KUWAIT,
September 2 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Kuwait became the first
Arab state to signal support for the U.S. strikes against Iraq, a U.K.
daily newspaper reported Monday, September 2.
Speaking
to the Telegraph, Kuwaiti foreign minister, Sheikh Mohammed Sabah
Salem al-Sabah said that: “While Saddam Hussein continues to keep
Kuwaiti prisoners of war, and continues to televise threats against
Kuwait, we consider the war against Iraq to have never ended."
According
to the newspaper, Al Sabah’s comments serve as encouragement for a
Washington administration struggling to convince the international
community of the need for military action against the
12-year-sanction-hit country.
Saudi
Arabia, which America used as a base during the 1991 Gulf War to drive
Iraqi invaders from Kuwait, has so far refused to open its territory to
American forces for a new war against Baghdad, said the Telegraph.
The
paper quoted a Kuwaiti government official as saying: "If America
asks for support Kuwait will give it. I expect the same response from
all Gulf states. There may be the need publicly to be anti-war, but
under-the-table deals are being struck."
Meanwhile,
the foreign ministers of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) will meet on
Monday, September 2 in Jeddah to study U.S. threats against Iraq and
Israeli terrorism, the GCC secretary general, Abdulrahman Al-Attiya said
Saturday, August 31, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
chief diplomats of the Gulf Arab monarchies will also review a host of
issues to speed up unity between the six-nation alliance, Al-Attiya said
in a statement.
The
ministers will review the "situation between Iraq and Kuwait, and
Iraq's implementation of the pertinent U.N. Security Council resolutions
in light of increasing tension between Iraq and the United
Nations," Attiya said.
The
regular talks come amid "the increasing intensity of U.S. threats
to launch a [military] strike against Iraq and the GCC opposition to
such policies because of their negative and dangerous consequences on
the security and stability of the region," Attiya added.
"The
foreign ministers will give special focus to the developments in the
Palestinian territories and the suffering of the Palestinian people as a
result of the continued Israeli terrorism."
The
GCC groups Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) who have individually all expressed opposition to a
new war on Iraq.
Attiya
said the meeting will also tackle relations with Iran in light of visits
by GCC officials to Tehran and an expected visit by Iranian President
Mohammed Khatami to the UAE.
On
the internal front, the ministers will review military and media
cooperation in addition to reviewing a number of ideas expressed by
Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz to accelerate cooperation in
all fields, the statement said.
The
Saudi daily newspaper, Okaz, on Monday, September 2, quoted
participating ministers as saying that the meeting comes amidst
sensitive conditions and needs a strong, serious stand from the
countries involved.