WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 28-08-2002 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ Britain ]

      [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/foreignaffairs/story/0,11538,781457,00.html

      Straw: no action yet on Iraq
      Staff and agencies
      Tuesday August 27, 2002


      The foreign secretary,
      Jack Straw, today insisted that no decision had been taken by Britain or the US to launch military action against Saddam Hussein.

      Despite the strongest warning yet from the US vice-president, Dick Cheney, of the need for pre-emptive action before Iraq acquires nuclear weapons, Mr Straw said it was still not too late for President Saddam to avoid attack.

      At the same time, America's most important Arab ally, the Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, warned that US action to overthrow President Saddam could lead to "disorder and chaos" in the Middle East.

      On a visit to Edinburgh, Mr Straw again indicated that the Iraqi leader could escape a devastating military assault if he re-admitted UN weapons inspectors.

      "The ball is now in Saddam Hussein's court," he said. "Let me repeat what the prime minister and I have made all too clear so often - and that is that no decisions about military action have been taken here and no decisions about military action have been taken in the US."

      In an interview later with BBC Radio 4's the World at One, he underscored Britain's adherence to the UN security council resolutions on weapons inspectors as the basis for any military action.

      "The United States were fully signed up to those nine United Nations security council resolutions which provided the basis for putting the weapons inspectors in and the military action, and that is our position," he said.

      Mr Straw rejected suggestions that his comments on the re-admission of weapons inspectors put him at odds with Mr Cheney.

      Nevertheless, the guarded tone of his remarks was in sharp contrast to the vice-president's speech on Monday to army veterans warning of the "devastating consequences" if the US delayed action against President Saddam.

      Mr Cheney attacked what he said was the "flawed logic" of those arguing against a pre-emptive strike to topple the Iraqi dictator, saying it would be too late if he went on to acquire nuclear weapons.

      His address was being seen as the strongest statement yet from the US administration of its determination to secure "regime change" in Baghdad.
      In Egypt, Mr Mubarak warned that US military intervention would wreck attempts to broker a peace accord in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while undermining moderate Arab leaders.

      "There might be repercussions and we fear a state of disorder and chaos may prevail in the region," he said in a speech broadcast on state-run television.

      In Britain, the shadow foreign secretary, Michael Ancram, emphasised that any military action must be to get rid of President Saddam's weapons of mass destruction and not just an attempt to overthrow his regime.

      "We must be absolutely clear that what we are doing is eliminating weapons of mass destruction which pose a threat to us and the wider world," he told the BBC.

      The Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman, Menzies Campbell, said: "Repeated assertions of the threat posed by Iraq are not enough. If public opinion is to be persuaded of the need to take the risks of military action, hard evidence will be required."

      However Sharif Ali bin al Hussein, of the opposition Iraqi National Congress who recently met leading figures in Washington, said he believed the US administration was committed to act.

      "They see Saddam Hussein as a clear and present danger and that they can no longer tolerate his flaunting of countless UN resolutions," he said.


      World Fact Book (CIA)]


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