WASHINGTON,
August 13 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Despite the fact that
U.S. President George W. Bush has been talking about a war in Iraq to
remove the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, there is much talk within the
U.S. administration which indicates that not everyone shares Bush’s
enthusiasm.
The
U.K. daily newspaper, the Times, said that while in Europe
there has been a tendency in the past fortnight to portray the U.S. as
united in its enthusiasm for war, it is a fact that the public,
congress and the administration are not united on the war against
Iraq.
The
Republicans, the paper said, are troubled and the Armed Services
Committee, called in witnesses with military expertise, tapping into
the vein of dissent within the Pentagon that is now the first battle
that President Bush must win if he wants to attack Iraq.
This
dissent is being seen through alternative battle plans that members of
the U.S. administration are presenting in the U.S.’s daily
newspapers everyday, said the Times.
For
instance, Secretary of State Colin Powell feels that it is better if
U.S. troops go in with large numbers and use overwhelming force,
reported the paper.
The
paper added that many diplomats question the wisdom of an invasion,
favoring containment and diplomacy in the region.
Against
them are ranged the Pentagon civilians: Donald Rumsfeld, the Defense
Secretary, and Paul Wolfowitz, his deputy, with the warm support of
Dick Cheney, the Vice-President.
Cheney
and Rumsfeld are of the school supporting a smaller invasion -
“Desert Storm Lite”, as it has been dubbed, said the Times.
Meanwhile,
the Chicago Sun Times said that Powell and U.S. Deputy
Secretary Richard Armitage have had a heart-to-heart talk with Bush
about the difficulties of initiating war with Iraq.
Powell
and Armitage, who normally do not spend much private time with Bush,
are described as having walked Bush through consequences of a
unilateral U.S. attack with little support from European allies and
hostility from moderate Arab states, said the paper.
As
a pillar of the Republican foreign policy establishment, Gen. Brent
Scowcroft for months had been turning down invitations from Sunday
televised talk shows because he did not want to oppose the
administration led by his former chief's son, it said adding however,
that he broke the silence and went to CBS’s ''Face the Nation” and
said: “To attack Iraq while the Middle East is in terror and America
appears not to be dealing with something which to every Muslim is a
real problem.”
“I
think could turn the whole region into a cauldron.”
Also,
said the Chicago Sun Times, there were other Republican voices
which urged restraint such as Jack Kemp as well as members of Congress
from both parties, with House Majority Leader Dick Armey last
Thursday, August 8, warning against an unprovoked attack on Iraq.
Sen.
Carl Levin, a liberal Democrat from Michigan, has moved toward the
skepticism of Sen. Chuck Hagel, a conservative Republican from
Nebraska. Levin calls Saddam a “survivalist” who would not employ
any available chemical or biological weapons that would sign his own
death warrant but would lash back in desperation if attacked.
Hagel
now embraces that view. Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, a well-informed
Republican, wonders when “pre-emption” replaced “deterrence”
as basic U.S. strategy, reported the paper.
The
Times also reported on Tuesday, August 13, that former U.S.
secretary of state Henry Kissinger urged Bush to use extreme care in
drafting war plans against Iraq or risk isolating America in the eyes
of the world.
With
his intervention yesterday, Kissinger joined a growing band of
prominent American military and foreign policy experts appealing to
the President to show caution in his desire to oust President Saddam
Hussein, said the paper.
He
said that the ground-breaking status of such an attack, which breached
international codes about using force only in self-defense, required
meticulous planning to counter the skepticism of allies and the
hostility of foes.
Bush
should contemplate military intervention only if he were ready to see
through a much longer diplomatic offensive, preparing the ground for
war and ensuring a stable settlement afterwards, Kissinger said,
reported the Times.
The
biggest danger, though, lay in allowing other countries to use
America’s intervention to justify their own acts of pre-emptive
hostility, he said. “It is not in the American national interest to
establish pre-emption as a universal principle available to every
nation.”.