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Hans Blix: War Planned 'Long in Advance', Apr...
amatullah
04/21/03 at 11:07:36
Here is an important article that you may have missed about Hans Blix's
comments on the fact that the united states and Britain were not
interested in finding weapons of mass destruction but rather that the
war was planned long in advance. The article is from News24.com and has
been distributed by Truth Out. Hans Blix, a Swede and Chief UN Weapons
Inspector for Iraq is well know for his independence and for stating the
truth.
Note his comments abaout the mesage that you need to have WMD to defend yourself and to be not attacked by the Bush administration and
the USA.




              Hans Blix: War Planned 'Long in Advance'
              News24.com

              Wednesday 9 April 2003

              Madrid - The invasion of Iraq was planned a long time in
advance,
              and the United States and Britain are not primarily
concerned
              with finding any banned weapons of mass destruction, the
chief
              UN weapons inspector, Hans Blix, said in an interview on
              Wednesday.

              "There is evidence that this war was planned well in
advance.
              Sometimes this raises doubts about their attitude to the
              (weapons) inspections," Blix told Spanish daily El Pais.

              "I now believe that finding weapons of mass destruction
has been
              relegated, I would say, to fourth place, which is why the
United
              States and Britain are now waging war on Iraq.

              Today the main aim is to change the dictatorial regime of

              Saddam Hussein," he said, according to the Spanish text
of the
              interview.

              Blix said US President George W Bush had told him in
October
              2002 that he backed the UN's work to verify US and
British
              claims that Baghdad was developing biological, chemical
and
              nuclear weapons.

              Washington 'less convinced now'

              But he said he knew at the time "there were people within
the
              Bush administration who were sceptical and who were
working on
              engineering regime change". By the start of March the
hawks in
              both Washington and London were getting impatient, he
added.

              Blix said that he thought the US might initially have
believed Iraq
              possessed weapons of mass destruction - although its
              "fabrication" of evidence raised doubts about even that -
but that
              Washington was now less convinced by its own claims.

              "I think the Americans started the war thinking there
were some. I
              think they now believe less in that possibility.

              But I don't know - you ask yourself a lot of questions
when you
              see the things they did to try and demonstrate that the
Iraqis had
              nuclear weapons, like the fake contract with Niger," he
explained.

              That was a reference to US allegations - later denied -
that Iraq
              had sought to purchase uranium from the west African
state of
              Niger.

              "I'm very curious to see if they do find any (weapons),"
he said.

              Blix said the war, which on Wednesday entered its 21st
day, was
              "a very high price to pay in terms of human lives and the

              destruction of a country" when the threat of weapons
proliferation
              could have been contained by UN inspections.

              By attacking Iraq, Washington had sent the wrong message
-
              that if a country did not possess biological, chemical or
nuclear
              weapons, it risked being attacked.

              US sending out the wrong signal

              "The United States maintains that the war on Iraq is
designed to
              send a signal to other countries to keep away from
weapons of
              mass destruction.

              But people are getting a different message.

              Take the announcement North Korea has just made. It's
              tantamount to saying 'if you let in the inspectors, like
Iraq did,
              you get attacked'.

              North Korea accused the United States on Sunday of using
a UN
              Security Council discussion of its nuclear programme as a

              "prelude to war" and warned that it would fully mobilise
and
              strengthen its forces.

              &qukt;It's an important problem," Blix continued.

              "If a country perceives that its security is guaranteed,
it won't
              need to consider weapons of mass destruction. This
security
              guarantee is the first line of defence against the
proliferation of
              weapons of mass destruction."

              The 74-year-old Swede announced in March that he would
step
              down from his post when his contract runs out in June.

              Blix's reputation for independence and resisting
political pressure
              was sorely tested as the Iraq crisis unfolded and US
officials
              became exasperated with his measured reports on Iraqi
              cooperation with his inspection teams.

              (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is
              distributed without profit to those who have expressed a
prior
              interest in receiving the included information for
research and
              educational purposes.)

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