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We can do without
France and Germany: Rumsfeld |
BAGHDAD, January 23
(IslamOnline & News Agencies) –
U.S. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld criticized Wednesday, January 22,
“problematic” France and Germany for their continued opposition to the
upcoming U.S. war on Iraq, saying that they represent “old Europe”.
Rumsfeld dismissed
French and German insistence that “everything must be done to avoid war”
with Iraq, saying that most European countries stand with the United
States in its campaign to force Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to
disarm, CNN’s online news service reported.
“Germany has been
a problem, and France has been a problem,” said Rumsfeld, a former NATO
ambassador. “But you look at vast numbers of other countries in Europe.
They’re not with France and Germany on this, they’re with the United
States.”
Germany and France
represent “old Europe,” and NATO’s expansion in recent years means “the
center of gravity is shifting to the east,” Rumsfeld said, CNN reported.
We Must Avoid War
This comes at the same time France and
Germany said that “everything must be done” to prevent war in Iraq, as
Baghdad accused the United States of trying to sabotage the U.N.
disarmament process as a pretext for a conflict, Agence France-Presse
(AFP) said.
While the United States tightened the
noose around Iraq, ordering two more carrier groups to the Gulf,
regional countries prepared for a meeting in Istanbul to coordinate
efforts to find a peaceful solution to the crisis.
In Paris, French President Jacques Chirac
said after a meeting with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder that the
two countries were united in their opposition to war in Iraq.
“Germany and France have the same judgment
on the Iraq crisis,” Chirac said at a news conference with Schroeder by
his side, summing up their stand in two points.
“The first is that any decision for the
(U.N.) Security Council belongs to it alone, to be expressed after
hearing the report of the inspectors” searching for alleged weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq, Chirac said.
The second is that, “for us, war is always
evidence of failure. Everything must be done to avoid war.”
Impatient Bush
The stance followed an attack by U.S.
President George W. Bush Tuesday, January 21, ahead of expected demands
by inspection chiefs for more time to complete their
“How much time do we need to see clearly
that he’s not disarming?” Bush snapped, charging Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein with using “the tricks of the past” to thwart U.N. inspectors as
he did after the 1991 Gulf War.
Germany had already said Tuesday it
refused to add its voice to any U.N. vote for the use of force against
Iraq, while France, Russia and China backed more time for the
disarmament inspectors to fulfill their mandate.
“Don’t expect Germany to approve a
resolution which would give legitimacy to war,” Schroeder said, without
making it clear if Berlin as a non-permanent member of the Security
Council would vote against or abstain.
And in another blow to Washington’s
attempts to forge a coalition in support of military action, Russia
aligned itself with fellow permanent Security Council members France and
China by opposing immediate conflict.
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said
a majority of the five permanent council members, all of whom have veto
power, now believed it was “indispensable” to pursue diplomatic efforts
well beyond next Monday’s progress report by the inspectors to the
Security Council.
He also warned Washington against taking
unilateral military action without explicit Security Council
authorization, saying this would “not only complicate the situation in
the region but weaken the anti-terror coalition.”
Nothing Justifies Attack
On Monday, French Foreign Minister
Dominique de Villepin had declared “nothing would justify” such an
attack and suggested France could use its veto in the Security Council.
His Chinese counterpart Tang Jiaxuan said
the report should be seen as a “new beginning,” not the end of the
process.
Iraqi Press Tells Bush: Prove It, Or Shut Up
Meanwhile in Baghdad, as arms experts
carried out a 54th day of inspections in Iraq, a leading
state-run newspaper said Bush was out to stop them certifying that the
country is free of banned weapons.
“The whole world knows that the
declarations of the U.S. president toward Iraq are false and even Bush
himself knows it,” said Babel, run by President Saddam Hussein’s
eldest son, Uday.
“If the U.S. administration cannot present
proof, it should shut up and let the inspectors carry on their mission
in all transparency and without pressure or blackmail.”
In another positive development for
Baghdad, a U.N. panel monitoring sanctions against Al-Qaeda said Tuesday
it had no evidence to back U.S. and British charges of links between
Iraq and Osama bin Laden’s network.
However, Bush and other U.S. leaders have
made it clear the United States is prepared to circumvent the U.N. and
take military action “with like-minded nations.” Britain is also pouring
troops and ships into the Gulf region.
More Deployment
Adding muscle to U.S. rhetoric, U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld signed deployment orders for the two additional
carrier battle groups at the weekend.
The U.S. Navy will now soon have five
aircraft carriers in or bound for the Gulf, giving U.S. commanders the
clout to launch a massive air offensive against Iraq, analysts said.
The United States is expected to have more
than 150,000 troops in the region by mid-February.