[iwar] [fc:Powell.battles.Pentagon.over.terrorism.strategy]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-21 19:20:41


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 19:20:41 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Powell.battles.Pentagon.over.terrorism.strategy]
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Powell battles Pentagon over terrorism strategy
September 20, 2001 Posted: 10:30 PM EDT (0230 GMT)
By Andrea Koppel

CNN State Department Correspondent
and Elise Labott 

State Department Producer

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Bush administration is engaged in an internal
tug-of-war about the scope and breadth of its campaign against
international terrorism, first and foremost a self-declared war against
Osama bin Laden, his terrorist network and the Taliban, senior State
Department officials tell CNN. 

Secretary of State Colin Powell is pushing for a limited military
component in this self-declared war against terrorism and instead wants
to place more emphasis on less traditional "tools" in the United States
arsenal -- financial, political, diplomatic and legal, according to
several senior State Department officials familiar with the department's
planning.  That is why, officials point out, the Treasury Department is
in the midst of setting up task forces to deal with the financial aspect
of this campaign.  One official said the military is a "blunt
instrument" and should be kept to a "minimum" in order to maintain the
idea that "this is not a war against Islam."

"If collateral damage is extensive it could wind up in a matter of weeks
or months in a holy war," said this official.  In addition, this
official said to use the word "war" in this campaign will be a misnomer
as this will likely be a drawn-out, multi-faceted campaign lasting
years. 

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, his deputy Paul Wolfowitz and
others, on the other hand, are pushing to broaden this campaign in the
short term, to target so-called state sponsors of terrorism like Iraq,
State Department officials and diplomatic sources tell CNN. 

In fact, one official described the debate over Iraq as the "most
contentious issue in inter-agency discussions."

If Powell's strategy prevails, one senior State Department official
confided, Iraq will be dealt with like an elephant -- and the U.S.  and
its international coalition will "eat this elephant one bite at a time,"
rather than swallow it whole. 

Phase one of this campaign is expected to include action against bin
Laden, his al-Qaeda terrorist network and the Taliban. 

In order to implement this campaign, Powell and President Bush have been
courting leaders around the world to join a global partnership, an
international coalition against terrorism.  To accomplish their mission
-- to close down terrorist cells or "nodes" linked to the bin Laden
network in their own countries -- they will also cut off financial
flows, arrest terrorists, shut down their offices and help to "dry up
the swamp" of terrorism, in the words of one official. 

The diplomatic campaign to build an international coalition is the
"centerpiece" of what the administration is trying to do.  On an ominous
note, State Department officials say Powell is deeply concerned about
the condition of the world economy and its potential impact on
sustaining momentum and public support around the world for this war on
terrorism. 

"When you have (thousands of) workers at National Airport unable to go
to work," said one senior State Department official, "these people are
going to be more concerned with how they're gonna get food on the table,
rather than fighting this war."

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