UK PM statement on Iraq - Full Text
PM statement on Iraq
Prime Minister Tony Blair has told the Commons that the new Resolution introduced by the UK, US and Spain yesterday would not be put to a vote immediately. Instead "we will delay it to give Saddam one further final chance to disarm voluntarily".
"The UN inspectors are continuing their work. They have a further report to make in March. But this time Saddam must understand. Now is the time for him to decide. Passive rather than active co-operation will not do. Co-operation on process not substance will not do."
The Prime Minister went on to say that the issue was not of time but of will:
"If Saddam is willing genuinely to co-operate then the inspectors should have up to July, and beyond July; as much time as they want. If he is not willing to co-operate then equally time will not help."
Mr Blair said that the authority of the UN was at stake:
"If the UN cannot be the way of resolving this issue, that is a dangerous moment for our world. That is why over the coming weeks we will work every last minute we can to reunite the international community and disarm Iraq through the UN."
Yesterday the UK along with the US and Spain introduced a new resolution declaring that "Iraq has failed to take the final opportunity afforded to it in Resolution 1441".
The Resolution will not be put to the vote immediately but will be delayed to give 'Saddam one further final chance to disarm voluntarily', said Mr Blair.
Read the statement in full below.
[Check against delivery]
With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a further statement on Iraq.
Let me again briefly recap the history of the
Iraqi crisis. In 1991 at the conclusion of the Gulf War, the
true extent of Saddam's WMD programme became clear. We knew
he had used these weapons against his own people, and
against a foreign country, Iran, but we had not known that
in addition to chemical weapons, he had biological weapons
which he had denied completely and was trying to construct a
nuclear weapons programme.
So on 3 April 1991, the UN
passed the first UN Resolution on Saddam and WMD, giving him
15 days to give an open account of all his weapons and
co-operate fully with the UN inspectors in destroying them.
15 days later he submitted a flawed and incomplete
declaration denying he had biological weapons and giving
little information on chemical weapons. It was only four
years later after the defection of Saddam's son-in-law to
Jordan, that the offensive biological weapons and the full
extent of the nuclear programme were discovered . In all, 17
UN Resolutions were passed. None was obeyed. At no stage did
he co-operate. At no stage did he tell the full truth.
Finally in December 1998 when he had begun to
obstruct and harass the UN inspectors, they withdrew. When
they left they said there were still large amounts of WMD
unaccounted for. Since then the international community has
relied on sanctions and the No Fly Zones policed by US and
UK pilots to contain Saddam. But the first is not proof
against Saddam's deception and the second is limited in its
impact.
In 2001 the sanctions were made more
targeted. But around $3 billion a year is illicitly taken by
Saddam, much of it for his and his family's personal use.
The intelligence is clear: he continues to believe his WMD
programme is essential both for internal repression and for
external aggression. It is essential to his regional power.
Prior to the inspectors coming back in he was engaged in a
systematic exercise in concealment of the weapons.
That is the history. Finally last November UN
Resolution 1441 declared Saddam in material breach and gave
him a "final opportunity" to comply fully immediately and
unconditionally with the UN's instruction to disarm
voluntarily. The first step was to give an open, honest
declaration of what WMD he had, where it was and how it
would be destroyed. On 8 December he submitted the
declaration denying he had any WMD, a statement not a single
member of the international community seriously believes.
There have been two UN inspectors reports. Both have
reported some co-operation on process. Both have denied
progress on substance.
So: how to proceed? There are
two paths before the UN. Yesterday the UK along with the US
and Spain introduced a new Resolution declaring that "Iraq
has failed to take the final opportunity afforded to it in
Resolution 1441".
But we will not put it to a vote
immediately. Instead we will delay it to give Saddam one
further final chance to disarm voluntarily. The UN
inspectors are continuing their work. They have a further
report to make in March. But this time Saddam must
understand. Now is the time for him to decide. Passive
rather than active co-operation will not do. Co-operation on
process not substance will not do. Refusal to declare
properly and fully what has happened to the unaccounted for
WMD will not do. Resolution 1441 called for full,
unconditional and immediate compliance. Not 10 per cent, not
20 per cent, not even 50 per cent, but 100 per cent
compliance. Anything less will not do. That is all we ask;
that what we said in Resolution 1441 we mean; and that what
it demands, Saddam does.
There is no complexity about
Resolution 1441. I ask all reasonable people to judge for
themselves:
After 12 years is it not reasonable that
the UN inspectors have unrestricted access to Iraqi
scientists - that means no tape recorders, no minders, no
intimidation, interviews outside Iraq as provided for by
Resolution 1441? So far this simply isn't
happening.
Is it not reasonable that Saddam provides
evidence of destruction of the biological and chemical
agents and weapons the UN proved he had in 1999? So far he
has provided none.
Is it not reasonable that he
provides evidence that he has destroyed 8,500 litres of
anthrax that he admitted possessing, and the 2,000 kilos of
biological growth material, enough to produce over 26,000
litres of anthrax?
Is it not reasonable that Saddam
accounts for up to 360 tonnes of bulk chemical warfare
agent, including 1½ tonnes of VX nerve agents, 3,000 tonnes
of precursor chemicals, and over 30,000 special
munitions?
To those who say we are rushing to war, I
say this. We are now 12 years after Saddam was first told by
the UN to disarm; nearly 6 months after President Bush made
his speech to the UN accepting the UN route to disarmament;
nearly 4 months on from Resolution 1441; and even now today
we are offering Saddam the prospect of voluntary disarmament
through the UN.
I detest his regime. But even now he
can save it by complying with the UN's demand. Even now, we
are prepared to go the extra step to achieve disarmament
peacefully.
I do not want war. I do not believe anyone
in this House wants war. But disarmament peacefully can only
happen with Saddam's active co-operation.
12 years of
bitter experience teaches that. And if he refuses to
co-operate - as he is refusing now and we fail to act, what
then? Saddam in charge of Iraq, his WMD intact, the will of
the international community set at nothing, the UN tricked
again, Saddam hugely strengthened and emboldened - does
anyone truly believe that will mean peace? And when we turn
to deal with other threats, where will our authority be? And
when we make a demand next time, what will our credibility
be? This is not a road to peace but folly and weakness that
will only mean the conflict when it comes is more bloody,
less certain and greater in its devastation.
Our path
laid out before the UN expresses our preference to resolve
this peacefully; but it ensures we remain firm in our
determination to resolve it.
I have read the
memorandum put forward by France, Germany and Russia in
response to our UN Resolution. It is to be welcomed at least
in these respects. It accepts that Saddam must disarm fully.
And it accepts that he is not yet co-operating fully. Indeed
not a single member of the EU who spoke at the Summit in
Brussels on 17 February disputed the fact of his
non-co-operation.
But the call is for more time, up
to the end of July at least. They say the time is necessary
"to search out" the weapons. At the core of this proposition
is the notion that the task of the inspectors is to enter
Iraq to find the weapons, to sniff them out as one member of
the European Council put it. That is emphatically not the
inspectors' job. They are not a detective agency. And even
if they were, Iraq is a country with a land mass roughly the
size of France. The idea that the inspectors could
conceivably sniff out the weapons and documentation relating
to them without the help of the Iraqi authorities is absurd.
That is why 1441 calls for Iraq's active
co-operation.
The issue is not time. It is will. If
Saddam is willing genuinely to co-operate then the
inspectors should have up to July, and beyond July; as much
time as they want. If he is not willing to co-operate then
equally time will not help. We will be just right back where
we were in the 1990s.
And, of course, Saddam will
offer concessions. This is a game with which he is immensely
familiar. As the threat level rises, so the concessions are
eked out. At present he is saying he will not destroy the
Al-Samud missiles the inspectors have found were in breach
of 1441. But he will, under pressure, claiming that this
proves his co-operation. But does anyone think that he would
be making any such concessions, that indeed the inspectors
would be within a 1,000 miles of Baghdad, were it not for
the US and UK troops massed on his doorstep? And what is his
hope? To play for time, to drag the process out until the
attention of the international community wanes, the troops
go, the way is again clear for him.
Give it more time,
some urge on us. I say we are giving it more time. But I say
this too: it takes no time at all for Saddam to co-operate.
It just takes a fundamental change of heart and mind.
Today the path to peace is clear. Saddam can
co-operate fully with the inspectors. He can voluntarily
disarm. He can even leave the country peacefully. But he
cannot avoid disarmament.
One further point. The
purpose in our acting is disarmament. But the nature of
Saddam's regime is relevant in two ways. First, WMD in the
hands of a regime of this brutality is especially dangerous
because Saddam has shown he will use them. Secondly, I know
the innocent as well as the guilty die in a war. But do not
let us forget the 4 million Iraqi exiles, the thousands of
children who die needlessly every year due to Saddam's
impoverishment of his country - a country which in 1978 was
wealthier than Portugal or Malaysia but now is in ruins, 60
per cent of its people on food aid. Let us not forget the
tens of thousands imprisoned, tortured or executed by his
barbarity every year. The innocent die every day in Iraq
victims of Saddam, and their plight too should be
heard.
And I know the vital importance in all of this
of the Middle East peace process. The European Council last
week called for the early implementation of the Roadmap.
Terror and violence must end. So must settelement activity.
We welcomed President Arafat's statement that he will
appoint a Prime Minister, an initiative flowing from last
month's London conference on Palestinian reform. I will
continue to strive in every way for an even-handed and just
approach to the Middle East peace process.
At stake in
Iraq is not just peace or war. It is the authority of the
UN. Resolution 1441 is clear. All we are asking is that it
now be upheld. If it is not, the consequences will stretch
far beyond Iraq. If the UN cannot be the way of resolving
this issue, that is a dangerous moment for our world. That
is why over the coming weeks we will work every last minute
we can to reunite the international community and disarm
Iraq through the UN. It is our desire and it is still our
hope that this can be done.
ENDS
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