From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 15 2002 - 14:40:37 MDT
U.N. backs U.S. demand for weapons inspections in Iraq
UNITED NATIONS (APOnline) ” Security Council members 
echoed President Bush's demand for Iraq to admit U.N. weapons 
inspectors, and key nations indicated they would support giving 
Saddam Hussein a deadline to comply. 
But after Bush told the council to confront the "grave and 
gathering danger" posed by Iraq or stand aside as the United 
States acts, no council nation backed the use of force if Saddam 
continues to say no
Many council members, Arab countries, and other U.N. member 
states focused on Bush's decision to give the United Nations a 
chance to avoid a confrontation. 
Foreign ministers from the five veto-wielding nations on the 
Security Council ” the United States, Russia, China, Britain and 
France ” discussed Iraq over lunch Friday with Secretary-General 
Kofi Annan. 
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov read a statement on behalf 
of the five permanent members saying Iraq's failure to comply 
with council resolutions "is a serious problem." They also said 
consultations had begun to decide how the council can tackle the 
problem of implementation. 
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told reporters after the 
meeting there was "complete unanimity about the imperative of 
getting the weapons inspectors back into Iraq." 
"I think it's fair to say (there is) a very clear understanding that if 
we're going to set an imperative to get those weapons inspectors 
back, then that has to mean a time limit," he said. 
But Straw, whose country has been the strongest supporter of the 
United States, said time was needed for detailed discussions on 
resolutions about Iraq. 
"What we're looking at first is concepts and then only later we'll 
come on to the detailed wording, but so far so good," he said. 
Secretary of State Colin Powell spent the day lobbying the 15 
council members, Arab countries, and other U.N. members to 
support Bush's proposal. 
"We're off to a good start," he said. They all "recognize the 
challenge that Iraq does present to international law and to the 
mandate of the Security Council." 
Powell said U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte would follow up 
with individual meetings next week with other council members. 
Vice President Dick Cheney was also planning to come to New 
York next week. 
Sanctions imposed on Iraq after its 1990 invasion of Kuwait 
cannot be lifted until U.N. inspectors certify that its weapons of 
mass destruction have been destroyed. Inspectors left the country 
four years ago ahead of U.S. and British airstrikes to punish Iraq 
for not cooperating with inspections. 
Since then, Iraq has refused to allow inspectors to return, and the 
stalemate has split the Security Council several times. 
Ivanov, whose country is Iraq's closest ally on the council, called 
for a political settlement and urged Iraq to comply with council 
resolutions. China's Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan echoed the 
plea for more diplomacy. 
Their focus on political ” not military ” action indicated how 
tough it will be to get council authorization for an attack on Iraq. 
While Ivanov reiterated Moscow's opposition to unilateral U.S. 
military action against Iraq, he also indicated that what happens to 
Iraq is up to Saddam. 
He told Russian reporters in New York "if Iraq refuses to 
cooperate with the U.N. Security Council, the Iraqi government 
will take responsibility itself for possible consequences," the 
Interfax news agency reported. 
French President Jacques Chirac has proposed a two-step 
approach, which some diplomats say would avert a divisive split 
in the council early on. 
An initial resolution would set a short deadline for Iraq to let 
inspectors return. If Iraq refuses, or seeks to undermine their 
work, the Security Council would then consider action against 
Iraq. A senior U.S. official said Washington is open to the French 
proposal. 
France hasn't endorsed military action, but hasn't ruled it out. 
French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said Friday that 
"the best way forward" is the return of inspectors. 
During his day of lobbying, Powell also met the 10 non-permanent 
council members, whose terms rotate every two years. 
Arab ministers grasped at Bush's decision to go the United 
Nations as an opportunity to avert war. 
Syria's U.N. Ambassador Mikhail Wehbe, whose country is on the 
council, said he was waiting to see what "formula" the council 
proposes. He backed the Arab position that opposes an attack on 
Iraq, but calls for its compliance with U.N. resolutions. 
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Wed Sep 25 2002 - 13:28:58 MDT