The
resolution would immediately lift United Nations sanctions against
Iraq and put its oil revenues into a new Iraqi Assistance Fund to be
spent "at the direction" of the U.S.-led occupying powers.
But
the document only allows the U.N. an essentially supervisory role and
relegates the international body to providing humanitarian relief and
support in the country's reconstruction. The United States also firmly
opposes the return of U.N. weapons inspectors.
Blair
Still Has Role
Condemning
the resolution as "deeply unsatisfactory", the Guardian
criticized British Prime Minister Tony Blair for failing to push
harder for a bigger U.N. role.
"Blair
still has a lot of explaining to do. Where is the 'vital role' for the
U.N. that he promised?"
Blair
had earlier touted that the threat thought to be posed by Iraq’s
weapons are the principal reason for launching war.
Stressing
the importance of the immediate return of U.N. weapons inspectors, the
British newspaper said that without an independent, international
verification of Iraq’s weapons capability, any future U.S. and
British evidence showing their action to be justified “may not be
believed,"
"Suspicions
gain ground that Washington and London exaggerated the weapons of mass
destruction threat for political purposes, that their intelligence was
either faulty or used selectively, and that they now have something to
hide," read the editorial.
"What
an irony, and what a disgrace, that after years of complaining about
Saddam's obstruction of inspections, the U.S. is now itself
obstructing them."
“Vociferous
Opposition”
As
the U.S. and Britain sees no role for the U.N. inspectors in the
foreseeable future, other veto-wielding countries are still standing
on the opposite sides.
The
draft resolution will probably face amendments from France and Russia,
who have favored suspending the sanctions but advocate some control
being vested in the U.N. until an Iraqi government is established.
Russia
wants to see a strong role for the U.N. to give any U.S.-chosen Iraqi
authority international legitimacy. While French president Jacques
Chirac intimated that there was room for negotiation, saying "I
can confirm to you that France's will [is] to undertake discussions on
the future of this country in an open and constructive spirit."
Russia
and France also want the U.N. to follow procedures - opposed by
Washington - which would require U.N. arms inspectors to declare Iraq
free of weapons of mass destruction.
But
no ground is given to Russia's demand by Washington or London. The
U.S. own search teams are now working for weeks in Iraq, but they have
“found nothing of any great significance.”
In
a further sign of the confusion over the U.S. role in Iraq, the
defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Friday, May 9, that a one-year
timeline attached to the presence of U.S. and British forces in Iraq
was probably "just a review period" in the overall postwar
plan.
"Anyone
who thinks they know how long it's going to take is fooling
themselves," Rumsfeld said. It's not knowable," he added
“Appropriate”
The
U.S. draft resolution envisages a similarly tight U.S.-British grip,
also for at least one year, on exploitation of and revenue from Iraq's
oil once U.N. controls, specifically the oil-for-food program, are
phased out.
“Common
sense again suggests that the U.N. should be afforded a leading role,
as in Afghanistan, in facilitating the creation of a post-Saddam
system of governance,” said the Guardian editorial.
Outside
the U.N., the proposals provoked a vociferous response from the
European Union's commissioner for aid and development, Poul Nielsen,
who accused America of seeking to seize control of Iraq's vast oil
wealth.
Nielson,
a Dane who has just returned from a three-day fact-finding mission to
Iraq said the U.S. was "on its way to becoming a member of
Opec", the Middle Eastern oil cartel.
"They
will appropriate the oil," he told the Danish public service DR
radio station. "It is very difficult to see how this would make
sense in any other way.”
"The
unwillingness to give the U.N. a genuine, legal well-defined role,
also in the broader context of rebuilding Iraq after Saddam ... speaks
a language that is quite clear."
Eager
to avoid another bitter transatlantic diplomatic row, the commission
headquarters issued a swift rebuttal, saying Nielson's views did not
"reflect the opinion of the commission as a whole".
Iraqis
also responded frostily to the plans, praising the lifting of
sanctions but calling for the U.N. or an Iraqi interim government to
take charge of the nation's oil wealth.