LARRY
KING, HOST: Tonight, exclusive. A very rare interview with Sean Penn, his
first interview, in fact, since that controversial trip to Iraq. He never
talks to anyone, but he's talking to me. In- depth and personal for the
whole hour, and he's next on LARRY KING WEEKEND.
Welcome to
a very special edition of LARRY KING WEEKEND. Our special guest for the
full program tonight is Sean
Penn, the
three- time Oscar nominated actor, also director, producer and screenwriter,
recently returned from a
three-day
trip to Baghdad.
This is his first interview concerning that trip, which, of course, caused great discussion in the United States and elsewhere in the world, as well.
One quote about
his acting ability given to me by Marlon Brando, "He's the best actor living."
Of course, a lot of otherguys are dead before him, but currently living,
Sean Penn is the best.
Sean Penn,
back from Baghdad. In October, he spent $56,000 of his own money to place
an advertisement in "The
Washington
Post" decrying the possibility of going to war against Iraq. The ad was
an open letter to President Bush.It included the plea, "Sir, I beg you,
help save America before yours is a legacy of shame and horror." And in
mid-December
a three-day trip to Baghdad.
What brought
all this about?
SEAN PENN,
ACTOR/DIRECTOR: Well, the letter, I think, was brought about by a, sort
of, increasing feeling of
shame on my
own part in not participating in what, for me, was not necessarily so much
a political but a -- to the
degree that
humanitarianism and civic responsibility are the same thing, I think that
it's -- we're living now in what
Mailer said
is probably the first century that -- because of technology and the conflicts
in the world, maybe the first century in the history of man that the Earth
survives without us.
And I have
children who are going to face that century and live in that century. And
so I felt that the popular media, by and large, which is really what most
people who don't have even the opportunities that I have in this country,
by my luck and good fortune in this country, which gives me, I think, an
added responsibility this way -- don't have the time to attack their own
ignorance on issues beyond popular media -- you know, you work a job, two
jobs, you get home, you're exhausted, you kiss your child, maybe your feet
get up and you turn on the television, and that's what you have. And I
felt that it wasn't addressing enough in the area of debate, enough of
reflection on something that's such a serious issue as what's going on
right now.
KING: Well, couldn't the other side say the exact same Mailer quote and say, "We have great worries? This country,this Iraq is going to bring damage to its neighbors. It's going to spread it. It's got these terrible weapons. We have to do something"?
PENN: Yes.
KING: Couldn't that be made as a humanity plea?
PENN: Yes,
and that's where we have to start. We start by taking out a pad of paper
and every mother and father in the country -- and they can do it while
this interview goes on -- writes down the words: "Dear Mr. and Mrs. So-and-so;
we regret to inform you that your son, John, has died in combat in Iraq."
And then you have to finish that letter in a way that will comfort you.
If you can
do that, then you have one side of the debate and I respect that position.
But until we have the information, until we demand upon ourselves to avail
of ourselves that information, upon our government to show us the evidence
that they have, as long as we are going to be a country with a respect
for the rule of law, we have to understand that if we go to war without
having examined these things, that we are then going to be left with the
question: "What America is it we protected?"
KING: So you did this ad and went to Baghdad, because you felt this country, its president, its administration, had not given you sufficient information to support its claim?
PENN: I believe that this administration is, in good intentions, inadvertently teaching a master class in the manifestation of rage into hatred. And...
KING: With good intentions?
PENN: I think that it's just misguided. What we need, I believe, in leadership is counseling that rage which is -- rage can be productive, but the -- I'm not a pacifist. I'm neither a Democrat nor a Republican. I'm an American. I'm a father. And...
KING: Would have fought in World War II?
PENN: Probably
would have fought in -- would aspire to be able to say I would have fought
in World War II.
And I don't
-- I don't come here with specifically aan anti-war message. I believe that
because of this -- the privileged position that I'm in and the opportunity
that I had to go to Iraq and the access that I had to people -- some in
the media, some in the military, and many Iraqis as well -- that that gives
me this added responsibility to help the cause of promoting debate.
KING: Did you
realize that there'd be a lot of criticism, first on "Who is this actor?
What makes him an international
specialist
on conflicts of war and peace?"
I mean, every
American has the right to speak out, but who is this guy with -- you know,
why -- what makes him...
PENN: No, but
the opponents of actors speaking generally voted for Ronald Reagan. And
I remember John Huston
had a comment,
you know, "It's one thing to have an actor in the White House, quite another
a bad actor."
But I'm not
here as an actor. I'm not here as anything but a citizen. And I believe...
KING: But a citizen, as you said, couldn't have done this, or would have done it, wouldn't have been on this show. If it was John Jones that went...
PENN: But that's
the heightened responsibility I believe we have. And I -- you know, again,
you know, I could never go into politics; you know, as Brenard Beam (ph)
said, "I only have one face."
But I -- and
it's why, you know, I don't think my most productive position in a situation
like this is to strongly take one particular side or another, so much that
it is that I have been afforded the access and opportunity to see that
the debate is not been stimulated enough in this country.
KING: When you placed the ad you knew there'd be a lot of talk. And, like, what led to the idea of going to Baghdad? And how did you do that? How'd you make the arrangements?
PENN: I was -- as a result of the ad -- the letter tthat I wrote the president, I was invited by the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, Norman Solomon. And I went on a trip that was organized by that group.
KING: And that is a -- does that have an agenda, the Institute for...
PENN: It's an American non-profit think tank. And they basically -- I think their agenda is primarily motivated by the fact that facts are stubborn. And it's their pursuit to propagate facts.
KING: Did you go with an agenda?
PENN: I would say that I went without any reluctance. I felt that -- when I was given that opportunity, immediately drawn to go. It was absolutely clear to me that the Iraqis may, to some degree, propagandize that event. But I don't necessarily see myself as as potent a propaganda weapon to the Iraqis as those who have considered this, sort of, knee-pad hound of Mr. Murdoch who went after me in this way. And so...
KING:
Murdoch went after you, do you mean (UNINTELLIGIBLE).
PENN: Yes, all that, all those outlets. But I think that there -- you know, there's a commonsense balance. And to go there and to have a couple of newspapers say things that I didn't say...
KING: Yes, I want to clear all of that up. We'll get to everything. The essential question is, why'd you go?
PENN: Well,
I think there are a couple of issues on -- when I wrote the letter before
I went to Baghdad, one of the things that became a discussion point --
those who I consulted as I was writing the piece -- had to do with -- you
know, I think the cynical view that all of this is pissing in the wind;
that we're headed for some kind of a disaster. I'm not in a position to
accept that as a father of two children.
And so, I
think that there became one thing that I believed very strongly in, which
is is that we have been conditioned often to underestimate the power of
preaching to the choir. Because the choir itself, I believe, is out there,
in terms of the debate that I am looking for.
KING: We'll
be right back with more of Sean Penn. He's with us for the full show on
this special edition of LARRY
KING WEEKEND.
Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: We are back on LARRY KING WEEKEND with Sean Penn.
Recently I interviewed Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and asked him about Sean Penn. Here was his comment.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
KING: Does that bother you...
DONALD H. RUMSFELD, U.S. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE: You know, I...
KING: ... celebrities coming out against it?
RUMSFELD: I guess it doesn't. I think that people have a right in our country to say what they want to say and to think what they want to think.
KING: Do you think it's harmful for Sean Penn to go over to Baghdad and express feelings of support for them?
RUMSFELD: I was not -- didn't have enough free time to follow what he said or how he behaved himself. I just don't know. But it -- yet, yet, I would say that the national dialogue on this subject has been a good one and an important one.And the debate in the Congress and the discussion in the United Nations and the discussions on television and in the press; we needed that.
(END VIDEO CLIP) KING: Would you agree with that?
PENN: Well, first, Larry, I would correct you there. I didn't say anything in support of the Iraqis...
KING: I misspoke to say that you had spoken in support.
PENN: Yes,
I think what's interesting in watching Secretary Rumsfeld in that piece
is when you ask him about people's involvement. And he reluctantly says,
"I guess it doesn't bother me."
I think there's
a lot to be seen in that. We know that the White House also released statements
saying that -- when asked about protests -- in that case it was the anti-war
demonstrators they were referring to -- they acknowledged protest, I felt,
very condescendingly in this case, and -- as a longstanding tradition to
be applauded. Protest in this kind of circumstance is not a longstanding
tradition to be applauded. It is a human cry of American citizens saying,
"Please pay attention to this," and it demands to be heard.
KING: But you realize, Sean, that these people and the United States may be at war, and the people that you visited may be shooting people who get that letter you described earlier. Jane Fonda was in that place when there was a war going on. She went to North Vietnam. Did you think at all that you may be hurting your country's position, not in speaking out, but in making the trip?
PENN: I think
that there are -- you know, I -- as I just said, I think that there are
things that the administration is simply doing to herd us into this position.
We as citizens have to take stock of our own conscience on these issues.
And I felt very sure, and do feel sure, that I didn't hurt this country's
position.
On the other
hand, this is not without limitation, in my mind. I spent nearly an hour
and a half with Tariq Aziz...
KING: The deputy
-- the foreign minister?/font>
PENN: Yes.
I don't believe that, despite some compelling arguments -- and I went in
as a very suspicious listener
KING: So you
did not come back as any sort of spokesman for the Iraqi point of view?
PENN: Do I
sound like it?
KING: No, you
don't sound like it. So the purpose was to what?
PENN: The purpose
was information. You know, these trips can be -- this kind of a thing can
be seen as a -- the brief interlude that it is.But we know from places
that we visit, you say, "Well, you know, we're going to -- I'm going to
go to New Orleans for the first time." Gosh, I can imagine what's that
like. I can imagine my hotel room. You get there, it's completely different,
it's not -- it's a completely different thing.
KING: Let me
ask you about Iraq. First, were they familiar with you?
PENN: Not particularly.
Some.
KING: But you
were not walking down the street, major movie star?
PENN: No, I
was walking down the street as a Western face. Often I had a camera on
me. And, you know, Iraq's -- on the streets of Iraq, the topic is -- would
be the topic -- it's been said before, but baseball being the topic here;
there the topic is sanctions. And a Western face there, I believe, represents
some hope to them that there's discussion on this.
KING: Much
American pop culture there?
PENN: Not a
lot at this stage. However, on television, yes. I watched you.
KING: Yes,
we're seen in Baghdad, right? OK, story of alleged quotes initially turned
up, I think, on the "Drudge Report;" was picked up by the "New York Post,"which
was a strong critic of you, and that's a Murdoch paper.
PENN: Well,
see, being discredited, I feel in fantastic company with a lot of people.
Here's what I think about when I'm asked something like this. That as somebody
who's had, you know, in my own world of movies and all of that stuff, a
20-year history of a front-row seat to accuracies and inaccuracies in the
media -- and I've been very critical of the media at times on that level
-- but I would take this opportunity to applaud a section
KING: Was this
a bum rap? Did you not say anything that -- did you not say that Iraq is
completely clear of weapons of mass destruction? How would you know?
PENN: You know,
I think it's just a preposterous thing and I think there's an argument
to be made that it's
KING: Former
inspector.
PENN: Former
inspector, impeccable record as a major in the United States Marines, combat
veteran. And, you
KING: You knew,
though -- you're smart enough to know that Iraq would use your trip. I
mean, you're not dumb.
PENN: Yes,
but I saw potentially more potent abuse of my trip propaganda-wise in this
country in the way that they capitalized on that thing. Yes, of course,
I knew that. Of course, I didn't expect to be told the truth on everything.
But I don't consider myself in Iraq -- in Iraqi propaganda, the significant
player that they'd like to portray me to be.They said that I said this,
they said that I said that. I think it's meaningless horse (EXPLETIVE DELETED)
-- excuse me -- you know, that is the waay that they behave. But, you know,
that's a price I was willing to pay.
KING: What
did you get from it? How long were you there?
PENN: Three
days.
KING: What
comes to mind? What's the first thing that struck you about Iraq, other
than the people talking about the sanctions? PENN: The desperate, sad conditions
of a country under 11 years of sanctions. I mean, when we talk about --
and, again, I feel I need to go back to that I am not standing here as
a pacifist. I'm not saying here ultimately that I am going to stand in
an anti-war position. I have a feeling that we are entering an age where
we can't -- we cannot afford the choice of military use. We can only exercise
it in the necessity.
KING: Because
we're the only superpower?
PENN: Well,
because -- we shouldn't under -- over-estimate what that will mean in terms
of world harmony. And I
KING: Let me
get a break and come back and we'll have you quote them. And I also want
to you ask you, what if the inspectors come back and find a lot of this
stuff?
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "I AM SAM")
PENN: I don't
understand exactly what you mean. You told me that you would be my lawyer.
MICHELLE PFEIFFER,
ACTRESS: Yes, Sam, I mean...
PENN: Golly,
because I thought -- maybe I must have misunderstood you.
PFEIFFER: I
told you that when we first met.
PENN: You said
you would be my lawyer?
PFEIFFER: Yes.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: I think
no matter how you feel about his opinions, you will not deny that Sean
Penn is one of America's, if not the world's, finest actors. Three-time
Academy Award nominee, back from Iraq. And he's not here to talk about
a movie, but to talk about that trip.
PENN: Yes.
I would say first -- I want to go back for a moment. You asked -- you know,
this preposterous accusation that I went there with the presumption of
being a weapons inspectors in some way. There is -- you know, one of these
-- the areas of information that I thinkk is -- has been, sort of, consistently
disregarded in most popular media, there is this discussion about the possibility
-- whether the inspectors are able to fiind really. And often I've heard,
is it a needle in a haystack?
KING: If it's
there, we're going to find it, is what you're saying?
PENN: If it's
there, and we're given the time, we will find it.
KING: And if
we find it, does that mean your position is wrong?
PENN: Well,
that's assuming that my position is against the war. My position now is
that I do not see any evidence that we are under immediate threat, and
that we don't have the time to find out what's right.
KING: What
if neighbors are under threat, neighbors that we care about? What if Israel
is under threat?
PENN: Well,
that's where I think we have -- these are, again, issues that need to be
taken to the people in an
KING: And your
question is, it is not our destiny. I mean, your opinion is that we don't
go to war to help others or
PENN: I'd like
to voice the opinion of what's considered my opposition in this for a moment.
KING: OK.
PENN: And that's
what this is.
KING: What
surprised you about Iraq?
PENN: The warmth
of the people. You know, we are -- those anti- war friends of mine often
talk about -- and it
KING: But,
Sean, war is horrible. There are sick children in North Korea. There's
also sick children in Harlem.
PENN: You bet.
KING: And there's
sick children all over the world.
PENN: That's
right.
KING: And whenever
you're at war -- we've bombed Hiroshima to end World War II...
PENN: That's
right. And...
KING: ... and
maimed a lot of people.
PENN: ... that's
why we can't do it without very careful reflection. We've had all of this
time. Donald Rumsfeld has
KING: We'll
be right back with more of Sean Penn on this special edition of LARRY KING
WEEKEND. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
GEORGE W. BUSH,
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: We'd certainly prefer voluntary compliance
by Iraq. See,
(END VIDEO CLIP)
PENN: Yes.
Well, you know, a lot of this stuff happens as a conditioned response of
a, sort of, established
KING: Under
what circumstances would you support the government's action against Iraq?
What would they have to show you? What if -- you're saying, "Show me."
What if they showed you weapons of mass destruction and chemical warfare
outlets, all of that there...
PENN: All right.
KING: ... and
a despotic leader who you suggested would go to Bellevue running the show,
pushing the button?
PENN: Well,
let me see if it turns out that I come around to voicing my opinion, because
I certainly don't think that that's primary in this.
KING: So there
would be occasions you would take up arms?
PENN: Yes.
But I'm not going to be a party to that without voicing, you know, questions
first.
KING: What
-- are the Iraqi living in fear of thosee bombs coming?
PENN: I think
they're living in devastation. You've got these masses in incredible poverty.
We're creating a culture of those who are exploiting it, of players and
manipulators, as opposed to thinkers and strategists, that we're going
to have to deal with on the other end, who are also exploiting their own
people that way.
KING: What
do they say about their leader?
PENN: Well,
you know, I think that my trip -- I don't speak Arabic and I didn't presume
to be a journalist either. I went, again, as a citizen, and that was going
to mean to me what it meant moment by moment.
KING: But there's
no opposition in the country?
PENN: Well,
you know...
KING: Put (ph)
down.
PENN: No, there's
a -- I mean, there's a manipulated opposition by Saddam Hussein that he's
put together out of his own intelligence police to give an air of some
kind of democratization.
KING: Anyone
ever try to talk you out of going?
PENN: I made
a point of not telling anybody I was going.
KING: Did your
wife support you?
PENN: The joke
I made that she had her fingers crossed I wasn't sure in what direction.
That's a married man joke.
KING: But did
she say, "OK"?
PENN: She was
very supportive, yes.
KING: She didn't
say, "Don't go"?
PENN: No.
KING: Because
you have children and you never know when you're going into...
PENN: Well,
I went because I have children.
KING: We'll
be right back with more of Sean Penn. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE THIN RED LINE")
PENN: What
difference do you think you can make, one single man in all this madness?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) won't be for nothing.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: We're
back with Sean Penn. Should more actors speak up?
PENN: You know,
I have been so reluctant all my life in this area.
KING: Is this
the first time you've taken a major stand on a...
PENN: Well,
it's the first time we're facing what we're facing right now, I think.
KING: You haven't
supported candidates in the past, have you?
PENN: Here
and there, but not so much. It's something that, you know, I've tried to
do as much as I felt that I was being responsible to it and not just doing
it on a fly-by-night basis.
KING: Should
they?
PENN: I think
that, you know, this is nary I -- you know, I guess I have an opinion.
I think that at this point in time -- and by the way there are many ways
to voice your position, but it has to be considered, and to just disregard
the obligation by saying, "I'm not political, I don't believe in politics,"
that this isn't a political issue.
KING: So, in
other words, you're saying to your fellows, "If you have a thought, express
it."
PENN: I think
it has to happen now. I think it has to happen, yes.
KING: Your
father, the great Leo Penn, a great director, expressed his thoughts and
got black-listed in the horror of McCarthyism, which I was a kid and witnessed.
You didn't witness it, did you?
PENN: No.
KING: I witnessed
it. So, that was a narrowing, if you spoke out you were in trouble.
PENN: Yes,
when they...
KING: But you
grew up with the remnants of that, didn't you?
PENN: Well,
what I grew up with is the example of a great father who was a great man
and a patriot, who was not embittered by that time, but felt it was, you
know, an unfortunate incident of some kind of mass intoxication in this
country.
KING: Well,
was it?
PENN: Well,
it's the absence of betrayal. It's doing the best you can. And it's not
giving up a belief in the courage of this country and the potential of
this country. And it's -- if it's on a piece of paper, it's in the United
States Constitution.
KING: Anything
about Iraq that turns you off? Didn't like, aspect, I mean other than their
leader?
PENN: Yes.
KING: I mean
poverty is obvious. Anything that -- you know, that, "Boy, that's a --
wouldn't want to be here."
PENN: Well,
you know, I don't -- I think that I was so overwhelmed emotionally by the
sadness of what you see that, you know, I didn't find a broker to look
for a condo.
(LAUGHTER)
But no, it's
not a place -- you know, there's a lot repellent about it. And a lot of
what is repellent about it these
KING: What
-- we were faced then with they brought it on themselves. We didn't invade
Kuwait...
PENN: Well,
they brought it on themselves. What they brought on themselves, it turns
out, is a heightened support of their leader on the basis of it was American
bombs that dropped and maintained that devastation through sanctions.
KING: Back
with our remaining moments with Sean Penn right after these words.
(COMMERCIAL
BREAK)
KING: Touching
some other bases, were you -- was it difficult for you to do this? For
example, you were never the kind of guy that likes to go out and promote
movies. I remember the last time you were on, it was just how to get you
here. But you don't like -- you generally -- you're not a someone who craves
the spotlight. Was this difficult for you?
PENN: Well,
this is -- you're making it not as difficult as possible.
(LAUGHTER)
You know, it's
a -- it's a nerve-wracking thing. For me, it's...
KING: You've
been camera shy, right, and press shy?
PENN: Yes,
but I'm more shy of the shame I'll feel when my kids grow up and see I
didn't say anything.
KING: Were
you disappointed that you weren't known there, or it didn't matter?
(LAUGHTER)
PENN: No, this
is a common misperception of the -- what would be considered the inherent
narcissism of the
KING: Have
you gotten accustomed to the tabloids and all of the things that have hit
you in life?
PENN: Well,
you know, I'll say that I have -- when I -- when I want to giggle, I might
turn on, you know, somebody as self-satisfied as Bill O'Reilly for just
a moment, just to pretend that he means what he says.
KING: You think
he doesn't?
PENN: I don't
believe that the man's operating on his conscience. I don't think he's
necessarily a bad man, but if he --you know, he was a gossip reporter for
"Inside Edition" who's decided -- which, for me, says he probably wanted
to be an actor. So these generally are the things that the...
KING: Do you
get pained, though, when you see tabloids with, you know, when they --
"Sean Penn was with this
PENN: You know,
it's...
KING: It goes
with the territory?
PENN: It's
there and I don't -- and very, very difficult to argue in protection of,
you know, those of us who have so much opportunity when there are more
important things to think about.
KING: Why do
you like acting?
PENN: Well,
that's a presumption that I do. I love watching it.
KING: Is it
true that you might stop?
PENN: Well,
you know...
KING: And just
direct?
PENN: I would
like to -- I would like to do that, but right now, you know...
KING: You'd
like to be just a director someday?
PENN: Probably,
yes. Yes, I just don't find myself very prolific when it comes to the writing
of the scripts I would do. So once a year -- once every five years I would
get something I want to do.
KING: So why
are you doing something you're not crazy about?
PENN: Well,
I'm probably crazy about it, but it also drives me crazy. But I think right
now, as I look to the future, it's a different conversation, because the
future, for me, right now, is very much occupied with the other things
that we're talking about.
KING: So you
intend that this is going to be more a part of your life than playing Harry
Jones in "Desert Storm II"
PENN: You know,
I don't -- I don't think I'll be playing that role, but I...
KING: You played
a bad army guy once.
PENN: Yes,
I did. Yes.
KING: And what
was it called?
PENN: "Casualties
of War."
KING: "Casualties
of War," with Michael J. Fox. That was a hell of a movie, and you were
the villain.
PENN: Yes.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "CASUALTIES OF WAR")
PENN: And you?
You I don't know about.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: So you
may leave acting, you may just do directing. But we expect to hear from
you a lot more on issues of
PENN: I'm going
to do whatever...
KING: ... importance?
PENN: I'm going
to do whatever I feel I can do that will be productive, whether that's
in movies or anything else.
KING: So whatever
comes along that you feel hits you the right way you're going to go with
it?
PENN: Yes.
KING: Would
you go to North Korea?
PENN: If I
felt there was a productive reason to go, I think, is one answer to it.
Am I curious to go to North Korea? Yes.
KING: All right,
what do you think is going to happen with Iraq? Do you have a projection,
prediction?
PENN: Well,
one has to -- again, if you think...
KING: The interim
report's in.
PENN: Well,
paying attention to history, we can say you have to follow the money trail.
I don't think that ultimately it's going to be good business to go in.
KING: You mean
billion?
PENN: Billion.
In this case, we're talking about $200 billion. I wonder who's going to
pay for that? It's going to be you and me and everybody watching this show.
And then what will be the costs afterwards?
KING: Some
people think that.
PENN: Yes,
well, the problem with that is that if you're not committed to the game
of chicken -- which in this case I don't believe Saddam Hussein is going
to roll over -- if you're committed to the game of chicken and you back
out of it, then you're the paper tiger that Osama bin Laden says you are.
KING: Sean,
it's always good seeing you.
PENN: Thank
you very much.
KING: Thank
you for coming forward.
PENN: You bet.
KING: Sean
Penn, on this special edition of LARRY KING WEEKEND. We'll be back again
tomorrow night with
and I -- (UNINTELLIGIBLE)
in that conversation -- that it is legitimate for someone in my position
to quote him and to be a messenger of anything to do with that message.
And I'll say
also, you know, one thing I came away from Iraq on, again, as somebody
who is -- who really believes
that we are
-- that we do not have the evidence to bbe America, the America we want
to be, and go in right now, that as it -- there's a big difference between
Saddam Hussein and Iraq, and these are all very different circumstances.I
think there's probably two legitimate places for Saddam Hussein: it's either
Bellevue or a meat grinder. This man's a horror and a criminal, there's
no question about it.
On top of
that, when you take that on you find yourself learning about it, you know,
you spend 20 hours on airplanes reading about it, it's a way for me, as
a privileged American, in terms of the pursuit of this information, to
be able to invest this way and participate in the system the best way I
know how.
"'Iraq Daily'
claimed the American movie star Sean Penn has condemned the United States-British
threats to wage
war. 'Iraq
Daily' also claimed Penn confirmed that Iraq is completely clear of weapons
of mass destruction, and the
United Nations
must adopt a positive stance toward Iraq."
of this that
I had never seen this way, which is the war correspondents, the people
on the ground in Baghdad, which was, for me, a very valuable source.
anti-American
for them to abuse -- for those papers to abuse the press this way in a
discrediting campaign.
But, again,
you know, I'll give you an example of somebody who's a much better spokesman
on that category,
someone like
Scott Ritter who, you know, has...
know, to the
man, the journalists in Baghdad seconded that about him, as did everyone
that served under him.
But that's
not been the case in Murdoch's media.
would quote
somebody on that. Do I have time in this segment?
We'll be right
back with Sean Penn on this edition of LARRY KING WEEKEND. Don't go away.
You wanted
to quote someone.
I can say
from research, that I have worked hard to fact-check and so on and so forth,
the science that exists that has not been talked about, what they have
-- what it is that this country right noow is an incredibly sophisticated
crime scene with extremely capable investigators and with very high-tech
instrumentation, that by no means is it a needle in a haystack.
informed way.
And I think the way that things are -- that's why I wanted to refer to
this, because I think that this -- that ultimately where this conversation
goes has to do with the philosophical question of whether or not it's the
American manifest destiny to police the world, and in what cases do we
make those decisions.
protect the
world.
"Fellow Republicans,
it is the cause of Republicanism to resist concentration of power, public
or private, which
enforce such
conformity and inflicts such despotism. It is the cause of Republicanism
to ensure that power remainsin the hands of the people. And so help us
God, that is exactly what a Republican president will do with the help
of a Republican Congress.
"It is further
the cause of Republicanism to restore a clear understanding of the tyranny
of man over man in the world at large. It is our cause to dispel the foggy
thinking which avoids hard decisions and the delusion that a world conflict
will somehow resolve itself into a world of harmony. And this is hogwash."
And that is Barry Goldwater.And I also believe that it represents the platform
that our standing president ran on. And so when they use phrases like "a
new kind of world," we have to say, "Well, OK, but does that mean that
we ignore history?" Or do we say, "Wasn't the drug war a new kind of war?
And what kind of a disaster has that been to date?"
certainly
hits my heart -- the collateral damage, you know, involved with children
and innocent civilians anywhere that we might go militarily.
But to be
there, to be in the hospitals -- you don't want to have someone slam a
door too loud when one of these sick children is sleeping, much less drop
a bomb on this place. I couldn't find, in three days, an Iraqi who didn't
greet me with a smile. It liked -- and this doesn't speak to Iraq, it speaks
to the best of where we share a lot of things.
gone on television
innumerable times telling us of the hard evidence they have. Why aren't
they sharing that evidence with the United Nations inspectors? Why aren't
they saying: "Here's where it is. Go get it"?
the use of
military force is this nation's last option, its last choice. Yet if a
force becomes necessary to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction and
enforce the will of the United Nations, if force becomes necessary to secure
our country and to keep the peace, America will act deliberately. America
will act decisively. And America will prevail because we've got the finest
military in the world.
KING:
We're back with Sean Penn.
Don Rumsfeld
said he welcomed the discussion, but you accused President Bush of trying
to stifle the debate.
Washington
culture, I think. And they have their, sort of, attack dogs that are sent
out in various -- in most cases right-wing groups that come out to, I think,
discredit things.
I think, you
know, one of the things that is -- that they've done very effectively having
to do with, you know, in the case of my profession, actors speaking out,
you know, they can give it an air of buffoonery, instead of celebrating
somebody stepping up and voicing their opinion.
So I feel
that, while I believe that, as he said it, I think that he believes that
he's in support of it. But I don't think that you can twist facts in an
effort to do that. And I don't think you can -- in the same way you can't
twist facts and arbitrarily say that you have a -- you know, 30-year crusader
against the kind of fundamentalism that they have in Iran and Saddam Hussein
and say that he -- of course, he is a secular tyrant. And to connect him
to somebody who's called an apostate, someone to kill, Osama bin Laden,
is the same kind of arbitrary couplings that they did in the attacks on
debate that doesn't support them, anything that represents dissent.
What would
you do?
But I think
that before we can -- that, as the government or an individual -- and its
wide democracy is potentially such -- the greatest possible system available
in the world -- is this takes a lot of heads to decide what to do.
What is it
they have? How much of it do they have? What is the immediate threat of
it? What are the ramifications of what we do about it? For example, the
same -- those same enemies of the state of Iraq today who, on the other
hand, are Arab brothers. My friend -- you know, the enemy of the enemy
and that whole notion. Who is going to give terrorists nuclear capability
as a result of us going into Iraq in a certain way? Who is going to? All
of these things have to be considered.
The best way
that, for my own opinion, I think, you know, given what are the facts of
-- the only way that I'll answer it is tto say that, you know, again, I
do not stand here as a pacifist. I would aspire to be a pacifist. I'm not.
I doubt I ever will be.
And the 4-year-olds,
who is somewhere -- you know, it is in their consciousness that they might
be bombed at any time, and there's a level of emotional destruction that's
going on.
You know,
of course, there is incredible propaganda there. There's also incredible
fear there. One has to understand that the food rations they're given by
their government are so precious that dissent is so costly, and so it's
very, very difficult to go there as a -- you know, in three days and be
able to voice a responsible opinion on what they really feel.
My guess --
I will afford myself the common sense this way -- is, you know, that they'd
probably be a lot better off, whether they know it or not, without this
guy. Yes, of course.
But all of
these indictments against Iraq are -- you know, have great validity, and
this is the -- you know, we know they've used chemical weapons in the past,
we know all of these things.
But this country
also has to know that in the cases of, for example, sarin gas and several
of these kinds of
compounds
that they're talking about, these things are effectively neutralized out
of five years of shelf life.
And all of
the sanctions, all of these kinds of things that they're talking about,
in terms of the technology of what's available -- again, when I go back
to why the weapons inspectors, given the opportunity and the support and
the information by the United States and others, have every chance in the
world of finding this, the fact is all of these things leave enormous amount
of trace evidence, from the smuggling trails of the equipment necessary,
to the particle matter and the chemical matter that's necessary to develop
them.
This is a
human issue right now. And I think that it's -- that it is morally reprehensible
for people not to do what they will be productive in doing, in terms of
adding to the best outcome of this situation.
Do you have
a definition of patriotism?
sanctions
are responsible for.
You know,
here we've got four emergencies right now, real emergencies. They'll say,
"Well, why aren't you helping in this kind of issue, or this or women's
issues or this is?" We've got our families, we've got North Korea, we've
got an entire continent either starving or dying of disease in Africa,
and we've got Iraq and we've got the environment.
There's 500,000
gallons of raw sewage a day going into the Tigris river as a result of
the '91 bombings of Baghdad. The infrastructure has been entirely destroyed.
So, you know,
is it pleasant to go into a place where all the water is highly polluted
and disease everywhere? No.
We have an
opportunity now, and this is what I think we have to focus on. There's
an incredible opportunity, and there is a groundswell in the streets of
Iraq this way, I do believe, because of my conversations with the journalists
who know more than I do.
This is like
the bully in the school yard just got punched in the nose. That's very
different than the '92 inspections, you know, after the '91 bombings. At
that time, it was a careful thing where a guy who had propagandized his
defeat into a victory. You know about that. That was how it was sold to
the people, as a victory. There are monuments to the victory over the United
States in this war in Baghdad.
Here the people
are aware that these inspectors are going into his palaces. This is the
bully getting punched in the nose. This has a possibility of a very positive
effect. And as long as we don't -- really don't have evidence of imminent
threat, and we have inspectors in there, let's see what the Iraqis do about
their situation.
But there's
not much that they're going to be able to do when they're teachers are
making $3 an hour and their kids are 60 to a classroom with broken windows,
and they're coming to school with no food in their stomachs, not
learning anything
because of that -- there's a direct correlation between nutrition and education
that's not being paid attention to. And it's that generation, whether we
go in or not, that our kids are going to be dealing with.
motion picture
business. I don't care how many actors get on here and say, you know, "If
so and so says they don't want to be famous," they're lying.
Well, no.
That's just not true. You know, you want the opportunity to share what
you can share. But famous is a funny word anyway, you know? How does it
apply and what does it get you? You know, it's not good to be famous if
famous is something that is debunked on its own definition by those who
want to attack you.
person last
night"?
tomorrow?
national...
I think that
in the short term it may be, and so I'm wondering how long and short term
the agenda is of the
establishment.
You know,
we spent -- it was -- the cost of the Gulf War was $82 billion, of which
the United States carried $18 million of that...
I would like
to believe that this is a masterful game of chicken, but I think that...
Which is,
you know, part of the debate that I think is also in the counterpart side
of most of my feelings. All of this stuff has to come into the discussion.
another outstanding
program we hope you'll enjoy.
Stay tuned
for more of coverage around the world on CNN. And for Sean Penn and yours
truly in Los Angeles, good night.