Interview given by Prime Minister Jean
Chrétien to ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos
March 9, 2003
Ottawa, Ontario
STEPHANOPOULOS: Mr. Prime Minister, thank you very much for having us in your
home.
JEAN CHRÉTIEN: My pleasure to be with you.
STEPHANOPOULOS: The divide in the United Nations seems deeper than ever this
weekend. How can it be bridged?
CHRÉTIEN: I don’t know if it can be bridged because we’re quite late in
the process, but there was some movement of sorts last week, because, you know
the Americans, the Brits and the Spaniards decided to have a deadline, something
that we had recommended, the Canadians, two or three weeks ago.
And the French said that 120 days is too much. So, I was…, you know I had
recommended the end of March, so we’re talking of days. And I…, I don’t
know what would happen, you know, it’s kind of sad because, you know, they
have done very well with 1441.
Now the question is a question of interpretation of what’s going on there.
And for me, I’m not…, I don’t know all the facts, but I know that we made
some progress in the position we have presented to the United Nations in a
speech by my ambassador on the 19th, two weeks ago, but we have
worked on that before.
You know it was the series of deadlines on four different items that was to
be terminated at the end of March and of the four items that were on the agenda
two things…, where we have made a lot of progress. In the case of the
missiles, it was one of the points that we had made. You know, they are
destroying them today, still they destroyed some more, the last few days, they
stopped for one day only and the inspector responsible, El Baradei, said that
the nuclear issue is almost resolved now.
So, we were left with the biological and the chemical. And all that is
happening, you know, people don’t say that often, but I say that all the time
in Canada, it is because the Americans and the British have moved a lot of
troops there. You know it is for me what is moving Saddam to comply otherwise he
wouldn’t have complied. Will he comply completely? It’s a question of
interpretation.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You’ve been talking to a lot of members of the Security
Council.
CHRÉTIEN: Yes.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Many of these Mexico, Chile who are still undecided, still
in the middle. What are you hearing from them and what do you believe they need
in order to support a resolution?
CHRÉTIEN: But…, they need…, they all agreed that, you know, there’s a
limit, you know we cannot wait forever and everybody has this view, clearly at
this moment that Saddam has to disarm, you know the question, and the resolution
1441 is about disarmament and that it’s a question of more days.
STEPHANOPOULOS: What is reasonable?
CHRÉTIEN: You know in politics it’s the people who judge you about, are
you reasonable yes or no. And it is a question of how do you interpret the facts
that you have in front of you. For me, you know, I think that…, you know we
should give credit to the president and to Mr. Blair. The movement of troops
there has really created the situation. In my judgment, it has been won. You
know the president has won. I have no doubt about it. He won.
STEPHANOPOULOS: What do you mean by that?
CHRÉTIEN: I mean that you know, he has created a situation where Saddam
cannot do anything anymore. He has troops at the door and inspectors on the
ground. Planes flying over and he cannot do anything, and he started to destroy
missiles, there’s no nuclear danger there, we…, so, he has to destroy the…,
What’s happened, we don’t know exactly what’s left. But again, he has
moved.
And when I say you know, it’s because the Americans moved strong troops
there, otherwise probably nothing would have happened.
You know, you know the Americans have won I say that in Canada all the time.
You guys, you won the Cold War, without one tank, one missile and losing one
life. (Inaudible)…, USSR.
And there’s the same thing in Iraq, in my judgment. You’re winning it
big. In my view, you probably have won this time. But the question is, I’m
talking in terms of disarmament. The question of a regime…, change of regime
is something else.
But, yesterday or Friday, Mr. Straw was clear. He said the British are there
to…, the elimination of the armament of massive destruction.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Not regime change?
CHRÉTIEN: He didn’t, he said no it’s not their policy a regime change.
So, there’s a confusion there. He said disarmament of regime…, change of
regime. And this is not the debate at the UN. So, I’ve concentrated on that
and I thought that there is a way to bridge, probably it’s too late, but the
Americans and the Brits and the Spaniards moved yesterday, Friday. And but they
need probably to move more, that is the impression I have. But when you’re in
a situation like that you don’t…, you know perhaps it’s the definite date,
the 17th of March, perhaps a couple of more weeks could help, I don’t
know.
STEPHANOPOULOS: So, if the Prime Minister…, the President of Chile, came to
President Bush and President Fox in Mexico and some of these other nations came
to President Bush and said, we need another week, we need two more weeks, give
us till the end of March, do you think that’s something President Bush would
accept?
CHRÉTIEN: I don’t know, I cannot…, I cannot pass a judgment on that.
But I know that they…, these people face a difficult political problem at home
with that. You know, the public opinion is strongly opposed and some like Fox,
you know he’s the president, but the congress is not on his side, so he has to…,
same thing in Chile and these people have to live with the political reality at
home. But they…, what I suggested, on the 19th of February, they
were all very much interested. Some days ago, all the (inaudible)…, my
ambassador at the embassy of Mexico, in New York, to look at the Canadian Paper.
And…, but there’s more there is there. But they seemed to be buying at that
moment.
But, you know, I’m not at the Security Council and I cannot pretend that I
would be a bridge. But I’ve talked with all of them and they…, everybody…,
you know it was amazing…, everybody wants Saddam to disarm. No doubt about it.
He’s a terrible man and so on and we have to take away anything dangerous in
his hands. And there was…, that was the agreement after the end of the war in
1991, the cease fire, and some conditions that he has not respected. No doubt
about it.
But, for me it’s…, you know, there is…, (inaudible) could solve the
problem, because effectively it’s won.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You say America has won. You know, given that and as America’s
closest neighbour and friend, what advice would you give President Bush now?
CHRÉTIEN: Well, for me I…, he knows of my paper…, he called me and we
discussed that and my ambassador in New York has talked with your ambassador
there and so on, you know. The problem is for him he thinks, probably he’s
afraid that he has been dragging to…, delays and delays and delays to just to
postpone a decision. And if he had a date in mind and he has decided, like he
seemed to say to the nation when he appeared on TV Thursday night, last week,
there’s not much I can tell him.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You think he’s going to go?
CHRÉTIEN: I’m not sure, you know, for me I think peace can be preserved
there, if he could move, but I really don’t know how far he’s advanced in
his planning and his decision making.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But he…, the president does seem to have…, indicated at
least that he is ready to go to whether or not the UN approves. In your
judgement, what would be the consequences of a military action without the UN
umbrella?
CHRÉTIEN: Well, it would be quite bad because, you know the Americans are
the only super power now. And everybody…, you have to really be realistic
about it, that makes some people nervous. You know, while I’m not complaining
I have great relations with the United States and with the president and I have
no problem. But some do not want to take your word, you know, too easily, they
want to ask questions and they are afraid to have only one super power, that it’s
dangerous for them.
STEPHANOPOULOS: That seems to be the French position.
CHRÉTIEN: Yes, and others. And the UN can indeed be useful to the United
States. You know, take for example when the father of George…, George Senior
went to war in 1990, he had a resolution at the UN. And I remember very well,
that was the position of Canada. My predecessor Mr. Maloney said, Canada will
be with you and you need a resolution at the UN and we’ll be with you.
I said the same thing a year ago to President George W., that…, you know
the same position.
STEPHANOPOULOS: (Inaudible) having a UN resolution, if Canada will not
(inaudible)…, forces?
CHRÉTIEN: Right now you know we’re in the middle of this because we have
1441 and we don’t know what will happen, so it’s purely a hypothetical
question. But it is the position that I’ve stated since the beginning and
remains the position of the Canadian government.
But at that time, you know, that was…, when you went to Kazoo, for
example, there we did have a resolution, but I mean, the Russians opposed, and
being, you know because it was Serbia and question of the same religion and so
on, people considered that as special veto, everybody was one in agreement, but
we went there anyway under the NATO umbrella and it worked because we went there
to stop the genocide and we succeeded.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But your position now is that Canada will fight in Iraq only
if there is a UN resolution?
CHRÉTIEN: It has been the position of Canada since the first day and it was
the position of Canada in 1990, so…, but I’m not confronted with that. And
at this time there is no request from us because we’re moving quite a big
number of troops…, we have three ships in the Gulf at this moment there and in
the summer we have to go and replace some troops in Kabul, in Afghanistan,
because they think that Canadians are the proper group to be there at this time.
So, this is where we stand on the question of Iraq, you know they have their
troops there at this moment and we have ships there that are useful, but…,
STEPHANOPOULOS: You talk about the consequences for the United Nations, if
the United States goes forward without the United Nations, what is your concerns
specifically? Will it be more difficult, for example, for the United Nations to
come together and reach a unified position on North Korea?
CHRÉTIEN: It might because the President (inaudible)…, try do the same
thing. That is one of the concerns that a lot of people have, you know. China
might say, well we have a problem somewhere and you know, we don’t like the
regime and we’re going to change the regime. It’s why it’s dangerous. You
know, everybody will take that as a pretext.
Because there is a notion in the United States that I find a bit surprising.
They say we went to Kazoo to change the regime. Not true at all. We went to
stop the genocide. There was no change of regime there. The regime was changed
there by a vote in Serbia, when Milosevic lost the election. But it was…, the
war was terminated before and he was still the president when the election came,
he was defeated by his own people. That was the perfect solution.
Probably the reason was the fact that we stopped the genocide in Kazoo (inaudible)…, you know, made him very unpopular with his own people, but even
there he contested the elections. But…,
STEPHANOPOULOS: So when I talk of regime change, it’s dangerous talk?
CHRÉTIEN: It’s something that I’m not very comfortable with and I said
that in Canada and I said that to everybody, because where do you stop? You
know, if it’s okay that we do that there, why not elsewhere?
And you know, the British position with…, as expressed on Friday by…, or
Thursday by the minister of foreign affairs was very clear on that, that they
are going to Iraq to stop Saddam Hussein and force him to destroy his armament
of mass destruction.
STEPHANOPOULOS: There’s some difference between the United States and
Canada, but do you feel it’s a serious difference? What kind of affect do you
believe it will have on United States-Canadian relations?
CHRÉTIEN: Oh, not much. We’ve always been very close with the Americans.
We went with them in Kazoo and we were in Bosnia, we’re still there and so
on. We’ve always been peacekeepers. Canada is always willing to get involved
in peacekeeping and you know, you remember at one time when the Americans went
into Haiti, when they wanted to get out they needed somebody and President
Clinton asked me to send…, if I could not go and replace the Americans,
because the country did not want anymore to have Americans there and it was
easier for us, because it was convenient we sent some francophone soldiers there
to replace the Americans and it was the type of people that they needed at that
time.
So, whenever we…, generally speaking we have absolutely no problems there.
You know, the position is clear since a year with the president about what
Canada will do.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Can you imagine Canada being part of a future peacekeeping
force in Iraq?
CHRÉTIEN: I think we’re always somewhere, you know, we’re very strong on
that. Always…, because you know we have to be ready for that. Canadians are
always willing. You know, when we talk…, probably the biggest problem that we
all face collectively is Palestine and Israel, where we should…, the
international community move there and solve…, only the Americans can do that.
(Inaudible)…, Cyprus, you remember what happened in Cyprus 40 years ago,
something like that, Canada was there for about 28 years. You know where the
international community came and said this is Cyprus North and South. The Greek
are in the South and in the North was the Turks. And we just built a wall there
and the Canadian soldiers and others were there at that time.
But you remember in those days, it was always…, I should be (inaudible)…,
on the news every night with some killing here and there. And the community of
nations went there and imposed the peace.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Do you feel now that war is inevitable in Iraq?
CHRÉTIEN: For me it’s never inevitable. You know, if Saddam Hussein was
smart he would make a move over the weekend. You know, he has made a move on
missiles. I don’t know why he’s not just, come-on guys and look at this like
it was done in South Africa. But I think he’s crazy too.
Unfortunately I don’t think that he is…, you know he’s acting in…, he
attacked his own people with biological instruments and so on…, So he’s not…,
does not seem to be very rational about that. It is his own people who will pay
the price. You know, it’s not…, I think the Americans are much too strong
for them. It’s not a real match. And why does he come and take anything that
we have, I mean…, You know, Blip says that he’s making progress. I don’t
know why it’s taking so much time. But in fact, he’s trapped and he cannot
move. Two hundred and fifty thousand American and British soldiers waiting
there. I’m telling you that if I were in his…, you know, in his boots I
would be shaking.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Mr. Prime Minister, thank you very much.
CHRÉTIEN: My pleasure to be with you Sir.
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