Posted on 02/04/2003 11:34:27 PM PST by Timesink
TOKYO - Former U.N. chief weapons inspector Scott Ritter blasted the U.S. case against Iraq on Wednesday as based on "circumstantial evidence" and warned that invading the country would be a "long and horrific" invitation to terrorism.
The remarks came just hours before U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) was set to present the U.N. Security Council a detailed argument on the disarmament of Iraq.
Ritter, a former Gulf War (news - web sites) veteran who lead U.N. weapons inspections in Iraq from 1991 to 1998, said the United States was giving up on inspections too soon and that Powell could present only "circumstantial evidence" that they haven't worked.
"The purpose of Colin Powell's presentation ... is to destroy international trust and confidence in weapons inspections, and that's a darn shame," said Ritter, on a two-stop international campaign to condemn the push toward war in Iraq.
"Inspections can work if given a chance," he said.
Current chief weapons inspector Hans Blix indicated Tuesday that time and patience was running out, warning Baghdad that it is "five minutes to midnight."
According to Ritter, however, up to 95 percent of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction had been confirmed destroyed by the end of his tenure and the country has had no industrial base to rearm since a claim about which many are skeptical.
Ritter argued that U.S. President George W. Bush (news - web sites) wants to undercut the inspections process because his true aim is not the disarmament of Iraq but the removal of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites), a goal best achieved through military muscle.
Drawing on his years experience in the U.S. Marines and at the helm of 52 U.N. weapons inspections of Iraq, Ritter called Iraq a "defanged tiger."
But he warned that a U.S. invasion would be potentially devastating and likely trigger a global backlash of terrorist attacks against U.S. targets.
"It's going to be long and horrific," Ritter said. "I think an American invasion of Iraq is the best recruiting poster that Osama bin Laden (news - web sites) and al-Qaida will ever have."
He predicted that a U.S. air bombardment of Iraq would begin by the end of February and that U.S. ground troops could be marching across the border in early March. He said the country could be occupied as early as June. But he said getting there could entail thousands of U.S. casualties and possibly hundreds of thousands on the Iraqi side.
Ritter also dismissed arguments that the Iraqi people would welcome U.S. forces as liberators from an evil tyrant. He compared a U.S. invasion and occupation to Nazi Germany's 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union, a homeland fiercely defended by its citizens despite their fear and loathing of then-Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
"When you take a look at the average Iraqi villager, he reaches down in his village and pulls up a handful of dust," Ritter said. "That dust contains his grandfather, his great-grandfather, the history of Iraq. They will fight and die for that."
Ritter leaves Japan on Friday for a seminar in the United Arab Emirates.
DING!
TOKYO (Reuters) - A former U.N. weapons inspector and outspoken critic of U.S. policy on Iraq said Wednesday he expected war to break out by the end of February and that Pyongyang would likely seize the opportunity to attack Japan and South Korea (news - web sites).
Scott Ritter, a former U.S. Marine who spent seven years as a weapons inspector in Iraq in the 1990s, told journalists in Tokyo that a narrow, U.S.-led coalition would likely launch an attack on Iraq after failing to persuade the United Nations (news - web sites) of the need for military action.
"I see a massive aerial bombardment beginning by the end of February," he said. "I see ground troops crossing into Iraq in significant numbers in early March, and I don't see this war finishing any time soon."
Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) is due to speak before the U.N. Security Council at 10:30 a.m. EST in an attempt to persuade the world that Iraq is concealing weapons of mass destruction.
Russia, China and France -- which have powers of veto -- are uncertain about a war that might spark more instability in the Middle East.
An attack on Iraq might also alarm the isolated state of North Korea (news - web sites) into a pre-emptive strike on U.S. troops and their allies in Asia, Ritter said.
"North Korea, having seen the United States eliminate Iraq in violation of international law, is not going to simply sit back and wait for the Americans to come," he said.
"They won't be satisfied till Tokyo is reduced to a slab of radioactive waste."
The United States reported last autumn that Pyongyang had admitted to possessing weapons of mass destruction. North Korea withdrew from a nuclear non-proliferation treaty last month and ordered U.N. atomic energy inspectors out of the country.
U.S. bombers, fighter jets and warships have been put on alert for possible deployment to the western Pacific to deter any aggression by North Korea in the event of a war in Iraq.
Of course that's what he is doing. He wants to know if that missing plutonium means Japan has gone nuclear.
Were his pants on?
Scott Ritter is a traitor, pervert and a fool, imho...
< snip >
He was arrested by Colonie Police in June 2001 on a misdemeanor charge after he allegedly had a sexual discussion on the Internet with an undercover investigator he thought was an underage girl, law enforcement sources disclosed on condition of anonymity.
Scott Ritter:
Show me tha money !Scott Ritter was paid for his interest in a movie - $400,000. Some discussion on this article here on FR...
Also this FR article...
Scott Ritter in Pro-Iraq Movie Deal
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