Lawmakers Want Notice Before
Sun Aug 4,
By Calvin Woodward,
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - War against
Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., led
hearings last week that highlighted both the gravity of the threat posed by
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and the difficulty of replacing him with stable
leadership.
"I believe there probably will be a war with
Similar sentiment was expressed by other lawmakers appearing
on the talk shows. Like Biden, they said the
administration must do far more to sell Americans, allies and
They also said Bush must seek congressional approval if he
decides on war and heal splits among his own advisers over how best to meet his
goal of replacing Saddam.
Administration officials were absent from the airwaves,
letting lawmakers drive the debate.
Democratic Sen. Carl Levin of
"Does he love himself more than he hates us?" he
asked on CBS' "Face the Nation." "And I think the answer is
probably yes.
"And if that's true, then it would be unlikely that he
would initiate an attack with a weapon of mass destruction because it would be
certain that he would be destroyed in response."
But Biden said divining the Iraqi
leader's plans "is like reading the entrails of goats." What matters
is his capacity to unleash the weapons, whatever his intentions, Biden said on NBC's "Meet
the Press."
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle said Congress must weigh
in before
"We all support strongly a regime change," Daschle
said on ABC's "This Week." "But I think we have to get our ducks
in order. Do we have the support of our allies? Do we have an appropriate
plan?"
The administration has invited Iraqi opposition groups to
Ahmed Chalabi, head of a
London-based umbrella organization representing the fractious opposition
figures, said thousands of lightly armed Iraqis in the north, south and
Congress authorized Bush in the fall to use all necessary
force against nations or groups that aided the Sept. 11 hijackers or harbored such terrorists.
Few if any solid leads have come out linking Saddam to the
al-Qaida terrorist network and the debate remains
unsettled over whether Bush must come to Congress specifically to get approval
to attack
Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said earlier it
would be ridiculous for Bush to lay out a war plan in public view. And he
recalled the bitterness of some of the congressional debate that preceded the
last war against
But on Sunday he acknowledged, too, the need to engage the
public. Lott said he would probably support a resolution urging the
administration to bring the matter to Congress.
"While you may not have to come to
Biden, citing expert testimony in
his hearings, said it is clear
"We have no choice but to eliminate the threat,"
he said. "This is a guy who's an extreme danger to the world."
Does that mean war? "I think that's where we end
up," Biden said.
He said the
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, who favors
a hard line on Saddam, said leaks from the administration have betrayed splits
among Bush's advisers over his tough policy.
"I think we're at a point where it's critically
important for the president, as commander in chief, to take hold here,"
said Lieberman, D-Conn. "He's got obvious disagreement within his
administration."
Lieberman told "Fox News Sunday" that "every
day Saddam remains in power with chemical weapons, biological weapons, and the
development of nuclear weapons is a day of danger for the
Like Bush, Biden brushed off an
Iraqi offer to negotiate over the return of weapons inspectors. "I think
it's important we push for real inspections," he said, and not negotiate
over a faint offer.
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