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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20030319/ap_on_re_mi_ea/bush_iraq


Middle East - AP 
Wed, March 19, 2003
 
Gov't Prepares Americans for Casualties 
By RON FOURNIER, AP White House Correspondent 

WASHINGTON - War against Iraq will be as short as possible but
Americans must be prepared for loss of life, the White House warned
Wednesday as the deadline neared for Saddam Hussein to flee. 

Bush met with his war council and the White House sent Congress formal
notification of justification for war. In two separate documents, Bush
said diplomacy has failed to protect America's security, linked
Saddam's regime with the al-Qaida network and — laying out a new
rationale for war — said captured Iraqi officials could identify
terrorists living in the United States. 

"The president of the United Stats has the authority — indeed, given
the dangers involved, the duty — to use force against Iraq to protect
the security of the American people and to compel compliance with
United Nations resolutions," said a seven-page report sent to Congress
with a brief letter from Bush. 

While Bush communicated with Congress, spokesman Ari Fleischer 
delivered a grim message to the American public. 

"On the brink of war with Iraq, Americans should be prepared for what
we hope will be as precise, short a conflict as possible, but there are
many unknowns and it could be a matter of some duration," Fleischer
said. "We do not know." 

"Americans ought to be prepared for loss of life," he said. "Americans
ought to be prepared for the importance of disarming Saddam Hussein to
protect the peace." 

The White House had no public plans to mark the 8 p.m. EST Wednesday
deadline. Aides said war wouldn't automatically start the moment the
deadline expires but that Bush would rely on the advice of his military
commanders. 

Referring to Bush's demand that the Iraqi leader trade power for exile
or face a U.S.-led invasion, Fleischer said: "We have not received any
indications, unfortunately, from Saddam Hussein that he intends to
leave the country." 

"At 8 o'clock tonight the American people will know whether Saddam
Hussein has committed his final act of defiance," he added. 

In the event of war, Bush would address the nation from the Oval
Office, Fleischer said. White House speechwriters have been working on
the speech for several days, aides said. 

Bush met Wednesday morning with Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Colin Powell, National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and other members of his foreign
policy team. He also talked by telephone to Prime Minister Tony Blair,
his staunchest foreign ally. 

Later, the president met with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who
made a pitch for more money to help his city prevent a terrorist attack
and respond to any that occurs. The president warned Monday that
terrorists might retaliate for a U.S. attack on Iraq. 

Emerging from the White House, Bloomberg said the lengthy national
debate about whether to go to war is over. "The president has listened
and he has made his decision, and I know all New Yorkers are behind him
and the troops overseas," he said. "He's not going to be cowed or
dissuaded. He's going to go out there and do what we all pray is
right." 

New York and Washington were attacked by terrorists Sept. 11, 2001.
Though Iraq was not implicated, the strikes set Bush on a course to
combat terrorism across the globe — a mission that led him to the brink
of war with Saddam. 

Bush contends that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction that could get
in the hands of terrorists. 

The White House released a letter and report Bush sent Congress on
Tuesday night that, in compliance with a war resolution approved by
lawmakers last year, outlined his rationale for military conflict. 

Saying ousting Saddam would help the war on terrorism, the report
added: "United States government personnel operating in Iraq may
discover information through Iraqi government documents and interviews
with detained Iraqi officials that would identify individuals currently
in the United States and abroad who are linked to terrorist
organizations." 

The presidential letter said the Constitution gives the president
authority to "take the necessary actions against international
terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations,
organizations or persons who planned, authorized, committed or aided
the terrorist attacks that occurred on Sept. 11, 2001." 

White House spokesman Sean McCormack said the language refers to the
administration's belief that there are links between al-Qaida and Iraq,
and that Bush was not accusing Iraq of being involved in the attacks. 

Bush has said he has no proof that Iraq was linked to the 2001 strikes.


As he has nearly every day since the Sept. 11, 2001, Bush met Wednesday
with FBI director Robert Mueller and CIA director George Tenet to start
his day. He raised the nation's terrorism alert status Monday to the
second-highest level. 
_____________________
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