- The US has plans to establish an American-led military
administration in Iraq, similar to the postwar occupation of Germany and
Japan, which could last for several years after the fall of Saddam Hussein,
it emerged yesterday.
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- The plans, which surfaced after President George Bush
won a resounding congressional mandate to use force in Iraq, envisage the
biggest "nation-building" effort the US has undertaken since
the end of the second world war.
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- The occupation of the country would need an estimated
75,000 troops, at an annual cost of up to $16bn (£10bn), and would
almost certainly include British and other allied soldiers. It would be
run by a senior American officer, perhaps General Tommy Franks, who would
lead the assault on Iraq, and whose role would be modelled on that of General
Douglas MacArthur in postwar Japan.
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- The occupation regime would track down war criminals
and remove members of President Saddam's Ba'ath party from power, comb
the country for any hidden biological and chemical weapons, and guarantee
Iraq's territorial integrity. It would also administer the country's huge
oil deposits.
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- Ahmad Chalabi, leader of the opposition Iraqi National
Congress who is visiting Washington this week, gave the plan a qualified
welcome yesterday. He said he would prefer an interim Iraqi government
to be established in the immediate aftermath of President Saddam's fall,
but would accept a foreign administration as a temporary precursor to a
true democracy.
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- "We are concerned first with the liberation of Iraq,"
he told the Guardian, adding that he had "no idea" how long such
a transitional period would last. He said it was "very, very clear
it is going to be a huge development in the Arab world".
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- Mr Chalabi denied that such a large-scale prolonged US
military presence would destabilise the region, but an Arab diplomat in
Washington said it could have an "explosive" impact in the Middle
East, where the US military presence has already proven a rallying cry
for militants including Osama bin Laden.
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- "Every day in Iraq would raise the cost," the
diplomat warned.
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- The Iraqi project, outlined by Mr Bush's senior adviser
on the Middle East, Zalmay Khalilzad, would involve running the entire
country until a democratic Iraqi government was deemed ready.
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- A British official stressed yesterday that although contingency
plans were undoubtedly being drawn up, London had not agreed to such a
strategy. "It seems this is coming from the right end of the [political]
spectrum. I don't know if this is mainstream thinking in the administration,"
the official said.
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- US officials said no final decision had been taken on
the plan, but indicated that some form of direct American military rule
was almost inevitable.
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- "The purpose of the military has not changed: to
fight and win wars," Ari Fleischer, the White House spokesman said.
"But at the end of the day, when the military conflict has come to
an end, the question then becomes - in the post-Saddam era - how to make
certain the country remains unified, is stabilised, the region has stability.
The United States will not cut and run from that mission."
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- Mr Khalilzad provided a sketch of the plan at a meeting
of diplomats and Middle East experts at the weekend. "We will not
enter Iraq as conquerors. We will not treat the Iraqi people as a defeated
nation," he insisted. He said the long-term US aim was to establish
a "representative and democratic" government.
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- "In the short term, however, we will reunify Iraq,
because at present Iraq is not united, and maintain its territorial integrity,"
he said.
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- "First, there will be the political reconstruction.
This will involve thorough reform of the government, de-Ba'athising Iraq,
removing elements used by Saddam to enforce his tyranny. Officials guilty
of crimes against humanity will be prosecuted."
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- He conceded that "the costs will be significant",
but added: "We would have the commitment of resources necessary, and
we would have the will to stay for as long as necessary to do the job."
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- A military thinktank called the Role of American Military
Power, has estimated that 75,000 troops would be necessary to stabilize
Iraq after any war. It is possible that funds would be stripped from US
contributions to international efforts to stabilise other regions such
as the Balkans, to help meet the costs.
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- http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,810609,00.html
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