The White House, President George W. Bush Click to print this document

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
November 12, 2002

President says Iraq Must Disarm Now
District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department
Operations Center
Washington, D.C.

     Fact sheet en Español

10:33 A.M. EST

Q -- looking for a compromise homeland bill?

THE PRESIDENT: I'm looking for a good homeland bill, that's what I want.

Q Are you going to press for it today?

THE PRESIDENT: Pardon me?

Q Are you going to press people, lawmakers --

THE PRESIDENT: I'm going to press people right now, in a very gentle way and say let's get homeland security bill done, one that enables this country to be able to respond to threats, one that enables the President to be able to put the right people at the right place at the right time.

Q Mr. President, the Iraqi parliament, sir, has rejected the U.N. resolution.

THE PRESIDENT: Let's see what Saddam --

Q What happens if he follows through?

THE PRESIDENT: Then if Saddam Hussein does not comply with the -- to the detail of the resolution, we will lead a coalition to disarm him.

Q Does that start --

THE PRESIDENT: It's over, we're through negotiations, there's no more time. The man must disarm. He said he would disarm, he now must disarm. And, you know, this kind of deception and delay -- all that is over with. The country is committed to making the world more peaceful by disarming Saddam Hussein, it's just as simple as that. There's a zero tolerance policy now. The last 11 years have been a period of time when this guy tried to deceive the world and we're through with it. It's as simple as that.

Q Friday is the first test.

THE PRESIDENT: There's no test. This man must disarm. There must be a willingness in his administration to disarm.

Q The Iraqi parliament has recommended the other way.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, the Iraqi parliament is nothing but a rubber stamp for Saddam Hussein -- there's no democracy. This guy is a dictator, so we'll have to see what he says.

Q Mr. President, these cameras have become controversial in this city --

THE PRESIDENT: Well, then you can talk to the mayor about that.

Q Thank you. Any response to reports about Turkey selling anti-nerve antidotes to Iraq?

THE PRESIDENT: No response right now.

END 10:35 A.M. EST


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