals Saddam


By Alan Sipress and Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, February 17, 2001; Page A1


The U.S. airstrikes against Iraqi antiaircraft positions yesterday, though
billed by American officials as routine self-defense, marked an exceptional
step by President Bush that foreign policy analysts said signaled a more
confrontational approach to Baghdad.

In both scope and location, the raids went beyond the more limited responses
by the Clinton administration to Iraqi challenges to U.S. and British
aircraft. And while national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said this was
the fourth enforcement of the "no-fly" zone since Bush took office, it was
the first time the president himself authorized the action.

"There's nothing routine about this at all," said Richard N. Perle, a former
Pentagon official and foreign policy adviser to Bush. "There's been a lot of
talk about how the administration will be tested by Saddam Hussein. Maybe the
administration has decided to test Saddam rather than be tested by him."

The desire to send a tough signal to Iraq, however, does nothing to resolve
the more fundamental conflict within the administration over how far to go in
trying to depose Saddam Hussein, an issue that has frustrated U.S. officials
since Bush's father launched allied response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait a
decade ago.

At the same time, the administration's apparent willingness to engage in
wider military strikes against Iraq may not be cost-free. The moves could
escalate differences with some U.S. allies – other than Britain, which joined
in yesterday's action – and create resistance to the continuation of United
Nation sanctions on the Iraqi regime.

Bush officials have spoken repeatedly about the importance of symbolism in
foreign policy. Twice in the past two weeks – first in approving funds to
Iraqi opposition groups for renewed activity inside Iraq, now with
yesterday's military action – the administration has acted to reinvigorate
U.S. policy toward Iraq and demonstrate its determination to step up pressure
on Saddam Hussein.

Taken together, administration officials said, the actions – limited as they
may be by themselves – are designed to show the Iraqis and others around the
world that Bush and his foreign affairs advisers have made policy toward Iraq
a priority in their early calculations.

"This policy of pushing Iraq off the front page, which was the Clinton
administration policy in 1999 and 2000, is clearly over," said Ivo H.
Daalder, a Clinton administration official now at the Brookings Institution.
The new administration's policy, he added, is designed to "put Iraq squarely
on the front page."

American aircraft had struck Iraqi antiaircraft targets nine times this year,
but yesterday's attack was larger and more carefully orchestrated. The raids
by U.S. and British aircraft, which struck targets outside the no-fly zones
for the first time since late 1999, set off air raid sirens in Baghdad that
have been mostly quiet in recent years. "This was a very deliberate, planned
procedure," said Pentagon spokesman Adm. Craig Quigley.

In the last six months, the U.S. Air Force has scaled back the intensity of
its patrols over the two no-fly zones, trying to avoid brushes with Iraqi
forces, while waiting to see whether the new administration intended a
muscular approach toward Saddam Hussein, according to a senior Air Force
general.

The administration's decision to send an early signal to Iraq underscores in
foreign policy what Bush's initial actions on domestic policy also have
shown: that what he said during the campaign will have consequence now that
he is president.

"The strongest impression I have of Bush so far is that what he says before
the election is very relevant to what he does after," said Thomas Mann of the
Brookings Institution. "It seems to me he sent all kinds of signals during
the campaign that he considered U.S. policy toward Iraq bankrupt, that the
status quo was unacceptable and that his administration would pursue policies
to change that."

During his debate with then-Vice President Gore last October, Bush criticized
the Clinton administration for allowing the coalition assembled against Iraq
during the Persian Gulf War to deteriorate and said he wanted to persuade
voters he would do a better job. Asked directly if he believed Iraqi policy
was a failure of Clinton, Bush replied, "I do."

At least once during the campaign, Bush was forced to clarify his policy
after a comment left the impression that, as president, he would use evidence
that Saddam Hussein was trying to develop weapons of mass destruction as an
excuse to try to eliminate Hussein himself. Later he said he was speaking
only about taking out the weapons, not the Iraqi leader.

Administration officials said yesterday the airstrikes did not represent a
new policy, but the president's Thursday decision put teeth into his pledge
last month "to keep the pressure on Saddam Hussein."

While the plan for the attacks originated with officers in the U.S. Central
Command involved in patrolling the no-fly zone, their recommendation was
passed up the chain of command to the administration's top national security
officials. These figures, including Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld,
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and Rice, reviewed the recommendation
during a meeting Thursday, one of several sessions devoted to shaping a new
Iraq policy during the administration's early days.

Bush then signed off on the plan, as he was required to do because the action
was outside the no-fly zone.

The go-ahead for the attacks came while the administration is still wrestling
with how best to confront Iraq, an issue freighted with history for many of
the key players, given their connections to the first Bush administration a
decade ago.

Among some of Bush's foreign policy lieutenants there has been sentiment for
a tougher approach that goes beyond the practice of retaliating against Iraqi
forces only when they open fire on allied aircraft or aim their antiaircraft
radar at them. "This strange bombing of Saddam when he wants to be bombed
seems silly," said a Bush adviser during the campaign. The adviser, named to
a senior post since then, said: "I'd be in favor of an exponential
escalation. . .‚. I'd rather dramatically up the pain for Saddam Hussein."

While some top officials, including Vice President Cheney and Rumsfeld, have
urged a more aggressive policy built on supporting the Iraqi opposition's
campaign to overthrow Hussein, Powell has spoken mainly of strengthening the
sanctions imposed on Iraq after its 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

Another indication that the administration's Iraq policy is taking shape was
a meeting called yesterday by Edward S. Walker Jr., assistant secretary of
state for Near Eastern affairs, with Ahmed Chalabi, a leader of the
opposition Iraqi National Congress. Chalabi said he was given the green light
to proceed with the arrangements for spending more than $30 million in
American aid previously promised to the opposition, much of it for activities
inside Iraq.

State Department spokesman Philip T. Reeker said the meeting yesterday "was a
continuation of the discussions about the contribution that the INC and the
whole Iraqi opposition can make to our overall policy."

With that debate over Iraq policy still unresolved and several key
policymakers yet to assume their posts, the attack yesterday provides the
administration extra time to develop an approach, analysts said.

"This is the White House trying to send a message that the administration is
going to be tough but they're also trying to buy themselves some breathing
room," said Henri Barkey, an Iraq expert formerly of the State Department.

Staff writers Mike Allen, Steven Mufson and Thomas E. Ricks contributed to
this report.




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