BarbaraBoxer_Pounces_on_Condeleeza_Rice
The following is a transcript of Sen. Barbara Boxer's remarks and Condoleezza Rice's response at Rice's
confirmation hearing as provided by Federal News Service. (Thanks FiPi)
SEN. BOXER: Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, Dr. Rice, for agreeing to stay as long as it
takes, because some of us do have a lot of questions. And, Senator Lugar, you are a very fair chairman,
and I wanted to say to the new members also welcome -- and you'll enjoy this committee, because we have
such a great chairman and such a terrific ranking member, and we really do a lot of things in a bipartisan
way, unlike other committees. And I think you're going to enjoy your time here.
Dr. Rice, before I get to my formal remarks, you no doubt will be confirmed -- that's at least what we think.
And if you're going to become the voice of diplomacy -- this is just a helpful point -- when Senator Voinovich
mentioned the issue of tsunami relief, you said -- your first words were, "The tsunami was a wonderful
opportunity for us." Now, the tsunami was one of the worst tragedies of our lifetime -- one of the worst -- and
it's going to have a 10-year impact on rebuilding that area. I was very disappointed in your statement. I
think you blew the opportunity. You mention it as part of one sentence. And I would hope to work with you on
this, because children are suffering, we're worried they're going to get in the sex trade. This thing is a
disaster, a true natural disaster and a human disaster of great proportions, and I hope that the State Department
will take a huge lead under your leadership in helping those folks in the long range.
Well, Mr. Chairman, again I thank you. I am -- Dr. Rice, I was glad you mentioned Martin Luther King -- it was
very appropriate, given everything. And he also said, Martin Luther King, quote, "Our lives begin to end the day
we become silent about the things that matter." And one of the things that matters most to my people in California
and the people in America is this war in Iraq.
Now, it took you to page three of your testimony to mention the word "Iraq." You said very little really about it,
and only in the questioning have we been able to get into some areas. Perhaps you agree with President Bush, who
said all that's been resolved. I'm quoting today's Post: "Bush said in an interview last week with the Washington
Post that the '04 election was a moment of accountability for the decisions he made in Iraq." But today's
Washington Post/ABC poll found that 58 percent disapprove of his handling of the situation, to 40 percent who
approve -- and only 44 percent said the war was worth fighting.
So in your statement it takes you to page three to mention the word "Iraq." Then you mention it in the context of
elections -- which is fine -- but you never even mention indirectly the 1,366 American troops that have died, or
the 10,372 who have been wounded -- many mentally, as a report that I read over the weekend that maybe a third will
come home and need help because of what they saw -- it's been so traumatic to them. And 25 percent of those dead
are from my home state. And this from a war that was based on what everyone now says, including your own
administration, were falsehoods about WMDs, weapons of mass destruction. And I've had tens of thousands of people
from all over the country say that they disagree -- although they respect the president -- they disagree that this
administration and the people in it shouldn't be held accountable. I don't know if you saw the movie,
"The Fog of War" -- war is a nightmare, you know that. Colin Powell I think was the most eloquent I've heard on it,
because he's seen it himself -- he's been there and done it. And I don't want to have you in a circumstance where
you're writing something years later about the fog of war. And I'm fearful if we don't see some changes here we're
going to have trouble.
And I think the way we should start is by trying to set the record straight on some of the things you said going
into this war. Now, since 9/11 we've been engaged in a just fight against terror. And I, like Senator Feingold
and everyone here who was in the Senate at the time, voted to go after Osama bin Laden and to go after the Taliban,
and to defeat al Qaeda. And you say they have left territory -- that's not true. Your own documents show that al
Qaeda has expanded from 45 countries in '01 to more than 60 countries today.
Well, with you in the lead role, Dr. Rice, we went into Iraq. I want to read you a paragraph that best expresses my
views, and ask my staff if they would hold this up -- and I believe the views of millions of Californians and
Americans. It was written by one of the world's experts on terrorism, Peter Bergen, five months ago. He wrote:
"What we have done in Iraq is what bin Laden could not have hoped for in his wildest dreams: We invaded an oil-rich
Muslim nation in the heart of the Middle East, the very type of imperial adventure bin Laden has long predicted was
the U.S.'s long-term goal in the region. We deposed the secular socialist Saddam, whom bin Laden has long despised,
ignited Sunni and Shi'a fundamentalist fervor in Iraq, and have now provoked a defensive jihad that has galvanized
jihad- minded Muslims around the world. It's hard to imagine a set of policies better designed to sabotage the war
on terror." This conclusion was reiterated last Thursday by the National Intelligence Council, the CIA director's
think tank, which released a report saying that Iraq has replaced Afghanistan as the training ground for the next
generation of professionalized terrorists.
That's your own administration's CIA. NIC chairman Robert Hutchings said Iraq is, quote, "a magnet for international
terrorist activity."
And this was not the case in '01. And I have great proof of it, including a State Department document that lists every
country -- could you hold that up? -- in which al Qaeda operated prior to 9/11. And you can see the countries; no
mention of Iraq. And this booklet was signed off on by the president of the United States, George W. Bush. It was put
out by George Bush's State Department, and he signed it. There was no al Qaeda activity there -- no cells.
Now, the war was sold to the American people, as Chief of Staff to President Bush Andy Card said, like a "new product."
Those were his words. Remember, he said, "You don't roll out a new product in the summer." Now, you rolled out the idea
and then you had to convince the people, as you made your case with the president.
And I personally believe -- this is my personal view -- that your loyalty to the mission you were given, to sell this
war, overwhelmed your respect for the truth. And I don't say it lightly, and I'm going to go into the documents that
show your statements and the facts at the time.
Now, I don't want the families of those 1,366 troops that were killed or the 10,372 that were wounded to believe for a
minute that their lives and their bodies were given in vain, because when your commander-in-chief asks you to sacrifice
yourself for your country, it is the most noble thing you can do to answer that call.
I am giving their families, as we all are here, all the support they want and need. But I also will not shrink from
questioning a war that was not built on the truth.
Now, perhaps the most well-known statement you've made was the one about Saddam Hussein launching a nuclear weapon on
America with the image of, quote, quoting you, "a mushroom cloud." That image had to frighten every American into
believing that Saddam Hussein was on the verge of annihilating them if he was not stopped. And I will be placing into
the record a number of such statements you made which have not been consistent with the facts.
As the nominee for secretary of State, you must answer to the American people, and you are doing that now through this
confirmation process. And I continue to stand in awe of our founders, who understood that ultimately those of us in
the highest positions of our government must be held accountable to the people we serve.
So I want to show you some statements that you made regarding the nuclear threat and the ability of Saddam to attack us.
Now, September 5th -- let me get to the right package here. On July 30th, 2003, you were asked by PBS NewsHour's Gwen
Ifill if you continued to stand by the claims you made about Saddam's nuclear program in the days and months leading up
to the war.
In what appears to be an effort to downplay the nuclear-weapons scare tactics you used before the war, your answer was,
and I quote, "It was a case that said he was trying to reconstitute. He's trying to acquire nuclear weapons. Nobody
ever said that it was going to be the next year." So that's what you said to the American people on television -- "Nobody
ever said it was going to be the next year."
Well, that wasn't true, because nine months before you said this to the American people, what had George Bush said,
President Bush, at his speech at the Cincinnati Museum Center? "If the Iraqi regime is able to produce, buy or steal an
amount of highly-enriched uranium a little larger than a single softball, it could have a nuclear weapon in less than a
year."
So the president tells the people there could be a weapon. Nine months later you said no one ever said he could have a
weapon in a year, when in fact the president said it.
And here's the real kicker. On October 10th, '04, on Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace, three months ago, you were asked
about CIA Director Tenet's remark that prior to the war he had, quote, "made it clear to the White House that he thought
the nuclear-weapons program was much weaker than the program to develop other WMDs. Your response was this: "The
intelligence assessment was that he was reconstituting his nuclear program; that, left unchecked, he would have a nuclear
weapon by the end of the year."
So here you are, first contradicting the president and then contradicting yourself. So it's hard to even ask you a
question about this, because you are on the record basically taking two sides of an issue. And this does not serve the
American people.
If it served your purpose to downplay the threat of nuclear weapons, you said, "No one said he's going to have it in a
year." But then later, when you thought that perhaps you were on more solid ground with the American people because at
the time the war was probably popular, or more popular, you'd say, "We thought he was going to have a weapon within a
year."
And this is -- the question is, this is a pattern here of what I see from you on this issue, on the issue of the aluminum
tubes, on the issue of whether al Qaeda was actually involved in Iraq, which you've said many times. And in my rounds -- I
don't have any questions on this round, because I'm just laying this out; I do have questions on further rounds about
similar contradictions. It's very troubling.
You know, if you were rolling out a new product like a can opener, who would care about what we said? But this product is
a war, and people are dead and dying, and people are now saying they're not going to go back because of what they
experienced there. And it's very serious.
And as much as I want to look ahead -- and we will work together on a myriad of issues -- it's hard for me to let go of
this war, because people are still dying. And you have not laid out an exit strategy. You've not set up a timetable.
And you don't seem to be willing to, A, admit a mistake, or give any indication of what you're going to do to forcefully
involve others. As a matter of fact, you've said more misstatements; that the territory of the terrorists has been
shrinking when your own administration says it's now expanded to 60 countries. So I am deeply troubled.
MS. RICE: Senator, may I respond?
SEN. LUGAR: Yes, let me just say that I appreciate the importance of Senator Boxer's statement. That's why we allowed
the statement to continue for several more minutes of time.
SEN. BOXER: I'm sorry, I lost track of time.
SEN. LUGAR: But clearly you ought to have the right to respond. Then, at that point, we're going to have a recess. But
will you please give your response?
MS. RICE: Yes. Senator, I am more than aware of the stakes that we face in Iraq, and I was more than aware of the stakes
of going to war in Iraq. I mourn and honor -- I mourn the dead and honor their service, because we have asked American
men and women in uniform to do the hardest thing, which is to go and defend freedom and give others an opportunity to
build a free society, which will make us safer.
Senator, I have to say that I have never, ever lost respect for the truth in the service of anything. It is not my nature.
It is not my character. And I would hope that we can have this conversation and discuss what happened before and what went
on before and what I said without impugning my credibility or my integrity.
The fact is that we did face a very difficult intelligence challenge in trying to understand what Saddam Hussein had in
terms of weapons of mass destruction. We knew something about him. We knew that he had -- we had gone to war with him
twice in the past, in 1991 and in 1998.
We knew that he continued to shoot at American aircraft in the no-fly zone as we tried to enforce the resolutions of U.N.
Security -- that the U.N. Security Council had passed. We knew that he continued to threaten his neighbors. We knew that
he was an implacable enemy of the United States who did cavort with terrorists.
We knew that he was the world's most dangerous man in the world's most dangerous region. And we knew that in terms of
weapons of mass destruction, he had sought them before, tried to build them before, that he had an undetected biological
weapons program that we didn't learn of until 1995, that he was closer to a nuclear weapon in 1991 than anybody thought.
And we knew, most importantly, that he had used weapons of mass destruction.
That was the context that frankly made us awfully suspicious when he refused to account for his weapons-of-mass-destruction
programs despite repeated Security Council resolutions and despite the fact that he was given one last chance to comply
with Resolution 1441.
Now, there were lots of data points about his weapons-of-mass- destruction progra MS. Some were right and some were not.
But what was right was that there was an unbreakable link between Saddam Hussein and weapons of mass destruction. That is
something that Charlie Duelfer, in his report of the Iraq survey group, has made very clear, that Saddam Hussein intended
to continue his weapons-of-mass- destruction activities, that he had laboratories that were run by his security services.
I could go on and on.
But Senator Boxer, we went to war not because of aluminum tubes. We went to war because this was the threat of weapons of
mass destruction in the hands of a man against whom we had gone to war before, who threatened his neighbors, who threatened
our interests, who was one of the world's most brutal dictators. And it was high time to get rid of him, and I'm glad that
we're rid of him.
Now, as to the statement about territory and the terrorist groups, I was referring to the fact that the al Qaeda organization
of Osama bin Laden, which once trained openly in Afghanistan, which once ran with impunity in places like Pakistan, can no
longer count on hospitable territory from which to carry out their activities.
In the places where they are, they're being sought and run down and arrested and pursued in ways that they never were before.
So we can have a semantic discussion about what it means to take or lose territory, but I don't think it's a matter of
misstatement to say that the loss of Afghanistan, the loss of the northwest frontier of Pakistan, the loss of running with
impunity in places like Saudi Arabia, the fact that now intelligence networks and law enforcement networks pursue them
worldwide, means that they have lost territory where they can operate with impunity.
SEN. BOXER: Mr. Chairman, I'm going to take 30 seconds, with your permission. First of all, Charles Duelfer said, and I
quote -- here it is; I ask unanimous consent to place in the record Charlie Duelfer's report --
SEN. LUGAR: It will be placed in the record.
SEN. BOXER: -- in which he says, "Although Saddam clearly assigned a high value to the nuclear progress and talent that had
been developed up to '91, the program ended and the intellectual capital decayed in the succeeding years."
Here's the point. You and I could sit here and go back and forth and present our arguments, and maybe somebody watching a
debate would pick one or the other, depending on their own views. But I'm not interested in that. I'm interested in the facts.
So when I ask you these questions, I'm going to show you your words, not my words.
And, if I might say, again you said you're aware of the stakes in Iraq; we sent our beautiful people -- and thank you, thank
you so much for your comments about them -- to defend freedom. You sent them in there because of weapons of mass destruction.
Later, the mission changed when there were none. I have your quotes on it. I have the president's quotes on it.
And everybody admits it but you that that was the reason for the war. And then, once we're in there, now it moves to a different
mission, which is great. We all want to give democracy and freedom everywhere we can possibly do it. But let's not rewrite
history. It's too soon to do that.
MS. RICE: Senator Boxer, I would refer you to the president's speech before the American Enterprise Institute in February,
prior to the war, in which he talked about the fact that, yes, there was the threat of weapons of mass destruction, but he
also talked to the strategic threat that Saddam Hussein was to the region.
Saddam Hussein was a threat, yes, because he was trying to acquire weapons of mass destruction. And, yes, we thought that he
had stockpiles which he did not have. We had problems with the intelligence. We are all, as a collective polity of the United
States, trying to deal with ways to get better intelligence.
But it wasn't just weapons of mass destruction. He was also a place -- his territory was a place where terrorists were
welcomed, where he paid suicide bombers to bomb Israel, where he had used Scuds against Israel in the past.
And so we knew what his intentions were in the region; where he had attacked his neighbors before and, in fact, tried to
annex Kuwait; where we had gone to war against him twice in the past. It was the total picture, Senator, not just weapons
of mass destruction, that caused us to decide that, post-September 11th, it was finally time to deal with Saddam Hussein.
SEN. BOXER: Well, you should read what we voted on when we voted to support the war, which I did not, but most of my colleagues
did. It was WMD, period. That was the reason and the causation for that, you know, particular vote.
But, again, I just feel you quote President Bush when it suits you but you contradicted him when he said, "Yes, Saddam could
have a nuclear weapon in less than a year." You go on television nine months later and said, "Nobody ever said it was" --
MS. RICE: Senator, that was just a question of pointing out to people that there was an uncertainty. No one was saying that he
would have to have a weapon within a year for it to be worth it to go to war.
SEN. BOXER: Well, if you can't admit to this mistake, I hope that you'll --
MS. RICE: Senator, we can have this discussion in any way that you would like. But I really hope that you will refrain from
impugning my integrity. Thank you very much.
SEN. BOXER: I'm not. I'm just quoting what you said. You contradicted the president and you contradicted yourself.
MS. RICE: Senator, I'm happy to continue the discussion, but I really hope that you will not imply that I take the truth lightly.
SEN. LUGAR: Let me intervene at this point. Now we've had four hours of good hearing, and we thank all members for their
constancy. We're going to recess, and I'm going to suggest we come back at 2:30. Is that convenient for you, Dr. Rice?
MS. RICE: Perfect.
SEN. LUGAR: Very well. We recess until 2:30.
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