U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #16, 00-02-29
From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>
1181
U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing
I N D E X
Tuesday, February 29, 2000
Briefer: James P. Rubin
IRAQ
1-13 Report on Palace Building and Oil Smuggling / Construction of
Pipeline / Illegal Export of Gas Oil / Oil for Food Program /
Importation of Luxury Goods (alcohol and cigarettes) /
Noncompliance of UNSC Resolutions / No-Fly Zones / Lifting of
Sanctions / Post-Sanctioned World
STATEMENT
14 Yugoslav Army Checkpoint Near Montenegro-Albania Border
RUSSIA (CHECHNYA)
14-15 Killing of Journalist / Freedom of the Press / Release of Andrei
Babitskiy
NORTH KOREA
15 US / North Korea Talks
SYRIA/ISRAEL
15-16 Resumption of Israel / Syria Talks
AUSTRIA
16-17 Freedom Party Entry into Austrian Government / Haider Resignation /
Readout of Ambassador Hall's Meeting with Secretary Albright
INDIA
16-17 Increase of Military Expenditures
SUDAN
18 Visit of Special Envoy Harry Johnston Visit to Khartoum
ARMS CONTROL
18 U/S Holum's Meeting on Arms Control in Geneva / Start III Agreement
/ ABM Treaty Modifications
TURKEY
18 Release of Kurdish Mayors from Jail
MOZAMBIQUE
18-19 US Assistance with Flood Relief Efforts
NIGERIA
19 Communal Violence
GERMANY
19-20 Arrest of American Citizen Teenagers
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #16
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 2000, 12:40 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. RUBIN: Greetings. Welcome to the State Department briefing on this
here Tuesday. Before I left, I wanted to make sure I got to do one more of
these presentations. So we do have a presentation today on Iraq, and the
purpose of this briefing is to present newly declassified satellite imagery
which once again documents the perfidy of the regime of Saddam Hussein and
the importance of international efforts to prevent such violations and to
help the Iraqi people.
The imagery that I will show you today proves two things. First, since the
Gulf War and until now, Saddam Hussein has been building enormous palaces
and VIP residences for himself and his regime. These palaces cost billions
of dollars, money which the government of Iraq could and should be spending
on the needs of the Iraqi people.
To pay for these palaces and these luxury goods for Saddam Hussein's family,
Saddam Hussein himself and his supporters, the regime is selling oil
outside of the Oil-for-Food Program and in violation of UN sanctions. The
people of Iraq would be a lot better off if he would simply cooperate with
the UN, sell Iraq's oil under the Oil-for-Food Program and use the money to
buy what the Iraqi people need.
We're releasing this information now because Baghdad is again pushing the
canard that sanctions rather than the misrule and the cynical manipulation
of his own people that Saddam Hussein propagates are responsible for the
suffering of Iraqis. These photos tell a very different story. They
document the real reason that Iraqi people don't have what they need,
because Saddam Hussein refuses to use oil revenues to order goods for his
people or to cooperate with the relief agencies providing them. Instead,
he is building palaces, smuggling oil in order to buy the loyalty
of his small coterie of guards and his small and significant security
apparatus so that he can prevent them from putting a bullet in his
head.
These photos and accompanying text are available in English and Arabic on
the Web at usia.gov, and if you click on Near East, the photos and a new
report on this subject will be available. We are also providing these
photos on beta videotape. So let's go to the palace construction map.
What you see here is that there are nine palaces. Okay, let's move it over
there.
There are nine palaces listed by their names, five of whom are centered
around Baghdad. That's a blow-up of those five palaces and their location.
You'll notice that they're concentrated around Baghdad and in the center of
the country where Saddam is in greater control. There is only one palace in
the north -- over there -- and none in the south because these are both
areas where popular resistance to Saddam Hussein is strong and his security
cannot be assured.
Let's go to the Tikrit residential site, the largest and most elaborate of
Saddam's presidential sites. Construction has been ongoing since 1991. The
site itself covers four square miles. This whole area right there is four
square miles. And then what you'll see is that there are numerous palaces -
this is a palace, this here is a palace, and these are the VIP residences
for his supporters.
There are also to the west of this site where you can't see, there are
rural and extensive farm retreats also for use by regime favorites.
Now let's turn to the Al Salam Palace in Baghdad, the interior palace
photo.
This is located on the site of the former Republican Guard's headquarters
in Baghdad which was destroyed during Operation Desert Storm. Since then,
Saddam has been rebuilding the palace,and it was completed in early 1999.
What you'll see here are - this is the main palace here, this is a large
conference center, these are special waterways that have been created, and
this is the whole palace grounds there in the red and white.
What we know about the interior of these palaces from firsthand reports,
these particular palaces, who have traveled to Iraq and visited the palaces,
that in these type of palaces they feature marble floors, crystal
chandeliers and, according to eyewitnesses, gold-plated faucets and other
excesses.
Now let's go to the Abu Ghurayb Palace. Construction at the Abu Ghurayb
Palace is ongoing. As these photos show - this is before it was completed -
you'll see all these areas weren't filled in with water. These are the
after sites. So all of this area and down here was not filled in with water
as they were constructed. There are elaborate fountains, waterfalls. We
find the scale of this one particularly excessive.
The point here is that Iraq is suffering from a drought that the government
claims has caused widespread crop damage. Think about this. They complain
about a drought, and yet Saddam doesn't hesitate to use scarce water
resources to ensure that the lakes of his palaces are filled and his
grounds are well cared for.
Now let's go to the oil question starting with the Basrah refinery. The
question always arises where does money come from to provide for these
palaces and to provide for other efforts to build their efforts to
circumvent the sanctions. What you see here is this particular refinery was
destroyed in Operation Desert Fox, and what these squares show you in the
little stacks are not inflamed, meaning they're not operational after
Desert Fox. So these were destroyed during Desert Fox. And you can see from
where these little arrows are that they are not operating refineries.
Now if you look at them, you can see the flares in January 2000 to show
that these are operating. The point here is that these are refineries. Iraq
is not allowed to sell refined oil products pursuant to the sanctions; they
are only allowed to sell oil. And what you discover is by rebuilding this
site is the beginning of the pipeline -- pipeline metaphorically -- for the
illegal gas oil sales that I will show you in the subsequent slides.
What they have now been able to do at Basrah is produce some 140,000
barrels per day; that is, illegal refined products for sale abroad. Oil
exports are only authorized through the ports at Mina al Baqr; that is, the
Oil-for-Food Program in the Persian Gulf and via the oil pipeline through
Turkey. The oil smuggled at the Basrah refinery is illegally sold and
smuggled out of Iraq through a loading facility called Abu Flus.
So what you see here is that this is the Basrah refinery. The ships are
loaded and they are loaded at the Abu Flus loading facility, which is down
here, and then they proceed down in the - I'm sorry, I should be over there
- down this waterway out into the Persian Gulf. This is an example of the
ships that pick up the illegal gas oil. These are - each of these are
different ships that pick up the illegal gas oil in that waterway.
What then happens is that these ships then hug the coastline and come out
here and hug the coastline along the Iranian border until they reach
international waters here, which is the point at which the Multinational
Interdiction Force can then intercept them. That is how we intercept ships,
and I think we have intercepted a huge number of vessels over the years.
Since 1990, the Multinational Interception Force has queried more than 28,
000 vessels, boarded more than 12,000 and diverted 700 for violation of
sanctions.
So the point of this presentation is to show you the extensive effort
Saddam Hussein is making to illegally export gas oil outside the UN Oil-for-
Food Program; take that money, meanwhile crying poverty and blaming the
rest of the world for the effect of sanctions on its citizens; and building
these elaborate palaces that I've just shown you.
So we think this is conclusive proof that, to the extent there are problems
in Iraq on the question of food and medicine and concern about the people
of Iraq, those problems are the fault of Saddam Hussein. In general terms,
the level of smuggling has grown in recent months. It's reached the
unprecedented level of 100,000 barrels per day, which puts more than $25
million into the hands of Saddam's regime so then he can spend the money
on these palaces. Overall, we estimate since these palace constructions
began, that over $2 billion of scarce resources has been diverted to the
purpose of building these palaces.
I'd like to make one final point before taking any of your questions. We've
heard a lot in recent days about the regime complaining about the effect of
sanctions. In addition to using the illegal export of oil to provide funds
for building things like these palaces, they also import a number of luxury
goods, and we find it particularly ironic that while he is not spending the
money that the Oil-for-Food Program permits him to spend for food
and medicine, the regime led by Saddam Hussein spends money the regime
controls on alcohol and cigarettes.
In the past ten weeks, ten 20-foot containers of whiskey have arrived in
the Port of Aqabah bound for Iraq. This is, according to experts, below
average for the period. Each 20-foot container contains an average of 900
cases of whiskey, or a total of 10,800 bottles of whiskey. In addition, a
further 20-foot container of wine and beer went to Baghdad during the same
period. That's 350,000 cans of beer and 7,200 bottles of wine. The regime
in Baghdad is consuming more than 10,000 bottles of whiskey, 350,000
cans of beer and 700 bottles of wine per week - and alcohol is illegal
in Iraq. Food is exempt from sanctions, and these goods are classified as
foods, so Baghdad is importing all of this legally.
The important point here is that the regime is getting drunk while it
claims that its people don't have enough to eat. So we are a little tired
of hearing that sanctions are responsible for the problems of the people of
Iraq. It's the government of Iraq that spends its scarce resources on these
palaces, on items like beer and wine and liquor that's illegal in Iraq, and
then complains about the rest of the world causing problems for the people
of Iraq.
The last point, and I'll turn to your question. You know, we're often asked
whether the sanctions regime is weakening, that people are losing their
support for it. I would advise you all to take a look at the communique
issued by the Saudi and Syrian Governments last week which squarely places
the blame for the suffering of the people of Iraq on Saddam Hussein's
refusal to comply with UN resolutions. That's the Syria and Saudi
Arabian Governments communique as a result of their high-level
meetings last week. I can get you a copy of the public version of that at
the end of the briefing.
With that opening comment, let me turn to any of your questions.
QUESTION: Apparently, a lot of these ships are making it past the
monitors. How come it can't be more efficient than it is?
MR. RUBIN: Well, on the monitoring, obviously it is a difficult process.
As I said, we've intercepted or diverted 700 vessels and boarded more than
12,000 and queried more than 28,000. With this increased level of smuggling
that we're seeing, we're looking at ways to beef up the assets for the
Multinational Interdiction Force in the region. The government of the
United Arab Emirates is working closely with the UN and the Multinational
Interception Force to crack down on this smuggling activity. The UAE has
accepted far more vessels diverted by the MIF than any other country
in the region.
Obviously, Iran plays an important role in the smuggling of Iraqi oil by
allowing the smugglers to avoid the MIF by transiting through its
territorial waters, as I showed you earlier. We have raised this issue in
the Security Council Sanctions Committee and we plan to do so again. The
government of Iran has tended to respond positively when this issue has
been raised, and we do expect the government of Iran to uphold its
obligations as a UN member state and to crack down on this illegal
activity.
QUESTION: I thought the refining capacity was 140,000 barrels a day and
the illegal export was about 100,00 barrels a day. Does that mean that the
other 40,000 is for home consumption?
MR. RUBIN: Well, there may be - that is what - those are the numbers that
I have. I will try to, after the briefing, get you an explanation for
whether that 40,000 stays inside Iraq for domestic purposes.
QUESTION: Jamie, it's not just Iraq that's complaining about the effect
of the sanctions. A significant number of members of the US Congress have
complained also about the effect of the sanctions. What will you tell those
in Congress who are sending you letters and urging you to move to ease the
sanctions after nine years?
MR. RUBIN: Well, what we would tell them is that the sanctions are there
for a very real purpose: to deny Saddam Hussein access to the funds he
needs to build up his military machine; and that this is a repeat offender
who started a war with Iran for eight years, who started the war with
Kuwait that led to this situation; and that we're prepared to err on the
side of caution when it comes to ensuring that Saddam Hussein can never
again get the capability to threaten his neighbors and the world.
When it comes to the suffering of the Iraqi people, we would tell these
members of Congress and whoever made this point that they are misinformed.
It is the United States and Argentina and the United Kingdom that created
the Oil-for-Food Program that forced Saddam Hussein to spend over $10
billion on food and medicine that have now been approved for the export to
Iraq.
And we would further add to those members of Congress that even if
sanctions were lifted, only wishful thinking could make someone think that
Saddam Hussein would spend more of his money on food and medicine for his
lower classes when that is only being done because we force him to. Instead,
if he has his way, he would be using the money to spend on the kind of
palaces and luxury living that I've been describing.
QUESTION: First of all, I was wondering why you didn't condemn or in some
way repudiate Iran for its - what you called an important role in the
smuggling of oil. You only said that Iran should live up to the UN
regulations, but you didn't have any sort of negative language about them.
That's my first question.
My second question is the US has used deadly force in its enforcement of
the no-fly zones, and I wonder why - if this is a problem why you're not
doing what you've done before which is to bomb, for example, the Basrah
refinery.
MR. RUBIN: Well, you shouldn't confuse, on the second point, apples and
oranges. With deadly force on the no-fly zone, we're talking about a
situation where Iraq is threatening our pilots, and we believe that the use
of force is necessary to deter and to eliminate those threats.
Secondly, the purpose of the no-fly zone is to prevent Iraq from using its
air space to kill and maim its own citizens in the north and the south, as
it has done in the past. That is a different - both of those issues are
different than illegal oil smuggling.
With respect to your first question, we do expect Iran to live up to its
obligations as a member state. We have had some success in bringing to the
attention of the Iranians through the Sanctions Committee this activity,
and they have responded, and that is the accurate statement of the
facts.
QUESTION: To follow up on the question of force or not and why it's
apples and oranges, why not use something less than deadly force and
blockade the Shatt Al Arab?
MR. RUBIN: Well, we have made the decision to intercept ships and deter
additional smuggling through this interception of ships. We're looking at
providing additional assets. I'm not going to get into a tactical
discussion with you about what our other options are.
QUESTION: Jamie, a couple of things. There seems to be something - one
thing missing. What's the destination of all this illegal oil? Who's buying
this stuff?
MR. RUBIN: What happens is it gets on the oil market, and then it gets
mixed in with oil products that go anywhere.
QUESTION: Well, it's got to go somewhere first where someone knows that
it's illegal.
MR. RUBIN: Well, absolutely. What we try to do - well, if we knew every
place that it was, we would certainly try to take action. It's not always
possible once a ship leaves this area where you know it's an illegal export
to track it so thoroughly that you can be sure that you know once it's
mixed in with other products. So we've tried to deal with it at the source
through this Multinational Interdiction Force, and obviously when we
have evidence of where the illegal oil ends up, we act on that as
well.
QUESTION: Where has it ended up in the past?
MR. RUBIN: I'll try to get you additional information after the briefing
as to some of the locations.
QUESTION: And the other thing is that there is a lot of smuggling of
alcohol in other places --into a lot of countries where it's illegal, and
I'm just wondering why -- you know the destination of these thousands of
cases of whiskey is Saddam and his --
MR. RUBIN: That's the information I've been provided, yes.
QUESTION: We don't have any - I mean, you don't have any photos of
impounding Chivas here. How do we know --
MR. RUBIN: Well, if I get one of those, I'll be sure to provide that to
you directly.
QUESTION: Jamie, the bottom line in your message is that the sanctions is
not responsible for the suffering of the people of Iraq; the government is.
However, the people in the area, fair-minded people, are wondering why
official after official of the United Nations are disagreeing with you. The
head of the - Hans Von Sponeck, Denis Halliday before him, the head of
World Food Program, they all disagree with your assumption.
MR. RUBIN: Well, as I indicated, the Saudi Government and the Syrian
Government last week put out a very clear statement placing the blame
squarely on Saddam Hussein's shoulders for the harm done to his citizens.
So it's not just our view; it's the view of the Syrian and Saudi Governments
in that statement. I'd be happy to provide you a copy of that.
With respect to well-intentioned but misguided individuals like Mr. Von
Sponeck, I've heard his account of these events. And he seems to think - in
what I consider and what this administration considers a matter of wishful
thinking - that if sanctions weren't on Iraq, somehow the people of Iraq
would be getting the benefits of sanctions relief when all the indicators
are the opposite.
Let me give you a very clear example. In northern Iraq, the UNICEF did a
study and they looked at infant mortality in northern Iraq during the
period of the Oil-for-Food Program where Saddam Hussein has no control over
the distribution of food and medicine. And what they discovered is the
infant mortality rate is lower in northern Iraq during the sanctions under
the Oil-for-Food Program than it was prior to sanctions.
Think about that. That means that before sanctions were imposed, there were
more people dying in northern Iraq, infants, than there are now under the
Oil-for-Food Program. That's an indicator of what a post-sanctions world
might be like under Saddam Hussein where no effort is made to provide food,
medicine and necessary supplies to prevent problems like infant mortality.
So as well-intentioned as Mr. Von Sponeck is, we have consciences too. He's
not the only one with a conscience. That's why we created the Oil-for-Food
Program. That's why we've allowed $10 billion worth of food and medicine to
go to the people of Iraq. And if we hadn't done so, it never would have
gotten there. So we find it unjustified for people like Mr. Von Sponeck to
point the finger at us rather than pointing the finger at Saddam Hussein's
regime which hasn't implemented the Oil-for-Food Program.
The problems Mr. Von Sponeck identifies in central and southern Iraq, many
of them could be resolved if Saddam Hussein's regime would take the
medicine and food and other supplies out of the pipeline - out of the
warehouses and distribute them, if he would spend the money that he's
allowed to spend on food and medicine.
The UN has to force him to buy food and medicine for his people because he
doesn't care about them. That should give you an indicator of what the
world would look like if sanctions were lifted. So we think he's well-
intentioned, he has a conscience. So do we. We have a different judgment as
to what would happen in a post-sanctions world.
QUESTION: Jamie, some of those on Capitol Hill are urging the administration
to delink sanctions and basically get rid of the economic sanctions and
keep military sanctions in place. Is that something that seems reasonable?
MR. RUBIN: No. We think that would be ill-advised in the extreme. The
problem here is making sure that Saddam Hussein's access to hard currency
is as limited as possible. We have denied him something like $100 billion
in hard currency. That has prevented him over the period of sanctions from
spending that hard currency on weaponry, on illegal goods that he could try
to buy even if there were sanctions around. Hard currency to Saddam is a
prescription for disaster, so we try to limit the amount of hard currency
through the oil embargo and through other steps and try to keep it
down to these small amounts of money that we track as best as we can.
And so we think it would be ill-advised in the extreme to allow a dictator
like him to get access to billions of dollars of hard currency through some
suspension of the economic embargo unless and until he has shown a
willingness to comply with UN Security Council resolutions.
QUESTION: What makes you think he isn't using some of that money that he
gets from selling oil illegally to buy the very things that you're --
MR. RUBIN: We have no doubt that he's trying to do that. What we're
trying to do through sanctions is limit the amount of money he could use,
because the more you have the more you're able to bribe people, do things
illegally, get dual use equipment. So what the sanctions - the primary tool
they serve is to limit his access to hard currency so we limit his access
to military hardware and military goods so that he can never again be
the threat that he was to the rest of the world.
QUESTION: First of all, is all of the money being spent?
MR. RUBIN: No. We think that there are significant gaps in what he is
prepared to order, and I can go through a little bit with you after the
briefing. But certainly we believe that UN reporting has shown that he is
under-utilizing the funds. They've under-funded the food sector by more
than $200 million. It is allocated to the health sector, two-thirds less
than what the Secretary General said was minimally acceptable. And it
continues to ignore calls - that's the regime - by the UN to order
critical medicines to treat child leukemia.
So those are some of the examples of ways in which he has not ordered what
he could using the funds available. We're talking about a lot of money
here. Over the coming year, there may be as much as $20 billion in oil
revenue that could then be used for significant portions for food and
medicine, but if he doesn't use it and he won't spend it, that's where Mr.
Von Sponeck should have focused his energy on the regime. Why isn't it
using these enormous amounts of money to ease the concerns that he
has?
QUESTION: Von Sponeck and others have said that the requisition and the
licensing procedure is unnecessarily restrictive and cumbersome. Have you
thought about improving that system?
MR. RUBIN: Well, we do not believe contract holds are the problem. In
December 1999, the UN's Office of the Iraq Program issued a report on the
impact of holds on the program. The report concludes that contract holds
have had a minimal impact. This is the UN's own report. Mr. Von Sponeck's
own organization has said that holds have had a minimal impact on most
sectors. It also says that poor ordering by Iraq and Iraqi delays in
distribution are hampering the program's effectiveness.
About 90 percent of the contracts submitted to the UN are approved. There
are no contract holds on food. With minor exceptions, there are no contract
holds on medicines. The most frequent reason for contract holds is the
quality of information that accompanies the contract. We currently have 300
contracts on hold because the technical information or the end use
information in the contract was insufficient to make a judgment.
We want to be cautious. We do not want to let dual use equipment sneak
through this process. Let me give you an example. Pesticides. Pesticides
can be used for legitimate purposes and illegitimate purposes. And unless
we know the information and understand who the end user is and whether the
supplier is someone who has violated sanctions in the past, we want to be
careful. But none of that interferes with the bulk of the job of the Oil-
for-Food Program, and Saddam Hussein's refusal to order supplies, food and
medicine, far exceeds the very limited effect of these holds.
They constantly want to blame the holds, and we are troubled when people
fall into the trap of accepting that as the reason when the reality is
these tens of billions of dollars that are available they don't want to
spend on food and medicine, and they have to be forced to. So our concern
is that we will obviously look to ensure that the contract review process
is speeded up, that there are pre-approved goods that don't require
committee approval pursuant to the Resolution 1284.
But if you look at the facts, a really good, hard look at the numbers, the
delays in distribution, regularly we have situations where there is huge
amounts of food and medicine sitting in warehouses that they don't want to
distribute. And they only distribute them when we make so much noise
publicly that people running the program, like Mr. Von Sponeck, finally
feel compelled to approach the Iraqi Government and ask them what happened
to the food and medicine that's in this warehouse. And then suddenly,
magically, there is an effort to distribute it.
So the concern on holds is greatly exaggerated. It's a very small
percentage that are put on hold, but we obviously want to improve the
process.
QUESTION: On the pesticides, the illegitimate use would be possibly
chemical weapons?
MR. RUBIN: Correct, yes.
QUESTION: Do you think the diesel fuel trade with Turkey also contributes
to Saddam's wealth and this decadence?
MR. RUBIN: The Turkish Government estimates that Turkey has suffered
losses of tens of billions of dollars as a result of enforcing Iraqi
sanctions. Because of these losses, Turkey asked the Sanctions Committee in
1996 to legalize its diesel and gas oil trade with Iraq. The action was
deferred on this request.
We have raised this issue with Turkey and are working to find a way to
strengthen sanctions enforcement without causing further hardship on
southeastern Turkey. But we certainly believe that Turkey, like all
countries, should understand that these sanctions are important to the
security of the world because they deny hard currency to the regime so that
it can never again pose the same threat as it has to its neighbors.
QUESTION: Jamie, to go back to the question of the imports, Mr. Eckhart,
Kofi Annan's spokesman himself, said after he resigned - Mr. Von Sponeck
resigned -- that Mr. Annan shared the views of Mr. Von Sponeck on how to
improve the regime in terms of getting (inaudible) with Iraqis. Are you
saying that he's just being diplomatic? Is he --
MR. RUBIN: Well, you know, if you look carefully - and I'll be happy to
get you the material, it's quite voluminous - there are many reports by the
UN. Most of the figures that I'm giving you about the ways in which Saddam
Hussein has refused to sell - buy the food that he's able to buy, to
distribute the food that he has purchased or to buy the medicine or
distribute the medicine that he's allowed to do, most of this data
comes from the UN. And there are many reports the UN has put out that
include the demonstration that the bulk of the problem is their refusal to
order - distribute pursuant to the UN's recommendation we agree with.
When it comes to the contract holds, I'm - we're being quite candid, we
tend to err on the side of caution when it's a dual-use issue, and we do
that for very good reasons. And what I'm suggesting is that the UN itself
acknowledges that that's a very, very tiny percentage and bears almost no
effect on the problem. Minimal is the word they themselves have used.
QUESTION: Well, Jamie, getting back to the smuggling coming through
Aqabah you cited cases of alcohol which is illegal in Iraq. Why is that
allowed to be trans-shipped from Aqabah out through --
MR. RUBIN: Well, it's under the food and --
QUESTION: Well, it's under food, but you apparently know what's in it.
And it would seem to me --
MR. RUBIN: They're classified as foods, these goods. I'm just pointing
out the hypocrisy of the regime, that they spend their money on things like
whiskey and then come to people like Mr. Von Sponeck and others and they
try to make the case that they don't have the money to feed their
people.
QUESTION: Just about the palaces that you showed before, you showed a
before and after. What were the time periods --
MR. RUBIN: There were some dates on those, and we'll be able to give you
that. They're along the top.
QUESTION: And you also mentioned that you all estimate about $2 billion --
MR. RUBIN: Over $2 billion.
QUESTION: Over $2 billion was diverted for the purpose of building those
palaces.
MR. RUBIN: Yes.
QUESTION: Again, what --
MR. RUBIN: That's an estimate.
QUESTION: But over what period of time?
MR. RUBIN: Say over the last decade roughly, okay?
QUESTION: Children in Iraq are suffering from diseases because of
impurity of water, and Iraq has claimed they need chlorine to purify the
water which is dual function - one of their dual - how do you deal with
issues like pesticides which they need to grow their food and their plants,
chlorine to purify the water? How do you deal with such issues?
MR. RUBIN: Well, obviously, there are complexities, but what we deal with
them in -- is because, based on caring about what happens to the Iraqi
people, unlike the regime, which I think we've demonstrated conclusively
doesn't care and uses these arguments to try to divert attention from what
their real intent is. There are very technical issues. I can try after the
briefing to get you some information about various contracts and what the
concerns were. But by and large, once the legitimacy of the product
is certified and once the legitimacy of the end user is certified,
we allow these things to go through. We're just not going to do it willy
nilly. And Iraq tends to use any contract hold as an attempt to divert all
of your all's attention from the fact that their not spending the money
that is in the program.
QUESTION: Nobody will argue about the focus of the system, and you
describe those who believe lifting the sanction may end the suffering of
the people, and you describe them as wishful thinking.
MR. RUBIN: Right.
QUESTION: Do you still believe that sanctions or lifting the sanctions or
staying with the sanctions may put an end to the system or to the regime,
or this too is wishful thinking?
MR. RUBIN: No, that's not what we say sanctions are for. The sanctions
are for containment. We believe that to protect the security of the region
where he has gone to war against Iran, gone to war against Kuwait,
threatened the whole Gulf with war and devastation and destruction - and
those of you who remember the Gulf War know the threat that he poses where
he's used weapons of mass destruction against his own people - those are
the dangers. We are containing that danger through sanctions by denying
him the hard currency to rebuild the military machine that poses those
dangers.
In the meanwhile, we are supporting a number of opposition groups who
understand that the only long-term solution to the danger of Saddam
Hussein's regime to the region and to the world is to have that regime
changed. But the sanctions we've never said are going to change the regime.
We think they contain the danger he poses to the extent they put pressure
on him and cause other Iraqis to understand the value of another way of
running their country. Fine. But the purpose of them is to contain the
danger posed by hard currency reserves.
QUESTION: Jamie, besides buying whiskey and building palaces, do you all
have any idea where this money is going?
MR. RUBIN: Well, that's obviously two important outputs. There are other
outputs. We certainly think they tried to rebuild their hardware,
cannibalized their system, used some of their hard currency to try to
improve their military machine. They've been testing and seeking to deploy
very short-range missiles that are permitted below, I think, 150 kilometers.
That cost a lot of money.
So they're spending their money on the things that have nothing to do with
the concerns about water and water purification and infant mortality. They
are focusing their money on missiles, palaces and other outputs.
QUESTION: You mentioned nine palaces.
MR. RUBIN: Yes.
QUESTION: Are these new palaces, or is that the sum total since he
started his palace construction program?
MR. RUBIN: I think there are others. It depends on where - these are the
large style. There are smaller ones, and I can get you some numbers of -
there's dozens of others that are in the small palace category. These are
in the large palace category that are particularly egregious examples of
excess and waste.
QUESTION: So you don't dispute the statistics that say that people,
particularly children, are suffering from malnutrition and dying in Iraq?
You just dispute who's to blame for it?
MR. RUBIN: I think what I indicated from the UNICEF report is that we do
care about the children of Iraq, that's why we created the Oil-for-Food
Program, as a result of which the children in northern Iraq, where the UN
runs the program and Iraq doesn't, have a lower infant mortality rate than
the children in that part of the region did before the Gulf War when there
were no sanctions.
Is there suffering in Iraq? Of course there's suffering in Iraq. Mostly the
suffering is a result of the fact that this mad dictator has launched his
country into 10 years of war against Iran and 10 years of war against the
rest of the world. After 20 years, it's not a surprise that their economy
is in shambles. What we're saying is that we care about it and we're trying
to do something about it, and that people should not be misled from the
propaganda that comes from Baghdad.
QUESTION: On Chechnya, Mr. Rubin --
MR. RUBIN: Are we done with Iraq? Iraq, yes.
QUESTION: After all these violations and these numbers, do you have any
new - do you think you are going to revise or review?
MR. RUBIN: Sorry?
QUESTION: After all these violations by the system - Iraqi system -- and
complaints all over the world, I mean are you inclined, are you thinking
about revising or reviewing sanction policy?
MR. RUBIN: No. On the contrary --
QUESTION: No modification or --
MR. RUBIN: No, no. We were going to implement Resolution 1284 in the way
that I suggested in trying to make sure that certain products are notified
and approved in advance, that the control hold process is limited. That's
not changing the sanctions policy. The sanctions are those measures that
deny hard currency to the regime and prevent the import of weapons of mass
destruction, military hardware and other consumer goods that could be
used for that purpose. There is no consideration whatsoever being
given to that, headlines in major newspapers notwithstanding.
QUESTION: How long is the United States going to wait?
MR. RUBIN: Well, we are not in the waiting business; we are in the
protecting business. We are protecting our national interests by containing
the danger he poses. And so long as there is a danger from Iraq to our
national interests, we're going to continue to act to defend those
interests.
Are we done? Good. Before we move to your question, I have one statement to
read on Yugoslavia. The United States is concerned by the Yugoslav army
setting up a checkpoint last weekend and again today near the border
crossing on Montenegro's border with Albania. We are watching this
situation closely and remain in close contact with the Montenegrin
authorities.
The governments of Montenegro and Albania opened on February 24th the
Bozaj/Hani i Hotit border crossing which had been closed since 1997 in
order to foster economic development and promote stability in the region.
We welcome efforts by both governments to build confidence and cooperation
in a region that has been crippled by mistrust and confrontation for much
of the last decade.
We commend the Montenegrin officials for their show of restraint and their
efforts to prevent this situation from escalating, and we call on Belgrade
to dismantle the Yugoslav army checkpoint and to join the Montenegrin and
Albanian governments in efforts to build peace and prosperity in southeast
Europe.
Finally, we call on Serbia and Montenegro to renew efforts to resolve
peacefully their disagreements about respect for the Republic of Montenegro's
rights under the federal constitution.
QUESTION: On that same area there, do you have anything on this UN
official being shot on the Serb-Kosovo border this morning?
MR. RUBIN: I do not have that. I will check for you.
QUESTION: Do you have any announcement to make --
MR. RUBIN: No, we don't. When I do I will, but I don't.
QUESTION: On Chechnya, Russian foreign correspondent Vladimir Yatsina was
killed several days ago by Chechen rebels. He was kidnapped, tortured, and
then he was killed. There is a lot of talking about freedom of press in
Russia, mistreatment with Russian journalists, not only for Russian -
mistreatment with journalists, in particular with Mr. Babitskiy, and
brutality of Russian forces also.
How would you characterize this situation in this case? My understanding is
there was not any condemnation, any reaction on this murder.
MR. RUBIN: We're not aware - we're aware of reports. We have no
confirmation of this information. We're looking for that. If it proved to
be true, we'd obviously deplore that in the strongest possible terms.
In regard to your question, let me say that we were very pleased to learn
that Radio Liberty journalist Andrei Babitskiy was released from detention
today in Moscow. We were extremely troubled by the circumstances by which a
journalist would be traded as a hostage like a criminal in that circumstance,
and that was a rather chilling demonstration of one of the problems in that
coverage of that war.
We understand Mr. Babitskiy has agreed to remain in Moscow while an
investigation is completed into charges that he was carrying falsified
documents. We continue to urge the government of Russia to conduct a full
investigation as well into the alleged exchange of a civilian journalist to
Chechen separatists for Russian soldiers held prisoner. We support freedom
of the press in Russia for all journalists, and urge the government of
Russia to ensure that journalists are able to do their work without
unnecessary constraints.
If indeed Chechen rebels were responsible for murdering a journalist, that
would be profoundly troubling indeed. We're checking into reports that
we've heard to that effect.
QUESTION: You are aware but you have no confirmation on this?
MR. RUBIN: We don't have confirmation of the event, no.
QUESTION: Have you taken up with the Russian officials all these
conflicting and sometimes confusing stories that they kept putting onto you
and others?
MR. RUBIN: We believe there should - as I said, yes, we have raised this
with them at many, many, many occasions. What we're urging the Russians to
do, as I said, is to conduct a full investigation into the exchange of Mr.
Babitskiy and what happened and what didn't happen so that we can get to
the bottom of that.
QUESTION: Could you give us the latest about US-North Korea talks? You
said yesterday that the announcement would be made very shortly. How
shortly is shortly?
MR. RUBIN: Well, I said that before I left this job I was hoping to
define shortly for you. Obviously, shortly does not always mean within 24
hours.
QUESTION: Or within 10 minutes since the question was first asked.
QUESTION: I would have been very angry if you had answered his first.
QUESTION: Can you go to the Middle East for a second?
MR. RUBIN: Sure.
QUESTION: There's a whole new spate of reports about Syria-Israeli talks
being resumed in March and also that the ILMG that you guys and the French
have managed to get a meeting of this together. Any --
MR. RUBIN: Yes. On the Lebanon question, the co-chairmen have been in
Syria, are going to Lebanon and then will be in Israel in capitals meeting
to see that when a meeting of the ILMG is held that it can be as effective
and successful as possible. So the co-chairmen have been in these capitals
starting in Syria, then Lebanon, then Israel on Sunday, I believe, at which
time we hope to be in a better position to have such a meeting. Their
job is to work in capitals pending such a meeting happening. I'm not aware
of any imminent announcement of a meeting.
On the first question, I see these reports from time to time, and I think
I'm as well briefed as one can be on the Israel-Syria track. Let me say to
you there is no truth to these rumors, reports, suggestions that there is
an imminent announcement of a breakthrough on the Syria track. I wish that
were true. It's not true. What is true is that we are working with the
Syrians and the Israelis on a number of levels to try to make that possible,
but there is no imminent announcement that I'm aware of.
I think that hit both your questions hopefully out of the park.
QUESTION: And the Palestinian track?
MR. RUBIN: Well, Ambassador Ross has just returned today. He'll be
briefing Secretary Albright, and maybe after that we'll have more to
say.
QUESTION: Can I switch the subject again? On Austria, has there been a
review on the diplomatic steps that the US has taken in the wake of Mr.
Haider's announcement to step down as leader of the Freedom Party?
MR. RUBIN: If Mr. Haider's resignation leaves the Freedom Party better
able to work with Chancellor Schuessel in meeting the standards the
Austrian Government set for itself in the preamble to the coalition
agreement, we will see this as a positive step. We remain deeply concerned
about the Freedom Party's entry into the Austrian Government and have told
the Chancellor that we will hold the new government to the spirit and
letter of the preamble which both parties signed and which commits them to
democracy, pluralism and tolerance. We are following the actions of the
new government very closely, and we will react swiftly and firmly
to any statements or actions suggesting sympathy with Nazi-era policies or
that express racism, xenophobia or anti-Semitism.
The long and the short of it is we continue to monitor this. He's still a
member of the party. The Freedom Party is still part of the coalition.
We're going to continue to do what we have been doing which is to be
pleased with the preamble of the coalition agreement but to be monitoring
to ensure that that preamble is indeed the guiding force for the government.
QUESTION: The Indian Government announced --
MR. RUBIN: On this, yes?
QUESTION: I just want to know if you have a readout of Ambassador Hall's
meeting with the Secretary yesterday and what the Ambassador thinks.
Without mentioning Haider at all, just what she thinks of what's going
on.
MR. RUBIN: Well, there was a number of meetings with Secretary Albright
and other administration officials. Ambassador Hall is going to return to
Washington in a few weeks for further consultations. We have limited our
contacts with the new government, and we're constantly reviewing the
appropriate measures. We want to see how the new government performs before
considering other actions.
With respect to her views, I think I've reflected the US views on this
subject, and I don't intend to be more personal in saying what an
Ambassador's views are as opposed to the US Government's views. I think
Ambassador Hall is comfortable with what I just said.
QUESTION: Have you told Austria exactly what it needs to do to emerge
from this cloud?
MR. RUBIN: Yes.
QUESTION: Like there's benchmarks?
MR. RUBIN: We've told them that we need to monitor closely their
implementation of the preamble which we were supportive of.
QUESTION: There seems to be a note of skepticism. Your statement begins
with the word "if." Do you think that Haider's resignation was perhaps a
deceptive maneuver designed to abort punitive actions by you and the
European Union?
MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't know what the motivation was. I'd prefer not to
speculate. What I can tell you is what our policy is, is to remain
concerned about the presence of the Freedom Party in the Austrian coalition
and to judge them by their actions and not the presence or absence of
personalities, although that obviously, if his absence means they're more
likely to go along with the kind of policies that we have advocated, that
would be great.
QUESTION: Are you at all concerned by the Indian Government's announcement
that it's going to sharply increase defense spending in the new budget?
MR. RUBIN: On that subject, we have seen press reports the Indian
Government has submitted for parliament's approval a substantial increase
in military expenditures. They assert that this is a result of heavy
fighting in the Kargil sector last year. We don't have any details at this
point, and we want to get a full readout on the budget proposals and the
Indian Government's justification before reacting.
QUESTION: Did the government decide whether the President will be going
to Pakistan?
MR. RUBIN: The President's schedule is normally not announced here from
the State Department.
QUESTION: Apparently, there's been a flurry of activity involving US
diplomats in Khartoum of all places preparing for a weekend visit by Mr.
Johnston. I'm wondering if you have anything on that?
MR. RUBIN: Yes. On Sudan, what I can say about that is that the visit of
Special Envoy Harry Johnston along with Special Envoy Tom Vraalsen met with
the leadership last week in Nairobi to offer direct US and other donor
assistance. With respect to visits to Khartoum, I'll have to see whether
there's anything more I could say. I know he was in Nairobi meeting with
Garang but I don't know what other meetings, and I'll try to get that
for you after the briefing.
QUESTION: Mr. Rubin, if I'm not mistaken, Under Secretary of State Mr.
Holum is in Geneva now for talks on arms control issue as a Russian
counterpart. Could you update us on this issue or the development?
MR. RUBIN: Yes. I know he is - I don't know whether the meeting started
yet, but I know he's expected to travel for that purpose, and we will work
in those meetings to try to move towards a combined agreement on START III
and the ABM Treaty modifications we've proposed to try to get into greater
detail so that Russia and the Russian side can understand that these
modifications can take place without undermining the fundamental principles
of the ABM Treaty and help both we and they deal with this coming
threat that we see in the future.
We certainly hope that START II is indeed ratified by the Russian Duma as
Mr. Putin has indicated he would like to see - Acting President Putin see --
happen. And that will make it easier to turn discussions on START III into
negotiations on START III which would then accelerate the prospects for
agreement.
QUESTION: Do you have anything to say on the release from prison of
Kurdish mayors in Turkey?
MR. RUBIN: On this subject let me say that the release was a positive
step. The release of the three mayors arrested last week was a positive
step. We learned yesterday the order to remove the three from office has
also been rescinded. It is important that the mayors be accorded full due
process and treated in a manner conforming to international human rights
standards, and we're going to continue to follow the case - monitor the
case closely.
QUESTION: Do you have anything else today on aid to Mozambique?
MR. RUBIN: No. I will try to check for you, but I don't think I have
anything. I do? I thought that I used this yesterday.
All right. The US has provided approximately $1.7 million in response to
the flooding in Mozambique. Additionally, USAID is sending a seven-member
disaster assistance response team to Mozambique which will arrive later
this week. This will supplement a 14-member team which is already on the
ground.
USAID has also activated its public donations hotline, 1-800-USAID-RELIEF,
1-800-872-4373. For people interested in assisting the people of Mozambique
can call this hotline from 9:00 to 5:00 eastern standard time to receive a
list of non-governmental organizations who are assisting in Mozambique. An
Air Force C-17 loaded with humanitarian supplies is expected to arrive in
Maputo tomorrow. Supplies include 6,000 5-gallon water containers, 6,000
wool blankets, and 200 rolls of plastic sheeting. We're also transporting
30,000 pounds of high energy biscuits on behalf of the United States.
QUESTION: It won't surprise you to learn that the measures that you've
just detailed are being criticized in the African press already as paltry.
There's some mocking that President Clinton and Secretary Albright recently
said that Africa matters, yet it comes up with the measures that you've
just outlined. Could you respond to that, please?
MR. RUBIN: Yes. We always wish we could do more, and we're doing a
substantial amount to try to ease humanitarian relief, ease humanitarian
crisis there. This is a flood that has caused damage that we're responding
to, and we certainly hope that our friends and allies in Africa don't have
the views that you attributed to some critics.
QUESTION: Do you have anything on Nigeria's suspension of Sharia law in
three northern states? I understand there's been --
MR. RUBIN: I do. I'm aware that there was serious violence that broke out
yesterday in Aba, in southeastern Nigeria. The return from Kaduna of the
body of a local soccer star sparked the violence. The soccer star was
reportedly killed during last week's violence in Kaduna. We understand that
police have set up roadblocks around Aba. Our embassy reported that at
least 30 people have been killed.
We would like to take this opportunity to again call on all Nigerians to
respect each other and find peaceful ways to resolve their differences. We
support all Nigerians of good will who are working together to resolve
disputes, and we condemn any exploitation of differences to pursue short-
sighted objectives that harm Nigerians and their shared goals of democracy
and prosperity.
QUESTION: Is the US going to be able to provide choppers to help in
Mozambique?
MR. RUBIN: I will check that for you.
QUESTION: Do you have anything to say about these American youths who
have been arrested in Germany, possibly facing murder charges?
MR. RUBIN: Yes, I'm aware of this incident. The State Department wishes
to join Secretary Cohen in expressing shock and sadness at the tragic
incident that occurred Sunday in Darmstadt resulting in the death of three
German citizens and injury of four more. Our thoughts and prayers are with
the families of the victims who have experienced this terrible and
senseless loss. The suspects, who are military dependents, were arrested
Monday evening near Darmstadt, which is south of Frankfurt. We understand
they were arraigned earlier today in German court, and prosecutors
asked a magistrate for a warrant charging the three suspects with
murder and attempted murder. We will be cooperating fully with German
officials as this case unfolds.
QUESTION: Do you know if there's any kind of a treaty the US has with
Germany that
might --
MR. RUBIN: It is my understanding that the German authorities have
jurisdiction in this case, but the Department of Defense would have to be
able to clarify the rules more and the legalities more specifically. Thank
you.
(The briefing concluded at 1:35 p.m.)
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