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Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 07-02-2003 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ U.S ]

      [http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2003/02/05/21054-ap.html

      Bush warns 'game is over'
      Thu, February 6, 2003

      WASHINGTON (CP) - In the face of stiff opposition from allies, President George W. Bush declared Thursday "the game is over" for Saddam Hussein and urged the United Nations to join in disarming Iraq.

      "Saddam Hussein will be stopped," Bush said. The president said he would be open to a second UN resolution on disarmament, following up one approved last November, but only if it led to prompt action. "The Security Council must not back down when those demands are defied and mocked by a dictator," Bush said. If the UN fails to act,

      "The United States, along with a growing coalition of nations, is resolved to take whatever action is necessary to defend ourselves and disarm the Iraqi regime," he said.

      Aides said the next few days would be dedicated to turning up pressure on reluctant allies such as France and Germany as well as other UN members.

      Bush was silent on a timetable.

      In Ottawa on Thursday, Prime Minister Jean Chretien repeated in the Commons that if the Security Council decides on the use of force, Canada will do its part. But he ignored the question of what Canada would do if the Americans move without UN approval.

      Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham also dismissed the question Thursday, calling it hypothetical.

      Earlier in the day, Powell stuck to the phrase the administration has been using concerning a final decision on possible war - "weeks, not months" - but White House officials noted that Bush was no longer saying consultations would last that long. "Saddam Hussein was given a final chance, he is throwing that chance away. The dictator of Iraq is making his choice," Bush said.

      He spoke after meeting with privately with Powell to discuss efforts to win UN approval of a resolution specifically authorizing use of force. Powell, who laid out the U.S. case to the UN Security Council on Wednesday, told legislators Thursday that the Iraqi situation would be brought to a conclusion "one way or another" in a matter of weeks.

      Sticking largely to the case outlined by Powell on Wednesday, Bush said there is no doubt Saddam is not complying with the earlier UN order to disarm. "Saddam Hussein recently authorized Iraqi field commanders to use chemical weapons, the very weapons the dictator tells the world he does not have," Bush said.

      "Saddam Hussein has the motive and the means and the recklessness and the hatred to threaten the American people. Saddam Hussein has to be stopped," Bush said. He suggested anew that there is a link between Saddam and the terrorist group al-Qaida.

      "The same terrorist network operating out of Iraq is responsible for the murder - the recent murder - of an American diplomat, Lawrence Foley," Bush said. Foley, a U.S. Agency for International Development official, was killed last November outside his home in Amman, Jordan.

      Foreign ministers responded mostly with calls for more weapons inspections after Powell's UN presentation, in which he asserted that Iraq was shifting and hiding weapons and missile programs from the current inspectors.

      Powell told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that most of the statements read by foreign ministers after his speech had been prepared beforehand. He said he detected a shift in attitude when he talked to 13 of the ministers in private afterward.

      Still, President Jacques Chirac said Thursday France's position on war with Iraq was unchanged by Powell's presentation.
      "We refuse to think that war is inevitable," Chirac said.

      Powell told the senators Bush would welcome a second resolution and "many members of the Council would not only welcome it, some of them would say we require one for participation in whatever might come."

      A resolution approved unanimously by the Council in November authorized a new round of UN weapons inspections and warned Iraq of serious consequences if it defied earlier resolutions requiring it to get rid of weapons of mass destruction.

      The Bush administration has taken the position that the November resolution was sufficient backing for the use of force. But France, among other countries, does not agree. Bush spoke to reporters without taking questions.

      The president said Saddam has not accounted for a "vast arsenal" of weapons of mass destruction. "This deception is directed from the highest levels of the Iraqi regime, including Saddam Hussein, his son, the vice-president and the very official responsible for co-operating with inspectors," Bush said.

      Powell told the senators he had told Council members at the time of the November resolution that Iraq would be subjected to military action if it failed to comply. In fact, he said, he told ministers they should not vote for the resolution if they would not support a second resolution "when serious consequences are called for."

      "Don't play that double game," he said he told the ministers.

      Powell said Thursday a key to winning Security Council support would be a two-day visit to Baghdad this weekend by chief weapon inspectors Mohamed ElBaradei and Hans Blix.


      World Fact Book (CIA)]


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