Douglas Feith is an American public servant and lawyer who served as the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. His role involved shaping U.S. defense policy and strategies. Feith's work in government and his contributions to national security policy have been subjects of discussion and analysis in the context of his impact on defense and foreign policy.
"We know that there are various activities important to the insurgents in Iraq that are occurring in Syria."
"There have been linkages between the Iraqi government and al-Qaeda going back more or less a decade."
"The key to making the inspections work is the Iraqi government making the crucial decision that because of the international pressure Iraq has to disarm itself."
"The purpose of the UN mechanism, this inspection mechanism, is not to engage in a cat and mouse game with Saddam Hussein and try to find weapons that the Iraqi government is working on concealing."
"What the UN inspectors can do is demonstrate to the world, help the Iraqi government demonstrate to the world that the Iraqis are cooperatively disarming if that is in fact what the Iraqi government decides to do."
"If all goes well, the Iraqis are going to have a country that's going to have a representative government and will be at peace with its neighbors and in the region."
"They have involved co-operation between the Iraqi intelligence and al-Qaeda operatives on training and combined operations regarding bomb making and chemical and biological weapons."
"I don't think that anybody should be ruling in or ruling out anything while we are conducting diplomacy."