US White House Press Briefing by Ari Fleischer
12:21 P.M. EST
MR. FLEISCHER: Good afternoon. Two announcements for you today. The President began his day with a phone call to
Colombian President Uribe. They had very substantive conversations. The President views President Uribe as a close
friend and ally. They both expressed concern about the United States citizens who have been taken hostage by FARC and
the need for continued close cooperation to get them released. They both stressed the need to work together to fight
terror. They also agreed on the importance of the disarmament of Saddam Hussein.
In another matter, the President expresses his deep appreciation and gratitude to President Musharraf and to the
government of Pakistan for their efforts this past weekend that led to the capture of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the
mastermind of the September 11th attack.
This is a very serious development and a blow to al Qaeda. The President is appreciative to Pakistan for their fine
efforts that they have been carrying out in the war against terror and their fine work in this most recent success.
And with that, I'm happy to take your questions. Helen.
Q Has the President decided whether he will see the Pope's peace emissary this week?
MR. FLEISCHER: There is nothing scheduled for today and, as always, we keep you filled in on the President's schedule as
the events warrant.
Q But you would know, wouldn't you, if it was on the schedule this week?
MR. FLEISCHER: The meeting is not today; there's nothing scheduled today; and anything that comes later in the week,
we'll keep you filled in.
Q But you often give us the week-ahead.
MR. FLEISCHER: And I gave it last Friday. So anything subsequent –
Q So it's not?
MR. FLEISCHER: -- anything -- as a matter of routine scheduling, anything subsequent to that, we'll keep you filled in
as events warrant it and as events come closer.
Steve.
Q Iraq says it will submit a new report on VX and anthrax, and it is scrapping more missiles. Is this helpful?
MR. FLEISCHER: There is one thing that is helpful, and that is complete, total, immediate -- immediate -- disarmament,
per Resolution 1441. That was what Resolution 1441 called for in November. We have not seen complete disarmament. We
have not seen total disarmament. We have not seen immediate disarmament. We have seen nothing that the United Nations
Security Council called for except for -- under pressure -- Saddam Hussein finding things that he said he never had and
apparently destroying small numbers of the things that he says he never possessed.
Q Are you concerned that that's going to slow down the timetable, the fact that they're destroying these missiles?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President has said the timetable is weeks, not months. He said that just over a month ago. And
nothing has changed that timetable.
Q So it doesn't matter that they're destroying the missiles. In that case, why should they continue?
MR. FLEISCHER: Iraq needs to disarm because that's what the world has called on Iraq to do. They should disarm because
that is their promise made to the United Nations Security Council, and that still remains the best way to secure peace.
But it must be nothing less, nothing less, nothing less than complete, total, immediate. And it has not been any one of
those three.
Q Ari, can I try to get clarification on something that came up on Friday? It's the policy of the administration that
Saddam has to totally and completely disarm. But regime change is also the policy. So if he were to fully disarm, in the
administration's view would that amount to regime change? Or is the policy now full disarmament plus exile, meaning
Saddam has to –
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, what we've always said is that if the regime were to have completely have done what the United
Nations called on them to do in Resolution 1441 last November, it would, indeed, be a different type of regime. And then
people have said does that mean Saddam Hussein could still be the head of it? The point that I have made is, in the
event that the President makes a decision that force is used to disarm Saddam Hussein to accomplish disarmament, nobody
should think -- not even for a second -- that military action could be possibly taken to disarm Saddam Hussein that
would leave Saddam Hussein at the helm for him to rearm up later. No, that's not an option.
Q But if the decision is not made to take force, if by some chance he just says, yes, I'm fully disarming, I'm meeting
all the requirements of 1441, and he stays in power -- in your view, that would be a regime change?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, let's first see him completely, totally and immediately disarm, and see if that takes place.
Q Ari, the destruction of these Al Samoud missiles now represents about 10 percent or more of their entire medium-range
missile capability. That's a piece of real substantive disarmament under international supervision, but it's not total
disarmament. But you aren't denying that that's real disarmament?
MR. FLEISCHER: We are -- it is not real disarmament. There's only one standard of disarmament: full, complete and
immediate. The United Nations resolutions did not call for a little piece of disarmament. It didn't say, 10 percent
disarmament four months after we call on you to do it immediately. None of that was in 1441. And the only reason this is
even happening today in the small degree that it has indeed happened is because he is under great pressure from
President Bush, the United States and the coalition of the willing.
Q But it is substantive. It's not just process, this is substance. This is real destruction of weapons.
MR. FLEISCHER: It is insufficient. It is not complete. It is not total.
Q So it's the administration's view that making war in Iraq now is preferable to any further piecemeal substantive
disarmament?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, the President has not made a decision about whether or not this ultimately will be done through the
use of force. If he makes that decision I think you can infer from that action, and the President would agree with your
premise in that case. But until he does, of course, and if he does, the process remains underway, and it's a process by
which Iraq is defying the United Nations. They pretended to comply in small and limited ways. But nothing less than
full, complete and immediate is called for, because that's what the United Nations has sought.
Q May I also ask you about a report in The Observer newspaper in London, of a memo purported to be from the NSA -- an
email message from a man who actually works at the NSA they established -- in which he describes a surge in surveillance
of U.N. Security Council members to see what these nations are thinking about an Iraq vote. What's your response?
MR. FLEISCHER: Terry, as a matter of long-standing policy, the administration never comments on anything involving any
people involved in intelligence. For example, if somebody were to say to me, is Libya an object of American intelligence
-- I would never answer that question yes or no. The administration does not answer questions of that nature. We don't
answer who does or does not work in the intelligence community. Once you start that, you start getting into process of
elimination and we do not do that about any question, about any report, as a blanket matter of policy.
Q But, then, if you're a Cameroonian diplomat or a French diplomat at the United Nations, because of what you just said,
you're going to have to operate on the assumption that the United States is bugging you.
MR. FLEISCHER: No, it's a blanket matter of policy that we do not answer questions of that nature, whether it's true or
not true, and I'm not indicating to you whether it is true or not true. It's a blanket matter of approach and policy
that predates this administration.
David.
Q Ari, the past couple of weeks you've said a number of times that we know what disarmament looks like, and you've cited
the examples of South Africa and other nations that have disarmed.
If the Iraqis continue -- that's a big "if" -- but if they continued on a daily basis getting rid of missiles or buried
bombs that they suddenly happened to discover, would that -- if this is a sustained issue, would that begin to look like
the disarmament you have in mind? And why have you given us no matrix by which to measure what this disarmament would
look like?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, here's the Catch-22 that Saddam Hussein has put himself in: he denied he had these weapons, and
then he destroys things he says he never had. If he lies about never having them, how can you trust him when he says he
has destroyed them? How do you know he's not lying, he doesn't have tons more buried under the sand somewhere else? How
do you know this is not the mother of all distractions, diversions, so the world looks in one place while he buries them
in another?
And this is the point to which Saddam Hussein has brought himself as a result of defying the U.N., having created an
environment where the inspectors were removed in the late 1990s. And on their way out, in their final conclusive report,
they indicated that Iraq had up to 26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulin, 1.5 tons of nerve agent VX, 6,500
aerial chemical bombs. We don't know where those are. We have yet to see any accounting for all of these. And so the
fact that he may have destroyed some 16 missiles has nothing -- nothing to do with the anthrax, the botulin and the VX.
It also contradicts the fact that he said he doesn't have any weapons in violation of the United Nations resolutions.
He's put himself in an awfully bad Catch-22, and this is from his own doing.
Q Ari, as part of the rest of Pakistan is concerned, India Globe has been saying for months that all these terrorists
are hiding in Pakistan, and this one now was arrested at the house of chief of the movement's organization,
Jamaat-e-Islamic.
Why we are getting one by one -- I hope President Bush asks General Musharraf to give us all the terrorists at one time,
so we don't go through terrorizing every day another life here in America and around the globe. And also, Indian
Ambassador Mr. Lalit Mansingh said that Pakistan is a dangerous place as far as terrorism is concerned today. And my
question again is that even Osama bin Laden may be hiding, who knows, in one of the homes of the ministers or even
General Musharraf's house.
MR. FLEISCHER: I'm not sure on what basis you might say that. The President complimented President Musharraf and the
government of Pakistan for their actions. Clearly, al Qaeda fled Afghanistan as a result of the military operation the
United States and our allies launched against al Qaeda in Afghanistan. They fled across a difficult-to-patrol border
into Pakistan, into cities that are in the tens of millions, large cities where they believed they could hide. What this
shows is the strong cooperation that we have from the government of Pakistan, and for that the President is grateful to
President Musharraf and the people of Pakistan. They deserve the world's congratulations for helping in this effort and
leading this effort.
Q You said this morning that you were, that the Bush administration was surprised by the vote in the Turkish Parliament.
What is the U.S. doing, if anything, now to try to reverse that, diplomatically or otherwise? Or do you feel that the
best thing to do is not to do a lot because some Turkish officials have even said that public pressure from the U.S.
might have forced the vote to happen the way it did?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, one, Turkey is reviewing its options, and the United States is doing the same. As a result of this
vote, Turkey has gone back to look at it; we are doing this; and it's unclear, as well, what the ultimate outcome will
be. But no matter what the ultimate outcome is, one thing is for certain, and that is if the President of the United
States makes the determination that force must be used to disarm Saddam Hussein, whatever route is taken, the ultimate
military mission will remain successful. We don't know what the outcome will be. This is still a matter of study.
Q It will be successful, but it would harder?
MR. FLEISCHER: There's no question that the Turkish approach would have been a preferable approach, but other approaches
are available. There are other options from a military point of view. And the President has every confidence that those
other options will, indeed, be militarily successful if he so exercises them.
Q On the aid package, is the aid package still viable at this point?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, again, as I said, Turkey is reviewing its options; the United States is reviewing its options; and
I think it's impossible to make any judgments beyond that at this time.
Q On the disarmament process, Iraq clearly has started to destroy some of its weapons -- perhaps not as quickly as the
administration would like. Clearly, it can't all be done in one instant, some big bang theory. So doesn't this speak to
the President's well-known impatience, that his patience is running out, he's not willing to give this process more
time?
MR. FLEISCHER: No, I think the question is, why didn't Iraq destroy these missiles in November when they were told to?
Doesn't it surprise anybody that the only reason they're doing them now is because they're under mass pressure as troops
gather on their border? And doesn't that suggest that their motives have nothing to do with disarmament, their motives
have to do with trying to stretch this out to avoid pressure from the world, and to see if, by announcing the
destruction of a small amount of their known tip of the iceberg, while they continue to hide what is below the water,
that they're just trying to buy time and relieve pressure, all the while keeping their weapons of mass destruction --
including their anthrax, their botulin and their VX -- to themselves? That's the cause of concern.
Q So the President doesn't believe that this process is working or in any way positive?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President doesn't believe that Iraq has disarmed.
Q Ari, I wonder if you could lay out for us something that Secretary Ridge said today to reporters about the role of
Khalid Sheik Mohammed and the recent increase in the terror alert. How much was our knowledge of his plans a part of
that increase?
MR. FLEISCHER: Without getting into anything specific -- and as you know when the terror alert went up, it went for a
variety of factors -- it is accurate to say that several cases in those factors there were the ties to Khalid Sheik
Mohammed.
Q That we had knowledge of plans he intended to carry out in the United States?
MR. FLEISCHER: We had information, we had various reporting, all of which to varying degrees could be traced back to
Khalid Sheik Mohammed. And that gave more creditability to our concerns. Sometimes we talk about the amount of chatter.
And if you remember, I pointed out to you, sometimes it's not only the amount of chatter, it's the quality of chatter.
And in the case of quality of chatter, you can say that that is also attributable to anything that would be connected to
Khalid Sheik Mohammed. I think we had that conversation here before, and that's when I used the word quality.
Q He's been under indictment in the U.S. since the mid-'90s. I gather there is no plan at this point to bring him back
and actually try him, but rather just to continue to interrogate him. Is that accurate?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, at this point, I am not going to be able to provide you any information about his whereabouts, or
whether he is/is not in any one or other persons or nation's custody. At this point, there's nothing further to add
about that. Let's just say it's been a good day for all around the world, except for al Qaeda.
Q But no imminent plans to try him before an American court?
MR. FLEISCHER: I have nothing further to report on the topic.
Q Can I ask you one tiny little thing? Does the administration intend to do something on its Medicare plan tomorrow? Do
you intend to unveil something?
MR. FLEISCHER: Tomorrow the President has a speech at the American Medical Association and the President will discuss
many items in his health care agenda, it won't only be one item. The President has a rather robust health care agenda,
as part of the domestic policy initiatives. And he'll have several things to talk about.
Q How widely does the President intend for the drug benefit that he favors will be added to Medicare? How widely does he
anticipate that that would be applied to all beneficiaries in the traditional program, as well as to beneficiaries that
would choose to go into the reform program?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President thinks it's vital that all seniors receive prescription drug coverage. The President thinks
that all seniors deserve more choices and better benefits. And that's what the President is focusing on.
And one great example of this, there are some people in Congress, of course, who are going to weigh in on the
President's policies on Medicare. And of course those members of Congress enjoy a private sector health plan called the
Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan. And the President thinks it's entirely appropriate for members of Congress to have
private options and private plans that get them their prescription drugs, as well as other plans that get them their
benefits.
And the President thinks that more choices, more options, better benefits are good enough for members of Congress, he
thinks they ought to be good enough for all citizens -- in addition to existing Medicare programs.
Q So a benefit that would be available through the reform program that is modeled on the FEHB or program that you
described, as well as a benefit for those that are currently in the traditional program?
MR. FLEISCHER: And the President's focus includes -- when I say more options and better benefits, that includes, of
course fee for service programs in Medicare and in other ways, as well.
Q We've got a shifting dynamic here where the action, in effect -- the congressional leaders are poised to take a much
sharper role in shaping the bill, the action on the bill going forward. What role does the President anticipate the
White House will play in the process going forward? And will he be satisfied to leave the details about how the benefit
is structured to congressional leaders?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, the President very much wants to work with Congress on this. It's important for members of Congress
to play a key role here. But the most important thing of all is to get prescription drugs to our nation's seniors. The
Democrats and Republicans have to declare a cease-fire and start working together.
There's a reason seniors haven't gotten prescription drugs before, and it's because too many people would rather fight
than act; too many people would rather engage in division than form unity to get prescription drugs to seniors. That's
going to be the key test this year. The President is demonstrating his will; members of Congress are demonstrating their
will; and the President hopes that a new environment will be created in Washington so that will can be followed by a way
of getting prescription drugs to seniors.
Ken.
Q Ari, going back to your answer to David's question, if I understand you correctly, there is no way that Saddam Hussein
can ever truly satisfy this administration because no matter how much or how little he disgorges in the way of illicit
weapons, you will always say, well, how do we know there isn't more buried somewhere, how do we know he doesn't have
some here or some there?
If that's the case, if that's the administration's attitude, that he's simply so untrustworthy that we can never know,
no matter how much he gives up, how can he possibly satisfy you?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, that's why I put it the way I did. That Saddam Hussein has put himself in a Catch-22, where he
says, I do not have any weapons that violate the United Nations resolutions -- but I just found a few that I'm about to
destroy. Why does he keep finding things that he says he never, ever had? Which gives rise to the question, what does he
have that he is continuing to hide when we know, as a starting point, that the United Nations found the anthrax, found
the botulin, found the VX?
If Saddam Hussein would all of the sudden come out with the 26,000 liters of anthrax, the 38,000 liters of botulin, the
area chemicals that 30,000 empty chemical warheads -- which, of course, I think at last count some 12 had been found,
leading to the question, where's the other 29,900? These are the issues that decide whether Saddam Hussein has disarmed
completely, totally or not. And these are the issues that Saddam Hussein still will not answer.
Q But your answer -- if I take your answer to David's question right, what you're saying is that no matter how much he
produces, no matter how much evidence he were to produce, you still won't believe him because you'll still believe that
there might be something else out there that nobody knew about that might be there?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think the burden is on Saddam Hussein to show where these weapons are, particularly when -- if you
recall Secretary Powell's presentation -- we know because we heard it that there are coded communications where they
refer to the nerve agents that they have. There are conversations that they're having about these very weapons that we
worry the most about.
Q Ari, is the President -- to what degree is the President concerned that the longer this whole process drags on, the
greater will be the erosion of his political support here at home?
MR. FLEISCHER: None. It's just not part of the equation. If the President makes a decision to go to war, the President
will do so on the basis of national security and national security alone.
Q Ari, if I can get back to Campbell's point about regime change. What was the White House reaction to the overwhelming
opposition by the Arab League this weekend to a proposal calling for Saddam to be exiled?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, number one, I think as people who have watched the Arab world closely know, even the suggestion by
several nations that Saddam Hussein be exiled is an extraordinary development. So I think, frankly, the focus is just
the opposite. I think that Saddam Hussein has few to no friends left in the leadership of the Arab world because of the
type of regime that he has run, how despotic he is, and he does not exactly have a great number of allies left in the
world.
Q Any disappointment that there was no -- that among the countries that did support the measure, you didn't have Egypt,
you didn't have Syria, you didn't have Jordan, you didn't have Saudi Arabia? Any concern that some of the larger
economic, if not military powers, are not yet on board among Arab League members?
MR. FLEISCHER: No, I think the President -- if you were to put the question to the President, the President would tell
you that he is, indeed, satisfied with the cooperation he is getting from much of the Arab world.
Q Ari, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. was saying that the second resolution could come for a vote shortly after Friday,
after Hans Blix presents his report. How close are you to getting the nine votes that you need?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, as I've been saying for weeks, I think we will not know what the actual vote count will be until
the vote takes place. That typically is the pattern of the United Nations. And so the vote would likely take place
sometime shortly after Mr. Blix's report, and we won't know what the outcome is probably until very close to that vote.
Q Is there any possibility that you won't bring it for a vote? This is definitely going for a vote?
MR. FLEISCHER: The President has always said that he is confident that in the end the United Nations will vote to
approve the resolution. But think about the resolution that's been discussed. Think about what it means to vote against
that resolution. What it means to vote against it simply means that basically it's a backing away from the terms of
1441. The President doesn't think that anybody would want to do that. But, nevertheless, we'll find out. There have been
many issues that have been voted on before at the United Nations that moved forward where there was not clarity until
closer to the vote, and we shall see.
Q Ari, back to Turkey, if I may. You've said there is a Plan B, it's going to work, we'll be successful either way. Is
there a point -- are we at the point where we have to go for Plan B?
MR. FLEISCHER: Obviously, if we go to Plan B you will know about it. But at this point, it still is a matter that is
being studied.
Q Ari, the lead editorial in this morning's Washington Times is headlined, "A War Decision." And it contends, the very
act of further delay would tend to undercut the perceived need for urgent action. While this morning's lead editorial in
The New York Times is headlined, "The Rush to War." My question to you as the President's media analyst, do you suspect
that the New York Times would get –
MR. FLEISCHER: Is that a promotion or a demotion? I'm going to work with this. (Laughter.)
Q Well, I think you do pretty well. As the President's media analyst, do you suspect that the New York Times would get
behind our war effort if only Iraq were to open a males-only golf club, like Augusta, Georgia?
MR. FLEISCHER: This is why I believe in exchange programs among newspaper editorial page editors. (Laughter.) Let them
share time with each other.
Q Ari, among the nine Democratic candidates for President, not one of these has, to my knowledge, been willing to
deplore the candidacy of Al Sharpton, like Leon Panetta has just done. And my question, even though Mr. Panetta is a
Democrat, surely you and the President commend him for doing what all those presidential candidates are apparently
afraid to do; don't you, Ari?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think the Democratic presidential candidates have a lot of issues that they're going to be debating
each other about. And I have no intention of putting myself in the middle of their very interesting and lively debates
to come.
Q Ari, I have two questions for you. Following up on Terry's question about the article in The Observer, you say you
never do comment on intelligence matters. But the article also specifies that six of the countries the U.S. is trying to
get to vote in favor of the second resolution are being monitored. If they were to ask the U.S. government about that,
would they also get an answer, we don't comment on intelligence matters?
MR. FLEISCHER: My answer is the same in all cases, and that's the long-standing answer and policy, as you're all very
familiar with here.
Q What is the White House doing now to try to break the filibuster on the Miguel Estrada nomination?
MR. FLEISCHER: The communications are continuing with members of Congress. The open offer is for Miguel Estrada to meet
with any Democratic senators who have questions. And, interestingly, after the offer was made for Democratic senators to
meet with him, hardly any expressed any interest in it. We will continue to talk to those Democrat members of Congress,
and I think we will ultimately find out whether or not there are sufficient number of moderates who are so uncomfortable
with this that they will give a different message to the Democratic leadership. We certainly hope that's the case, and
the President will continue to make the case for somebody he views as a very good man.
Connie.
Q Thank you. Two questions, please. A few months ago, I asked if the President would lift the executive order about
assassinations, publicly declare Saddam Hussein a terrorist and put out an award for his capture. Now that apparently
happened this weekend in Pakistan. Why won't the President seriously consider this option now?
MR. FLEISCHER: The ban remains in place, and it just speaks for itself. That action speaks for itself. There's nothing
really further I can add about it.
Q But why does it remain in place? Why?
MR. FLEISCHER: Because the President has not made any determination to lift it.
Q Ari, you talked on Turkey a lot about the democratic process there. And apparently, according to what Turkish
diplomats tell us, about 95 percent of Turks are opposed to the direction that the U.S. is taking with respect to Iraq.
What is the case, why should a Turkish parliamentarian support the deployment of U.S. troops, given that 95 percent of
the Turks are opposed to it?
MR. FLEISCHER: Because the President thinks that the issue of how to disarm Saddam Hussein remains a front and center
issue for all in Turkey and around the world; that this is a threat that if Turkey and others don't deal with today will
only grow bigger, will grow worse and will have to be dealt with some other day because Saddam Hussein is not disarming.
He continues to have weapons of mass destruction, and it's only a matter of time -- as history has shown with Saddam
Hussein -- between now and when he actually uses them.
What the United States has seen, since September 11th, is we are the target -- often are target for these type of
attacks. Other nations around the world, or American interests around the world have often been attacked. And we do have
fears that Saddam Hussein could be the next attacker, or that Saddam Hussein could pass his weapons of mass destruction
on to terrorists to try to get away with a stealth attack, an attack that doesn't have his fingerprints attached to it.
And these are the fears that drive the President.
Q So the idea is that the Turkish parliament is kicking this threat down the road, not facing up to it, not dealing with
it?
MR. FLEISCHER: Again, we were -- the vote is a disappointment because the President thinks that it's very important for
the world to join together to disarm Saddam Hussein. Turkey remains a NATO ally. But, nevertheless, if the President
makes the decision to use force, whatever the route militarily chosen, it will lead to military success.
Q I want to try Plan B on the plan B question. How long will the United States wait to see if Turkey is going to
reconsider this? And it's –
MR. FLEISCHER: John and Mark, the reason I cannot answer this question for you right now -- when would you see a plan B
-- because as I said at the top, this is something that's being studied. And I can't get ahead of when decisions are
made and actually may be taken. So if action is taken, you will be notified. It will be reported. It will be visible.
And so I can't guess how long that process will be.
Q Ari, does Khalid Sheik Mohammed fit into the category for a military tribunal?
MR. FLEISCHER: Any decisions like that would have to be made by the President, and we try to fill you in on those. Just
as you know, we, on matters of criminal justice, fill you in. And there's nothing like that, that I've heard discussed,
so I don't have any information for you.
Q You've described him repeatedly as the mastermind of 9/11, you and others.
MR. FLEISCHER: Correct.
Q How do you think he ultimately will be brought to justice?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think it's too soon to say. I think this just happened. Obviously, we're very pleased with it.
Obviously, we are hoping that this will lead to substantial additional information on al Qaeda, on al Qaeda's plans and
al Qaeda's operations. And it's just too soon to say beyond that.
Q Can I ask a question on Khalid Sheik Mohammed, and one about Turkey? In the effort to ascertain what he knows about
the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden, how much pressure and what kind of pressure does the President think should be
brought to bear on Khalid Sheik Mohammed in the interrogation process?
MR. FLEISCHER: The standard for any type of interrogation of somebody in American custody is to be humane and to follow
all international laws and accords dealing with this type subject. That is precisely what has been happening, and
exactly what will happen.
Q I have a second question on Turkey. Can you just assess for us what the risks are with pursuing Plan A, in two
sentences? One, is there any concern the President has in sending troops to Turkey, given the overwhelming public
hostility to the deployment of troops on Turkish soil? And, secondly, given the support the President has shown to this
Islamic secular government, is there any concern that the push for deployment of U.S. troops is destablizing that
government?
MR. FLEISCHER: Turkey has proven that it is, indeed, a democracy. And it is important to follow the will of a democracy
as expressed by its elected officials. And so, as I say, Turkey is reviewing this, themselves. And this has just
happened; we'll see what the ultimate outcome is.
Q Have you any concern about safety for American troops?
MR. FLEISCHER: Turkey is a NATO ally, and Turkey is a democracy. And as such, we are friends.
Q Ari, on the aid package to Turkey, if the troops don't go to Turkey, then the aid package vanishes?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, all matters are being reviewed, and again, it is too soon to say what would happen with that.
Turkey is reviewing it, we're reviewing it. We'll find out.
Q -- possibility that we could give part of the aid package to Turkey even if troops are not allowed to –
MR. FLEISCHER: It means that this surprise and disappointment is still being looked into from both Turkey and the United
States' point of view, to see exactly what the next steps will be. At this point, as of Monday at noon, it is unclear,
it is still being looked into. We shall see.
Q You say the President is going to the AMA tomorrow to give a speech. There is also a group of victims of medical
malpractice who are in town, and they want to meet with the President. One of them is a gentleman named Richard Flag
(phonetic) who is a Vietnam Vet who voted for the President. And I just spoke to him, and he said that he was diagnosed
with a tumor in his left lung. The surgeon took out his right lung, his healthy right lung. And he's now ashamed that he
voted for the President, because the President is seeking to limit what he can get in terms of non-economic damages.
And I'm wondering two things. One, why won't the President meet with victims of medical malpractice, just to get their
point of view? And, two, why won't he meet also with a wide range of Americans who asked to meet with the President who
are opposed to the war, including religious leaders?
MR. FLEISCHER: On the first question, Russell, I would urge everybody to be at the speech tomorrow. The President, in
his remarks tomorrow, is going to talk about the issues involving medical liability. And he is going to talk about
problems that do come up with doctors and mistakes that can be made by doctors and patient's right to just and fair
compensation.
Patient's safety remains a paramount concern. And I think you'll be interested on what the President has to say on that
important part of this issue tomorrow. As always, the President meets with a variety of groups and hears a variety of
concerns. And we'll keep you informed of who he meets with.
Q Has he met with any of those representatives, Ari?
Q Ari –
MR. FLEISCHER: Go ahead.
Q Ari, is there -- going back to the British newspaper, The Observer, is there really a need to spy on the non-permanent
members of the Security Council, to wiretap their phones? Is it true what the newspaper is –
MR. FLEISCHER: I just go right back to my answer to Terry on that question. And, again, I hope you can appreciate, the
reason that these questions never get answered -- and not to infer that that means a yes or a no, because it's
impossible for you to make those judgments, because we are not -- I'm not indicating to you yes or no.
But I gave an example at the beginning. If I said, yes, we are, you would know something about what we do with our
intelligence. If I say, no, we're not, you start asking that question around the world to try to use the process of
elimination to find out what the United States does, from an intelligence point of view.
And that is not a position that I think the American people would want the government to go down the line and start to
describe every specific item of intelligence. So I'm not saying yes and I'm not saying no, I'm stating the long-standing
policy of the government on questions exactly like this, which do come up from time to time.
Q Ari, back on some other issues. Since the 9/11 mastermind is captured, does this give a glimmer of hope that Osama bin
Laden could be captured, dead or alive?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, as I indicated, often a capture like this leads to additional information of a variety of natures.
It could be information as to the whereabouts of different people; it could be information about plans that are underway
or future plans that have been made. And so we're hoping that it will lead to additional information; typically, it
does.
Q Well, what about Osama bin Laden?
MR. FLEISCHER: It's impossible to guess, April, we don't know. Perhaps that will be an outcome, but it's impossible to
guess.
Q All right. And another question, could you give graphic detail as to your disappointment about Turkey? (Laughter.)
MR. FLEISCHER: Work with me, is there something specific you're looking for? (Laughter.)
Q I mean, just, though I understand –
MR. FLEISCHER: Would this be verbal, would this be –
Q -- smarty-pants. (Laughter.) I mean, you keep saying you're disappointed.
MR. FLEISCHER: When we talked about this issue some two weeks ago, and I said to you that there's a Plan A and an Plan
B, the preferable is Plan A -- the preferable is Plan A for a variety of geographic reasons. But Plan B is also a very
militarily viable option, which will be successful. So I think it rather speaks for itself.
Q Tell me about Plan B. (Laughter.)
MR. FLEISCHER: Nice try, April, thank you very much.
Q Going back to the previous question, what is the U.S. policy about discussing intelligence information against other
countries from the podium?
MR. FLEISCHER: The policy is the same about any country; we do not talk about intelligence.
Q I'm trying to square that with earlier in a briefing when you reminded us that Colin Powell spoke about wiretaps of
Iraqi officials.
MR. FLEISCHER: Sure, and as you know, that was after a very lengthy declassification process involving the situation
uniquely in Iraq.
Q Well, all we're asking you here to do is if you can, in effect, declassify -- (laughter.) What is the difference? You
declassify stuff that helps make your case on Iraq. We're asking you if you're bugging our allies. It seems to be –
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, first of all, I'm not making any presumption that it is classified. I'm not saying whether there is
or is not anything of the kind that you are asking.
Q Well, if there's not of a kind, that's why I don't understand why you can't say it's not of the kind.
MR. FLEISCHER: Because then you're playing process of elimination around the world, which is a process we do not –
Q Well, we've already eliminated one, Iraq. (Laughter.) How about a couple more, the two that are mentioned in this
memo, that very clearly –
MR. FLEISCHER: This is something that those of you who have covered the White House for many years know exists --
pre-exists prior to this administration, and it is a standard response on any such questions about intelligence.
Q But you do know there have been times when officials have knocked down that intelligence, and you're certainly not
doing that today.
Q Ari, you've described the Catch-22 of Saddam Hussein in such a way I think most reasonable people would conclude that
the war is inevitable. Why shouldn't people then further conclude that the President has been less than candid about his
decision to go to war?
MR. FLEISCHER: Because the President has not made any final decision. What the President has done is put in place a
military buildup that puts increased pressure on Saddam Hussein so, hopefully, this can be done through diplomacy. The
President has said that what remains important, as you heard him say last week in the Cabinet Room, is complete
disarmament -- complete, total and immediate disarmament -- which is nothing less than what the United Nations called on
Saddam Hussein to do.
So, for anybody to suggest that it is somehow not in the ordinary for the President of the United States to say the
standards of the United Nations must be met, then what you're suggesting is United Nations standards need not be met.
And that's not a standard that the President holds.
Thank you.