LONDON,
February 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iraqi President Saddam
stressed that Iraq is free from weapons of mass destruction and denied
links with al-Qaeda network.
"We
have no relationship with al-Qaeda," Saddam said in a rear
interview with veteran British politician and former lawmaker Tony
Benn broadcast Tuesday, February 4, by shown by Britain's independent
Channel 4 television network.
"If
we had a relationship with al-Qaeda and we believed in that
relationship, we wouldn't be ashamed to admit it," Saddam said.
Washington
and London have accused Iraq of helping al-Qaeda, which the U.S.
blames for the 11 September attacks, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
He
also insisted that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction, and
accused Britain and the United States of being intent on war because
of their desire to control oil in the Middle East, reported the BBC
News Online.
Saddam
insisted that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction, and that it had
been fulfilling its obligations under U.N. Security Council resolution
1441, but said the world had reached a "critical situation".
"There
is only one truth and therefore I tell you as I have said on many
occasions before that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction
whatsoever," the Iraqi president said.
"We
challenge anyone who claims that we have to bring forward any evidence
and present it to public opinion."
"These
weapons do not come in small pills that you can hide in your
pocket," he stressed.
"These
are weapons of mass destruction, and it is easy to work out if Iraq
has them or not."
"It
is in our interests to help them (U.N. inspectors) reach the truth.
"The
question is whether the other side wants to reach the truth or whether
it wants to find a pretext for aggression.
"When
Iraq objects to the conduct of those implementing the Security Council
resolutions, that doesn't mean that Iraq wishes to push things to
confrontation. Iraq has no interest in war," stressed Saddam.
"No
Iraqi official or ordinary citizen has expressed a wish to go to
war," he told Benn in the interview at a presidential palace in
Baghdad.
The
U.S. and Britain claim Iraq is hiding prohibited weapons or related
documents from United Nations arms inspectors, who returned to Iraq
last November.
The
Iraqi leader accused the U.S. of aggression motivated by their desire
to control oil in the Middle East.
"The
consecutive American administrations were led to a path of hostility
against the people of this region, including our own nation," he
said.
"Therefore
the destruction of Iraq is a pre-requisite to controlling oil,"
he charged.
"The
most important factor in controlling oil is to destroy Iraq."
"It
seems to me that this hostility is a trademark of the current U.S.
administration and is based on its wish to control the world and
spread its hegemony," Saddam Hussein asserted.
Alluding
to U.S. President George W Bush, Saddam Hussein said anyone who
thought they could act without regard for the rest of the world was
"lacking in wisdom".
The
interview, recorded on Sunday, February 2, at Saddam’s presidential
palace in Baghdad, was being aired a day before U.S. Secretary of
State Colin Powell presents fresh evidence against Iraq to the U.N.
Security Council on Wednesday, February 5.
Commenting
on the interview, analysts said Saddam steered away from his usual
threats and aggressive language, the latest of which his threat during
a meeting with his top brass on Friday, January 31, to kill as many as
one million American soldiers should they dare invade Iraq.
A
spokesman for British Prime Minister Tony Blair declined immediate
comment, apart from saying: "It is for Channel 4 to judge whether
any interview carried by them accords to journalistic standards."
The
British government has alleged, without elaborating, that
"links" exist between al-Qaeda and individuals inside Iraq,
which stands accused of refusing to comply with U.N. demands to give
up chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Benn,
a former British cabinet minister and now an leading anti-war
campaigner, denied he was being used by the Iraqi government, adding
that he paid his own flight and hotel bill for his stay in Iraq.
The
interview was secured from Arab Television (ATV), the British-based
production company which filmed it.
Channel
4 defended its decision to broadcast Saddam's comments.
"Even
the voice of a man anathema to people of the West must be heard as
part of the raging debate over whether we should go to war," said
Dorothy Byrne, head of news and current affairs at Channel 4.
A
staunch pacifist, Benn, 77, met Saddam in 1990 to try to prevent the
escalation of the crisis following the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait.
Benn
spoke on Sunday with Saddam for two hours, during a meeting that was
video-taped by an Iraqi television crew with Arabic- and
English-speaking interpreters on hand.
Benn
said in Baghdad afterwards that Saddam remained "optimistic"
about avoiding a U.S.-led war against Iraq.
Speaking
to reporters after returning to London's Heathrow airport Monday, Benn
described the tone of his discussions with Saddam as "very
serious," and said that they covered Iraq's alleged failure to
cooperate with 12 years' worth of U.N. resolutions to disarm.
Benn
stressed that the crisis was driven by a U.S. thirst for oil.
"If
I believe for one moment it really was about weapons of mass
destruction, I would take a different view," he said.
On
the mood inside Iraq, Benn said: "I have never seen a country
which is less aggressive in its stance in private conversation."