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Politics : The Castle -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TimF who wrote (139)11/7/2002 5:33:15 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7936
 
U.S., France reach accord on Iraq
resolution
Associated Press


Published Nov. 7, 2002
IRAQ08

UNITED NATIONS -- The United States and France
reached agreement Thursday on a new Security Council
resolution on Iraq, removing a key hurdle toward passage
of the U.S.-drafted plan for tough new weapons
inspections.

French diplomats said the compromise was reached
through negotiations at the United Nations and in telephone
calls between President Bush and French President
Jacques Chirac over the last day.

According to French diplomats, the United States agreed to
change wording in a key provision that would declare Iraq
in ``material breach'' of its U.N. obligations. The change
addresses French and Russian concerns that the original
wording would have let the United States determine on its
own whether Iraq had committed an infraction. Such a
determination, France and Russia feared, would have
triggered an attack on Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

``The Security Council will now be the ones to decide
whether Iraq is in material breach,'' said a French
diplomat, on condition of anonymity.

Russia, like France, also appeared to be softening its
position in favor of the American draft.

The latest American text, a product of eight weeks of
intense lobbying by the Bush administration, signaled
significant progress and included major concessions to
Security Council members concerned about setting off
another war in Iraq.

Bush said he wanted a vote Friday although Syria wanted it
postponed because of an Arab League meeting this
weekend in Egypt.

The president also spoke by telephone with Russian
President Vladimir Putin on Thursday as lobbying
intensified a day before Washington planned to push for a
vote on the resolution.

``He's a real threat,'' Bush said of Saddam, ``and it's now
time for the world to come together and disarm him.''

Security Council members were expecting U.S. and British
diplomats to circulate a revised text later Thursday with
the new wording agreed upon earlier in the day.

Russian Ambassador Sergey Lavrov told The Associated
Press a Friday vote was possible if the United States and
Britain come up with a few more concessions. U.S. and
British diplomats said a new version could be ready by the
end of the day Thursday.

The U.S. draft resolution includes a greater role for the
Security Council but still frees the United States to take
military action against Iraq if inspectors say it isn't
complying.

In Iraq, the government-controlled media called the draft
resolution a pretext for war and urged the Security Council
not to bow to American demands.

``America wants to use this resolution as a pretext and a
cover for its aggression on Iraq and the whole Arab
nation,'' the ruling Baath Party newspaper Al-Thawra said
Thursday. ``The Security Council should not give (the
Americans) a pretext and a cover for the coming
aggression.''

That would give Iraq until Nov. 15 to accept the
resolution's terms and could put an advance team of
inspectors on the ground - for the first time in nearly four
years - by the end of the month.

According to a strict timeline in the resolution, inspectors
would have up to 45 days to actually begin work, and must
report to the council 60 days later on Iraq's performance. In
the meantime, any Iraqi obstructions or noncompliance
would be reported immediately to the council for
assessment.

At the same time, it offers Iraq the possibility of lifting a
decade of crippling sanctions if it complies fully with its
obligations.

U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte said the new
resolution, co-sponsored with Britain, offered Iraq the best
opportunity to avoid war.

For a resolution to be adopted, it needs at least nine ``yes''
votes and no veto by permanent members Russia, France,
China, Britain and the United States. None of the five are
likely to veto, though an abstention from Russia could hurt
the resolution's credibility. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan has said the way to send a strong message to Iraq is
through unity.

Syria, Iraq's Arab neighbor, appeared to be the most likely
of the 15 council members who could abstain or vote
against the resolution.

On Thursday, China's Foreign Ministry said it had noted
improvements in the new draft, but wouldn't say whether
China would endorse it.

``On the whole, we believe the new resolution takes into
consideration some of the concerns and worries of other
countries,'' spokesman Kong Quan said.

Negotiations for a new Iraq resolution began after Bush's
Sept. 12 speech to the U.N. General Assembly, when he
challenged world leaders to get tough with Iraq or stand
aside as the United States acted.

The speech was followed by a toughly worded draft
resolution that went through several revisions to address
opposition from council members and inspectors.

The latest version softens one reference to Iraq being in
``material breach'' of its obligations to disarm under a
decade of U.N. resolutions in place since the 1991 Persian
Gulf War. But a second reference still bothers Russia and
France which believe the legal term could be used to
justify war.

A cornerstone of the U.S. proposal is a tough new
inspections regime responsible for hunting for illicit
weapons and reporting on any Iraqi failures to comply with
its disarmament obligations.

It requires Iraq to provide inspectors with ``immediate,
unimpeded, unconditional, and unrestricted access to any
and all'' areas, including eight presidential sites, where
advance notice was previously needed for inspections.

Inspectors can also decide whether to interview Iraqi
scientists and government officials outside the country.

startribune.com



To: TimF who wrote (139)11/7/2002 9:09:25 PM
From: i-node  Respond to of 7936
 
Israel shows off anti-missile system in attempt to discourage any Iraqi attack
Thu Nov 7,12:58 PM ET


Anti-missle systems are going to get very popular. A great story illustrating just how good the SDI technology is getting --

newscientist.com