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“Before I can just stand up and say, we need to invade Iraq, I guess I would like to have better information," Schwarzkopf
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WASHINGTON,
January 29 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Norman Schwarzkopf, the
general who commanded the U.S.-led forces in the 1991 Gulf War, said a
new war with Iraq has not yet been justified.
Schwarzkopf,
who became a military hero for his role in the last war, has added his
weight to calls for UN inspectors to be given more time to uncover any
evidence of Iraq's alleged weapons programs, Agence France-Presse
(AFP) said.
"The
thought of Saddam Hussein with a sophisticated nuclear capability is a
frightening thought, OK?" he said in an interview published in
the Washington Post Tuesday, January 28.
"Now,
having said that, I don't know what intelligence the U.S. government
has. And before I can just stand up and say, 'Beyond a shadow of a
doubt, we need to invade Iraq,' I guess I would like to have better
information."
Interviewed
at his Tampa, Florida, home, the 68-year-old retired general who
became affectionately known as "Stormin' Norman", said he
would like to give UN weapons inspectors more time to complete their
task.
"I
think it is very important for us to wait and see what the inspectors
come up with, and hopefully they come up with something
conclusive," he said.
Rumsfeld's
authoritarian style
Schwarzkopf
was also critical of what he portrayed as Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld's authoritarian style.
"Candidly,
I have gotten somewhat nervous at some of the pronouncements Rumsfeld
has made," he said.
"When
he makes his comments, it appears that he disregards the army. He
gives the perception when he's on TV that he is the guy driving the
train and everybody else better fall in line behind him or else."
The
general also had concerns about the role of the U.S. army after any
conflict to overthrow Saddam.
"What
is post-war Iraq going to look like, with the Kurds and the Sunnis and
the Shiite? That's a huge question to my mind. It really should be
part of the overall campaign plan," he was quoted as saying.
"I
would hope that we have in place the adequate resources to become an
army of occupation, because you are going to walk into chaos."
Serving
under President George W. Bush's father, Schwarzkopf led the
UN-sanctioned allied military operation that followed Iraq's invasion
of Kuwait in 1990.
Vice
President Dick Cheney was defense secretary at the time and Secretary
of State Colin Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Several
other former top U.S. generals have expressed doubts about the wisdom
of a military campaign, including Anthony Zinni, former head of the
central command that covers the Gulf and Wesley Clark, former NATO
supreme commander during the 1999 Kosovo war.