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Putin, left, with Blair
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MOSCOW,
October 11 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Russia will not accept
a U.S. proposal for a U.N. resolution threatening the use of force
against Iraq.
"The
U.S. draft resolution cannot be accepted as a basis for a future U.N.
Security Council resolution on Iraq as it contains clearly
unfulfillable demands," Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Yury
Fedotov said Friday, October 11.
"If
we are to reach a new decision (in the Security Council over Iraq) it
should reflect the views of all members of the Security Council,
including Russia," the Agence France-Press (AFP) quoted Fedotov
as saying in a statement.
The
statement came after President Vladimir Putin held talks with British
Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Putin
told Blair that he thought a deal could be struck over a tough new
U.N. resolution on Iraq.
"With
this aim in mind, I do not rule out reaching a joint position (on the
Iraqi issue), including a U.N. resolution," he added.
"We
are ready together with our partners to search for ways to ensure the
work of (U.N. weapons) inspectors in Iraq," Putin told reporters,
flanked by Blair.
Russia
has seen no evidence that Iraq is developing weapons of mass
destruction, President Putin said after talks with Blair.
"Russia
does not have in its possession any trustworthy data which would
support the existence of nuclear weapons or any other weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq and we have not received from our partners such
information as yet," he said.
The
Putin-Blair meeting took place as U.S. President George Bush obtained
authorization from Congress to wage war on Iraq, citing a
"continuing threat" posed by Iraq's alleged weapons buildup.
The
same argument was further substantiated by Putin’s Defense Minister
Sergei Ivanov who said in a British press interview published Friday
October 11 that Washington has failed to provide conclusive evidence
to justify the need for an attack on Iraq.
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World countries are against the war on Iraq |
"Unfortunately,
I have not found facts which could prove without doubt the presence
(of weapons of mass destruction)," Ivanov told The Guardian.
"We
do not have any data about either the financial or material support of
the Iraqi leadership for international terrorists," said Ivanov,
adding that requests for such data had been made at the highest level.
Ivanov
dismissed speculation that Washington had offered a compensation
package for the possible loss of Russia's economic interests in Iraq
in the event of military action.
He
insisted, however, that Russia could not be bought: "It is not a
matter of bargaining," said Ivanov, who is considered Putin's
closest confidant.
"We
are sure that military force can be used only after all -- I repeat
all -- political and diplomatic measures have been tried without any
result."
He
said Washington's "refusal to take into account the fact that the
world is interdependent" and its determination to undertake
"unilateral measures that do not resolve problems, but create new
and unpredictable ones," imperiled U.S.-Russian relations.
The
defense minister dismissed Anglo-American attempts to broker a new
U.N. Security Council resolution and called for the immediate
deployment of weapons inspectors in Iraq.
In
Budapest, French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said Friday
October 11, "a military attack on Iraq must be the ‘last
step’".
"The
French solution (to the Iraqi crisis) allows the United Nations to
impose its authority at each step and to demonstrate to the world,
particularly the Arab world ... (that it is acting legitimately), in
order to make it clear that the use of force is truly the last
step," Villepin told a press conference.
He
said he was optimistic a peaceful solution could be found despite the
U.S. Congress authorizing Bush to use force against Iraq.
The
Philippines is not prepared to join a U.S. military strike on Iraq,
even as Manila remains committed to Washington's global war on terror,
Malaysian Foreign Secretary Blas Ople said Friday October 11.
"We
don't intend to participate in the war against Iraq, but of course
will continue our firm commitment to support the global war against
terrorism," Ople told reporters shortly after meeting with
President Gloria Arroyo.
He
stressed his government was "not obliged to support any
resolution passed by foreign legislature" even as he noted that
the U.S. vote did not set a specific timetable for any military force
against Iraq.
The
five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council -- Britain, China,
France, Russia and the United States -- are engaged in tough
consultations over the framing of a resolution that would require Iraq
to abandon its alleged capability for acquiring nuclear, chemical or
biological weapons.
Russia
has previously consistently opposed U.S. demands for a resolution that
would allow it to take military action if Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein fails to allow complete unfettered access to U.N. weapons
inspectors.
A
U.S.-British draft resolution would give Baghdad seven days to declare
all its alleged weapons of mass destruction programs or face military
action, and another 23 days to cooperate fully with U.N. inspection
teams.
Russia
has expressed interest in a French proposal for a two-stage ultimatum:
one resolution that would demand more effective inspections, and
another later if necessary to green-light the use of military force.

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