Remarks by the President
After
a Meeting with Former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard
Kerik
- The South Lawn - October 2, 2003
THE
PRESIDENT: Thank you
all for coming. I'll make a couple of statements. I'm going to ask
Bernie
Kerik to make a statement, and I'll answer two questions before I go to
Milwaukee.
First, I
want to welcome
Bernie Kerik to the South Lawn, and to the Oval Office. We just had a
fascinating
discussion about what he did in Iraq, what he saw in Iraq. He can speak
for himself. But let me characterize it this way, that he went to help
the Iraqis organize a police force. He showed up at times of chaos and
confusion. Because of his leadership, his knowledge and his experience,
he was able to stand up a police force in Baghdad in a very quick
period
of time. I think he told me opened up 37 different precinct stations --
35 different precinct stations. They activated and trained 35,000 Iraqi
police force. And that's important because the ultimate solution to the
security issues in Iraq is for the Iraqi citizens to manage their own
affairs.
Bernie went
there and
made a big difference. And for that our nation is very
grateful.
We appreciate it a lot.

MR. KERICK:
Thank you.
THE
PRESIDENT: We're going
to start training police officers in Jordan soon. As well, tomorrow,
750
new Iraqi army soldiers will graduate from training. Part of our
strategy
is to enable the Iraqis to protect themselves. Mr. Kerik can speak to
this,
but in a very short period of time, we're making great progress. Iraq
is
becoming more secure, and that is good.
That is good
for our overall
mission because a free and peaceful Iraq will mean that America is more
secure. I'll make one other comment, then Bernie will say a few words.
Mr. David
Kay reported
to the nation. I want to thank him for his good work. He is a
thoughtful
man. He and his team have worked under very difficult circumstances.
They
have done a lot of work in three months, and he reported on an interim
basis.
The report
states that
Saddam Hussein's regime had a clandestine network of biological
laboratories,
a live strain of deadly agent botulinum, sophisticated concealment
efforts,
and advanced design work on prohibited longer range missiles. The
report
summarized the regime's efforts in this way, and I quote from the
report:
"Iraq's WMD
programs spanned
more than two decades, involved thousands of people, billions of
dollars,
and was elaborately shielded by security and deception operations that
continued even beyond the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom."
That is what
the report
said. Specifically, Dr. Kay's team discovered what the report calls,
and
I quote, "dozens of WMD-related program activities and significant
amounts
of equipment that Iraq concealed from the United Nations during the
inspections
that began in late 2002."
In
addition to these
extensive concealment efforts, Dr. Kay found systematic destruction of
evidence of these illegal activities. This interim progress report is
not
final. Extensive work remains to be done on his biological, chemical
and
nuclear weapons programs. But these findings already make clear that
Saddam
Hussein actively deceived the international community, that Saddam
Hussein
was in clear violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution
1441,
and that Saddam Hussein was a danger to the world.

The
Commissioner will
say a few words.
MR. KERIK:
Thank you.
I just -- first, I want to take this opportunity to thank the President
for giving me the honor, and allowing me to go to Iraq -- to go to Iraq
and help the Iraqi people, give the Iraq people back their country.
And we did
so -- and we
did so quite quickly, and that continues on a daily basis. Four months
ago -- four-and-a-half months ago, when I arrived in Iraq, there were
no
police -- very few, if any. There were no police stations. There were
no
cars. There was no electricity. They didn't have telephones,
communications,
radios. They basically had nothing. They had no equipment. They had no
weapons, except for those they had ordered kept on the side. In the
last
four months, we brought back more than 40,000 police, 450 cars in
Baghdad,
stood up 35 police stations in Baghdad.
But I know I
constantly
hear as I come back, I listen to the press, and I listen to some of the
public, some of the criticism. And they talk about, it's taking too
long.
Well, try to stand up 35 police stations in New York City. It would
take
you about 11 years, depending on who is in the city council. It takes a
while. You only have 24 hours in a day. But they have made tremendous
progress.
The police are working; they're working in conjunction with the
military.
They are arresting the Fedayeen Saddam and the Baathists.
And I read
some of the
articles about this, about Dr. Kay's report today, in my opinion, there
was one weapon of mass destruction in Iraq, and it was Saddam Hussein.
I visited the mass graves. I watched the videos of the Mukhabarat, the
intelligence services, interrogate, torture, abuse and execute people
day
after day. I watched them tie grenades to the necks of people, or stuff
grenades in the pockets of people as they interviewed them, and then
detonate
those grenades and watch the people disappear. I watched a video of
Saddam
sitting in an office and allowing two Doberman Pinschers to eat alive a
general, a military general because he did not trust his loyalty. There
was one weapon of mass destruction -- he's no longer in power. And I
think
that's what counts today.
I
understand, probably
more than anyone, what a threat Iraq was and the people that threatened
Iraq was. I was beneath the towers on September 11th when they fell.
And
I -- again, I just -- I want to thank the President for the honor in
allowing
me to go there, because I lost 23 people. I wear this -- this memorial
band for the 23 I lost. They were defending the freedom of our country.
I got to go on their behalf to Iraq, to bring freedom to Iraq and take
one less threat away from us in this country. So, Mr. President

THE
PRESIDENT: I'll answer
a couple of questions.
Q Mr.
President, are you
still confident that you'll -- that weapons of mass destruction will be
found in Iraq? And how long do you think that that search will go on?
Is
that an open-ended search until something is found?
THE
PRESIDENT: That's
a question you can ask David Kay. He'll be interviewing with the press
today -- his opinion. I can only report to what his interim report says.
Q Well --
THE
PRESIDENT: Let me
-- let me finish, please.
Q Yes.
THE
PRESIDENT: His interim
report said that Iraq's weapons of mass destruction program spanned
more
than two decades. That's what he said. See, he's over there under
difficult
circumstances and reports back. He says that the WMD program involved
thousands
of people, billions of dollars and was elaborately shielded by security
and deception operations that continued even beyond the end of
Operation
Iraqi Freedom. In other words, he's saying Saddam Hussein was a threat,
a serious danger.
Q There's a
poll out in
which a lot of people today are wondering whether the war was really
worth
the cost.
THE
PRESIDENT: Yes.
Q How do you
respond to
that, sir?
THE
PRESIDENT: Yes, I
don't make decisions based upon polls. I make decisions based upon what
I think is important for the security of the American people. And I'm
not
going to forget the lessons of 9/11, September 2001. I'm not going to
forget
what Mr. Kerick described, the bombing that killed innocent life. This
administration will deal with gathering dangers where we find them. The
interim report of Mr. Kay showed that Saddam defied 1441 and was a
danger.
We gave him ample time to deal with his weapons of mass destruction --
he refused. So he's no longer in power and the world is better off for
it.
I can't
think of any people
who think that the world would be a safe place with Saddam Hussein in
power.
Sometimes the American people like the decisions I make, sometimes they
don't. But they need to know I'll make tough decisions based upon what
I think is right, given the intelligence that I know, in order to do my
job, which is secure this country, and to bring peace.
Thank you
all.
Bernie,
you're a good
man.
MR. KERIK:
Thank you,
Mr. President.
from: GeorgeWBush.com
