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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ed Huang who wrote (6551)2/8/2003 9:04:34 AM
From: Ed Huang  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25898
 
Bush Says U.N. Has to Decide Soon on Iraq
Fri February 7, 2003 08:10 PM ET

By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush said on Friday the United Nations must soon make up its mind on whether to back up its demands that Iraq disarm, as the leaders of France and China told him they wanted to avoid war.

"This is a defining moment for the U.N. Security Council," Bush told reporters. "If the Security Council were to allow a dictator to lie and deceive, the Security Council would be weakened."

A day after Bush said "the game is over" for Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, the United States plowed ahead on a war footing by ordering a fifth aircraft carrier to the Gulf, where thousands of U.S. troops are gathering, and increased the terror alert level at home, warning of a high risk of attack.

In another sign the United States may be bracing for war, a U.S. official said the State Department had decided to allow nonemergency U.S. diplomats and dependents at its embassies in Israel, Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon to leave their posts. It took similar moves ahead of the 1991 Gulf war with Iraq.

Bush, speaking on the steps of the Treasury Building in snowy Washington, repeated that he would welcome a new U.N. resolution that backs up the demands of the resolution the Security Council approved in November warning of serious consequences if Iraq did not give up its suspected weapons of mass destruction. Iraq denies having any such weapons

Bush said he was confident that when U.N. Security Council members assess their responsibilities, they will understand that the U.N. disarmament resolution 1441 "must be upheld in the fullest."

"The U.N. Security Council has got to make up its mind soon as to whether or not its word means anything," Bush said.

Bush made his case in telephone calls to French President Jacques Chirac and Chinese President Jiang Zemin, both of whom said they wanted to continue U.N. inspections in the search for suspected chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs.

"We can disarm Saddam Hussein without a war" by "reinforcing inspections and obtaining Iraq's cooperation," Chirac spokeswoman Catherine Colonna quoted Chirac as telling Bush.

China's official Xinhua news agency said Jiang told Bush support should be given to strengthen U.N. weapons inspection teams. He said weapons inspectors have made some progress in Iraq, though there were still some problems, Xinhua said.

The White House said Bush and Chirac agreed to continue consultations and Bush stressed to Jiang that "time was of the essence in dealing with Iraq."

'TREATED LIKE A JOKE'

Russia has expressed doubts as well. Any of these three nations, as permanent Security Council members, can veto any new resolution authorizing military force against Iraq, and the diplomatic push is on to get them to back U.S. efforts to form a coalition against Iraq.

Bush scoffed at proposals for beefing up weapons inspections.

"The role of inspectors is to sit there and verify whether or not he's disarmed, not to play hide-and-seek in a country the size of California," he said. "If Saddam Hussein was interested in peace and interested in complying with the U.N. Security Council resolutions, he would have disarmed."

Saddam has "treated the demands of the world as a joke up to now" and it is up to him to decide whether there will be a war, he added.

"It's his choice to make. He's the person who gets to decide war and peace," said Bush, who warned on Thursday Saddam had authorized use of chemical weapons in the event of a war.

The White House insisted that Bush still had not made a decision to go to war but that diplomatic negotiations were in a final phase that would end in weeks, not months.

Spokesman Ari Fleischer said the administration would devote the next two weeks to diplomacy on Iraq -- as well as on promoting Bush's economic program -- but did not indicate whether the period amounted to any deadline for negotiations.

"The president is going to spend some time himself, and other members of the administration, engaged in diplomacy toward the point of working together with the United Nations Security Council to come out with a resolution that is serious, effective, and acceptable," Fleischer said.

A new U.N. resolution seeking international legitimacy to invade Iraq is likely to have a brief deadline, if any, and may fall short of an explicit authorization of force, diplomats at the United Nations said.

Top U.S. ally Britain, which is expected to introduce such a resolution, despite French, Russian, Chinese and German opposition, has been drafting various elements of the measure.

The Pentagon ordered a fifth aircraft carrier, the USS Kitty Hawk, to head toward the Gulf region from the Pacific.

Along with several hundred U.S. Air Force fighters, attack jets and bombers now in place in the Gulf region, the United States continues to move tens of thousands of troops there.

Defense officials said about 110,000 U.S. troops already are in the region, with tens of thousands more set to arrive by the middle of the month.

The next week will be critical. Top U.N. disarmament officials Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei visit Baghdad to demand more evidence about its suspected weapons programs and then report to the Security Council on Feb. 14.

reuters.com



To: Ed Huang who wrote (6551)2/8/2003 9:38:44 PM
From: Ed Huang  Respond to of 25898
 
Franco-German Plan Floated to Avert Iraq War
Sat February 8, 2003 05:27 PM ET
By Emma Thomasson
MUNICH, Germany (Reuters) - Germany and France are working on a new plan to try to avert war in Iraq that would compel Baghdad to admit thousands of U.N. troops to enforce disarmament and tighter sanctions, a magazine said on Saturday.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said he knew nothing officially of the proposal.

Germany's leading news magazine Der Spiegel said the idea had originated in the office of Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and Berlin and Paris had been working on the details of the initiative in secret talks since the beginning of the year.

A German government spokesman confirmed Berlin and Paris were collaborating to find a peaceful alternative to war with Iraq, but would not provide any details of the efforts.

German government sources said the initiative built on proposals made by French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin this week to intensify weapons inspections in Iraq and offer French reconnaissance planes to support them.

After talks with German Defense Minister Peter Struck in Munich, Rumsfeld said he had not been officially informed of the initiative. U.S. officials said it was "extraordinary" Rumsfeld had not been told of the plan.

"I heard about it from the press. No official word. I have no knowledge of it," Rumsfeld told journalists after the meeting with Struck on the sidelines of a major security conference.

A senior U.S. official said Rumsfeld had questioned Struck on reports of the proposal to beef up inspections in Iraq and the German side had confirmed they were talking to the French but were not ready to discuss the plan with the Americans.

"We're now making the point to every Frenchman and German we find that that is not the way to have a winning hand with the United States," the official said.

Struck would only say the plan represented a "concrete proposal," but added he did not want to preempt an address by Schroeder on Iraq to the German parliament on Thursday.

OLD EUROPE STRIKES BACK

Schroeder, who has angered Washington with his opposition to any war with Iraq, would discuss the idea at the weekend with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Der Spiegel said. France would probably take over driving the initiative forward and use it as a basis for a new Security Council resolution proposal.

French and German reticence over war has infuriated Washington, prompting Rumsfeld to label them "old Europe," saying they were isolated in a continent whose center of gravity was shifting east to embrace U.S. allies in central Europe.

The French Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the proposal but French diplomatic sources confirmed Paris was discussing bolstering inspections with Security Council members.

French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie told the Munich conference Paris believed inspections had proved more effective than the Gulf War of 1991 in disarming Iraq, but did not rule out military action as a last resort to make Baghdad cooperate.

"That's why France has proposed reinforcing the means given to inspectors, to reinforce the number of inspectors," she said.

In an advance copy ahead of publication on Sunday, Der Spiegel said Berlin and Paris wanted to publish their proposal in the next few days before weapons inspectors in Iraq report back to the U.N. Security Council on Friday.

Initial reactions from Security Council veto-holders Russia and China and European Union president Greece were positive, the magazine said, while Pope John Paul had offered German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer support for the initiative.

U.N. PROTECTORATE

Der Spiegel said the initiative, which it said had been dubbed "Project Mirage," included the following proposals:

-- the some 150,000 U.S. troops already deployed to the Gulf should stay in place to force Baghdad to cooperate and be ready to invade if it breaches the new proposed U.N. resolution;

-- Iraqi President Saddam Hussein would be forced to admit thousands of armed U.N. troops to oversee intensified weapons inspections in the whole country as well as full disarmament, creating a de facto "U.N. protectorate";

-- the number of weapons inspectors should be tripled from the current 100 operating in Iraq;

-- the no-fly zone over northern and southern Iraq should be extended to cover the whole country and French, German and U.S. reconnaissance planes should be allowed to patrol the skies;

-- a permanent U.N. coordinator of arms inspections in Iraq could be appointed;

-- sanctions should be made more focused to clamp down on oil smuggling by Iraq's neighbors and tighten export controls;

-- a special U.N. court should be established to oversee infringements of the new resolution and human rights abuses;

The magazine said the initiative could help Schroeder out of the corner he seemed to have backed himself into over Iraq, risking international isolation if he sticks to his anti-war stance but political suicide at home if he changes course.

He could sell the proposal to war-weary Germans as a last-ditch bid to avert conflict, but swing behind any military action if Baghdad failed to go along with the plan, it said, although without the involvement of German troops.

President Bush has said the United Nations must soon decide whether to back his demand that Iraq abandon its alleged chemical, biological and nuclear programs or be disarmed by force. Iraq denies having any such weapons.

reuters.com