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Sat Jan 10, 6:25 PM ET
By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press
Writer
CRAWFORD, Texas - Former Treasury
Secretary Paul O'Neill contends
the United States began laying
the groundwork for an invasion
of Iraq (news - web sites) just
days after President Bush (news
- web sites) took office in January
2001 — more than two years
before the start of the U.S.-led
war that ousted Saddam Hussein.
"From the very beginning,
there was a conviction that
Saddam Hussein was a bad person
and that he needed to go,"
O'Neill told CBS's "60
Minutes" in an interview
to be aired Sunday night.
The official American government
stance on Iraq, dating to the
Clinton administration, was
that the United States sought
to oust Saddam.
But O'Neill, who was fired
by Bush in December 2002, said
he had qualms about what he
asserted was the pre-emptive
nature of the war planning.
"For me, the notion of
pre-emption, that the U.S. has
the unilateral right to do whatever
we decide to do, is a really
huge leap," according to
an excerpt of the interview
that CBS released Saturday.
The administration has not
found evidence that the Iraqi
leader was involved in the Sept.
11 attacks but officials have
said they had to consider the
possibility that Saddam could
have undertaken an even larger
scale-strike against the United
States.
White House spokesman Scott
McClellan would not confirm
or deny that the White House
began Iraq war planning early
in Bush's term. But, he said,
Saddam "was a threat to
peace and stability before September
11th, and even more of a threat
after September 11."
"It appears that the world
according to Mr. O'Neill is
more about trying to justify
his own opinions than looking
at the reality of the results
we are achieving on behalf of
the American people," McClellan
said in Texas, where the president
is staying at his ranch.
O'Neill's interview was part
of his effort to promote a new
book about the first half of
Bush's term, "The Price
of Loyalty," for which
O'Neill was a primary source.
The administration began sending
signals about a possible confrontation
with Iraq even before Sept.
11, 2001.
In July 2001, after an Iraqi
surface-to-air missile was fired
at an American surveillance
plane, Bush's national security
adviser put Saddam on notice
that the United States intended
a more resolute military policy
toward Iraq.
"Saddam Hussein is on
the radar screen for the administration,"
Condoleezza Rice said at the
time.
Yet Secretary of State Colin
Powell said in December 2001,
after the terrorist attacks
in Washington and New York,
that "with respect to what
is sometimes characterized as
taking out Saddam, I never saw
a plan that was going to take
him out."
According to the book by former
Wall Street Journal reporter
Ron Suskind, the Bush administration
began examining options for
an invasion in the first months
after Bush was inaugurated.
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