|
American Morning with Paula Zahn
-
- Explosive New Book Published In France Alleges
That U.S. Was In Negotiations To Do A Deal With Taliban
-
- Aired January 8, 2002 - 07:34 ET
-
- PAULA ZAHN, CNN ANCHOR: Time to check in with
ambassador-in-residence, Richard Butler, this morning. An explosive
new book published in France alleges that the United States was in
negotiations to do a deal with the Taliban for an oil pipeline in
Afghanistan.
-
- Joining us right now is Richard Butler to shed
some light on this new book. He is the former chief U.N. weapons
inspector. He is now on the Council on Foreign Relations and our own
ambassador-in- residence -- good morning.
-
- RICHARD BUTLER, FMR. U.N. WEAPONS INSPECTOR: Good
morning, Paula.
-
- ZAHN: Boy, if any of these charges are true...
-
- BUTLER: If?
-
- ZAHN: ... this...
-
- BUTLER: Yes?
-
- ZAHN: ... is really big news!
-
- BUTLER: I agree.
-
- ZAHN: Start off with what your understanding is of
what is in this book --the most explosive charge.
-
- BUTLER: The most explosive charge, Paula, is that
the Bush administration-- the present one, just shortly after
assuming office slowed down FBI investigations of al Qaeda and
terrorism in Afghanistan in order to do a deal with the Taliban on
oil -- an oil pipeline across Afghanistan.
-
- ZAHN: And this book points out that the FBI's
deputy director, John O'Neill, actually resigned because he felt the
U.S. administration was obstructing...
-
- BUTLER: A proper...
-
- ZAHN: ... the prosecution of terrorism.
-
- BUTLER: Yes, yes, a proper intelligence
investigation of terrorism. Now, you said if, and I affirmed that in
responding to you. We have to be careful here. These are
allegations. They're worth airing and talking about, because of
their gravity. We don't know if they are correct. But I believe they
should be investigated, because Central Asian oil, as we were
discussing yesterday, is potentially so important. And all prior
attempts to have a pipeline had to be done through Russia. It had to
be negotiated with Russia. Now, if there is to be a pipeline through
Afghanistan, obviating the need to deal with Russia, it would also
cost less than half of what a pipeline through Russia would cost. So
financially and politically, there's a big prize to be had. A
pipeline through Afghanistan down to the Pakistan coast would bring
out that Central Asian oil easier and more cheaply.
-
- ZAHN: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) as you spoke about this
yesterday, we almost immediately got a call from "The New York
Times."
-
- BUTLER: Right.
-
- ZAHN: They want you to write an op-ed piece on
this over the weekend.
-
- BUTLER: Right, and which I will do.
-
- ZAHN: But let's come back to this whole issue of
what John O'Neill, this FBI agent...
-
- BUTLER: Right.
-
- ZAHN: ... apparently told the authors of this
book. He is alleging that what -- the U.S. government was trying to
protect U.S. oil interests? And at the same time, shut off the
investigation of terrorism to allow for that to happen?
-
- BUTLER: That's the allegation - that instead of
prosecuting properly an investigation of terrorism, which has its
home in Afghanistan as we now know, or one of its main homes, that
was shut down or slowed down in order to pursue oil interests with
the Taliban. The people who we have now bombed out of
existence...and this not many months ago. The book says that the
negotiators said to the Taliban, you have a choice. You have a
carpet of gold, meaning an oil deal, or a carpet of bombs. That's
what the book alleges.
-
- ZAHN: Well, I know you're going to be doing your
own independent homework on this...
-
- BUTLER: Yes.
-
- ZAHN: ... to see if you can confirm any of this.
Let's move on to the whole issue of Iraq. The deputy defense
secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, at one time was considered one of those
voices within the administration...
-
- BUTLER: Yes.
-
- ZAHN: ... that was pushing for moving beyond
Afghanistan. He seemed to back off a little from that yesterday.
-
- BUTLER: Yes.
-
- ZAHN: What do you read through the tea leaves
here?
-
- BUTLER: A very interesting report that the
administration will focus on the Philippines, Yemen, Somalia as
places where there are al Qaeda cells. But the word Iraq wasn't used
by the man who was the chief hawk -- used as a, you know, as a
future target. So what I interpret from that is this: That very
likely our allies have been saying to us, this is too hard. This is
really serious. Be careful. Saddam is essentially contained at the
moment. Don't start, you know, a bigger problem either in the Arab
world or in the coalition by going after him. And Wolfowitz, it
seems, has probably accepted that.
-
- ZAHN: A quick thought on the Israelis intercepting
this latest armed shipment? What that means? You've got to do it in
about 15 seconds.
-
- BUTLER: It's extraordinarily serious, because it
seems to have been tied to Yasser Arafat himself. It needs to be
further investigated, but you know, Paula, the potentiality that
this could once again prove an impediment to resume peace
negotiations is really quite serious.
-
- ZAHN: Thank you as usual for covering so much
territory, Richard Butler. See you same time, same place tomorrow
morning.
Taken from: http://www.rense.com/general18/zahn.htm
|