For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 15, 2003
President's Radio Address
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. This weekend marks a bitter anniversary for the people of Iraq. Fifteen years ago, Saddam
Hussein's regime ordered a chemical weapons attack on a village in Iraq called Halabja. With that single order, the
regime killed thousands of Iraq's Kurdish citizens. Whole families died while trying to flee clouds of nerve and mustard
agents descending from the sky. Many who managed to survive still suffer from cancer, blindness, respiratory diseases,
miscarriages, and severe birth defects among their children.
The chemical attack on Halabja -- just one of 40 targeted at Iraq's own people -- provided a glimpse of the crimes
Saddam Hussein is willing to commit, and the kind of threat he now presents to the entire world. He is among history's
cruelest dictators, and he is arming himself with the world's most terrible weapons.
Recognizing this threat, the United Nations Security Council demanded that Saddam Hussein give up all his weapons of
mass destruction as a condition for ending the Gulf War 12 years ago. The Security Council has repeated this demand
numerous times and warned that Iraq faces serious consequences if it fails to comply. Iraq has responded with defiance,
delay and deception.
The United States, Great Britain and Spain continue to work with fellow members of the U.N. Security Council to confront
this common danger. We have seen far too many instances in the past decade -- from Bosnia, to Rwanda, to Kosovo -- where
the failure of the Security Council to act decisively has led to tragedy. And we must recognize that some threats are so
grave -- and their potential consequences so terrible -- that they must be removed, even if it requires military force.
As diplomatic efforts continue, we must never lose sight of the basic facts about the regime of Baghdad.
We know from recent history that Saddam Hussein is a reckless dictator who has twice invaded his neighbors without
provocation -- wars that led to death and suffering on a massive scale. We know from human rights groups that dissidents
in Iraq are tortured, imprisoned and sometimes just disappear; their hands, feet and tongues are cut off; their eyes are
gouged out; and female relatives are raped in their presence.
As the Nobel laureate and Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel, said this week, "We have a moral obligation to intervene
where evil is in control. Today, that place is Iraq."
We know from prior weapons inspections that Saddam has failed to account for vast quantities of biological and chemical
agents, including mustard agent, botulinum toxin and sarin, capable of killing millions of people. We know the Iraqi
regime finances and sponsors terror. And we know the regime has plans to place innocent people around military
installations to act as human shields.
There is little reason to hope that Saddam Hussein will disarm. If force is required to disarm him, the American people
can know that our armed forces have been given every tool and every resource to achieve victory. The people of Iraq can
know that every effort will be made to spare innocent life, and to help Iraq recover from three decades of totalitarian
rule. And plans are in place to provide Iraqis with massive amounts of food, as well as medicine and other essential
supplies, in the event of hostilities.
Crucial days lie ahead for the free nations of the world. Governments are now showing whether their stated commitments
to liberty and security are words alone -- or convictions they're prepared to act upon. And for the government of the
United States and the coalition we lead, there is no doubt: we will confront a growing danger, to protect ourselves, to
remove a patron and protector of terror, and to keep the peace of the world.
Thank you for listening.
END