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To: Original Mad Dog who wrote (5628)3/6/2003 1:48:40 PM
From: Wayne Rumball  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7689
 
US expelling people from 60 other countries.

My way or the highway Bush going too far.

ASHINGTON, Mar 06, 2003 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- The United States has asked
about 60 countries to expel selected Iraqis who officials say are undercover
agents possibly poised to attack American interests overseas, officials said.

In a separate development Wednesday, the State Department said it had ordered
two U.N.-based Iraqi diplomats to leave the country.

The government has identified 300 Iraqis in the 60 countries whom officials want
expelled, the U.S. officials said. Some are operating as diplomats out of Iraqi
embassies, the officials said, adding that the foreign governments were expected
to comply with the U.S. request.

State Department spokesman Philip Reeker confirmed the expulsion request but
offered no information on the number of countries or their identities, or on how
many suspected Iraqi agents were involved.

Reeker said the action had no bearing on possible U.S. military action against
Iraq.

The government officials, asking not to be identified, said the State Department
made similar requests of foreign governments before the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

The current request comes as a U.S.-led war against Iraq appears increasingly
likely. U.S. officials and outside analysts have warned that an attack on Iraq
could well trigger attacks on U.S. interests by Iraq or its allies.

Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday the real risk lies in failure to
act against Saddam.

In that event, he said, there would be a world "where Saddam and the likes of
Saddam are emboldened to acquire and wield weapons of mass destruction."

In New York, Iraq's U.N. ambassador, Mohammed Al-Douri, said the two Iraqis
being expelled were informed of the expulsion order Tuesday at 6 p.m. and given
72 hours to leave the United States.

The State Department identified them as Nazih Abdul Latif Rahman and Yehia Naeem
Suaoud.

The men speak only Arabic and have the ranks of attaches but are not on the list
of personnel accredited to the United Nations, Al-Douri said.

"They are the security personnel of the mission, the guards," the ambassador
told The Associated Press. "They are living in the basement of the (Iraqi)
mission."

He said both diplomats had been approached by U.S. officials and asked to
defect.

"All of our diplomats were pressurized, were asked if they would like to leave
the Iraqi government right now, to stay here in the United States," the
ambassador said. "And those people, they refused those kinds of proposals. And
this is a kind of vengeance because they didn't accept what had been asked by
Americans, by CIA, or FBI or whatever.

"All Iraqi people in the mission have been approached in that way, except me,"
he said.

But the State Department, in a statement, said: "The two attaches were engaged
in activities outside the scope of their official function. Federal law
enforcement authorities deemed the activities to be harmful to our national
security."

Last month, the U.S. government expelled an Iraqi journalist who covered the
United Nations for the official Iraqi News Agency, saying he was "harmful" to
the security of the United States.