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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3258)3/12/2002 7:06:54 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Cheney Gets Warning in Jordan
Tue Mar 12, 3:58 PM ET

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer

AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - Vice President Dick Cheney received a public warning Tuesday from
Jordanian King Abdullah II that expanding the terrorism
war to Iraq could destabilize the region and undermine
gains in Afghanistan.


U.S. officials had hoped for a more
muted message from the king, whose
comments came as Cheney began a
whirlwind tour of the Middle East.

Abdullah has been a top ally in the
terror war, but like many Arab
leaders he has been openly skeptical
of U.S. hints of hostile action against
Iraq.

During a private meeting with
Cheney, Abdullah "expressed hope
for a solution to all outstanding
problems with Iraq through dialogue
and peaceful means," said a palace
statement.

It also said Abdullah voiced Jordan's
concern about "the repercussions of
any possible strike on Iraq and the
dangers of that on the stability and
security of the region."

The meeting with the king was the vice president's first
stop on a tour of nine Arab nations, Israel and Turkey.

"Here and throughout this journey, I expect frank
discussions on the urgent matters facing this region and
all of the civilized world," Cheney said at an airport
welcoming ceremony.

He was then whisked away to the private meeting and
working dinner at Beit al-Barakeh palace with the king.

During the meeting, Cheney stressed the importance of
having U.N. weapons inspectors return to Iraq and said
the inspections must be "wide open, robust, everywhere,
anywhere, anytime," said Cheney spokeswoman Jennifer
Millerwise.

She also said that the king and Cheney agreed a
maximum effort must be made to get both Palestinians
and Israelis back to the table in the Middle East peace
process.

"As President Bush made clear last
week, the United States will do all it can to help end the
tragic violence between the Palestinians and the Israelis,
and return the parties to a productive negotiating
process," Cheney said.

He will meet later in the week, in Israel, with State
Department envoy Anthony Zinni, whom Bush has sent
to the region to try to get the peace process moving
again.

Abdullah set an opening-day tone for Cheney's trip with a
pre-emptive warning about U.S. military action against
Iraq.

The United Nations "is the only way to
resolve all outstanding issues," Abdullah said in an
interview with the Saudi Al-Watan newspaper. He also
spoke of ending "the sanctions on brotherly Iraq."

The remarks were carried by Jordan's official Petra news
agency shortly before Cheney's arrival.

Bush administration officials have suggested that much
of the recent rhetoric from Arab states is for domestic
consumption. Jordan, for instance, has a large
Palestinian population and borders Iraq.

U.S. officials hope that they can at least win private
assurances from Arab leaders that they will not attempt
to stand in the way of possible military strikes.

Cheney was welcomed at the airport by Jordan's prime
minister, Ali Abul-Ragheb, who suggested that spiraling
Israeli-Palestinian violence was one of the most urgent
issues affecting the region and hoped the Cheney visit
could help in "getting the process of peace back on track."

Arab nations want the United States to take a more
active role, primarily by putting more pressure on Israel.

The palace statement issued late Tuesday by Jordan said
that the king reviewed the "tense situation in the
Palestinian territories."

Abdullah expressed hope that Zinni's mission will
"succeed in salvaging the situation and enforcing a
cease-fire."

"The American role is essential to ... end the cycle of
violence and pave the way for putting the peace process
back on the right track," the statement said.

Amid tight security, a 30-vehicle motorcade escorted
Cheney across the Jordanian capital from the airport to Abdullah's hilltop
residence of Beit al-Barakeh, or Blessing House, in Amman's suburbs.

A police helicopter hovered overhead, and streets along the nine-mile drive were
sealed off by traffic police and lined with dozens of royal guards carrying
machine-guns.

Cheney knew in advance he faced a hard sell trying to drum up Arab support for
ridding Iraq of Saddam. He came to Jordan after a stop in London, where British
Prime Minister Tony Blair voiced strong support for widening
the terror war.

Jordan is the only Arab country to have sent forces to Afghanistan, U.S. officials
noted.

story.news.yahoo.com