From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 15 2002 - 14:45:57 MDT
¢ Saudi foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said Sunday the 
kingdom would be "obliged to follow through" if the United 
States needed bases in the kingdom to attack Iraq under U.N. 
authority. The comments, made to to CNN, would mark a 
dramatic change in Saudi policy. 
¢ President Bush made plain Saturday that the United States is 
willing to take Iraq on alone if the United Nations fails to "show 
some backbone" by confronting Saddam Hussein. "The U.N. will 
either be able to function as a peacekeeping body as we head into 
the 21st century, or it will be irrelevant. And that's what we're 
about to find out," Bush said Saturday from Camp David, Md. He 
added: "Make no mistake about it. If we have to deal with the 
problem, we'll deal with it." 
¢ President Bush on Thursday warned of a "grave and gathering 
danger" posed by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein and said the United 
Nations must counter the threat or the United States will. In a 
toughly worded address to the U.N. General Assembly, the 
president called on the world body to insist that Iraq meet 
longstanding U.N. demands to scrap its biological, chemical and 
nuclear weapons programs. 
¢ The German chancellor said he was unmoved Friday in his 
opposition to U.S. military action against Iraq despite President 
Bush's call for U.N. backing, but Egyptian President Hosni 
Mubarak - a key Arab leader - said the White House had opened a 
door for settling the crisis. Egypt's foreign minister, meanwhile, 
said his government would support a U.S. strike on Iraq if it were 
sanctioned by a U.N. Security Council resolution.
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