Thursday, 16 January 2003  
The widest coverage in Sri Lanka.
World
News

Business

Features

Editorial

Security

Politics

World

Letters

Sports

Obituaries

Archives

Government - Gazette

Silumina  on-line Edition

Sunday Observer

Budusarana On-line Edition





Saddam's time to disarm is "running out," US and Britain warn

WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (AFP) - The United States and Britain Tuesday warned Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein that his time to disarm was running out, but UN weapons inspectors insisted they needed longer to find proof Iraq was hiding banned weapons.

"I'm sick and tired of games and deception," an impatient President George W. Bush said as he received Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski at the White House.

"So far I haven't seen any evidence that he is disarming. ... Time is running out on Saddam Hussein; he must disarm."

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw jumped to Bush's side, saying in London he had been "right to put it in that way.

"(UN) Security Council resolution 1441 sets out a very clear pathway to a peaceful resolution of the Iraqi crisis but it requires the full and positive compliance by Saddam Hussein."

But all-out support for the US stance was not as forthcoming from other members of the European Union.

French President Jacques Chirac said after a dinner meeting with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder that their countries have "an identical approach and vision" regarding Iraq: diplomacy, but no war.

Schroeder, addressing a press conference with Chirac, said Germany had "the strongest possible hope and will" to see the current UN resolution in force on Iraq applied "by political pressure and not by military intervention.

"Germany will in no case participate in any military intervention," Schroeder said, although he has promised US and NATO forces the use of German bases and air space, and German troops to help crew AWACS surveillance planes over Turkey.

European Commission President Romano Prodi, addressing the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, urged EU governments to take a common approach to avoid war in Iraq, except as a last resort.

But Swedish Prime Minister Goeran Persson was pessimistic all 15 EU member states could agree a common policy.

"The differences are too great," he told the Danish newspaper Politiken. "The EU's foreign policy capacity is no larger than what all the members can agree upon. The truth is, we have a divided picture. The British have one line, the Germans another, and the French a third."

French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin told the parliament his government's opposition to war had not changed.

He implicitly criticised Washington's claim that the all-important UN Resolution 1441 could alone trigger military action if Iraq is deemed to have obstructed inspections.

"If there is going to be use of force, there will have to be a deliberation other than that for 1441, because the source of international law -- essential for us -- is at the UN and the Security Council," he said.

Some 150,000 US ground, air and naval personnel are set for deployment to the Gulf region by mid-February, but the White House maintains no timetable has been set for an attack.

Bush's harsh words appeared at odds with earlier comments by chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix hinting he was not as keen as the US president to rush to judgement.

Blix told the Washington Post a progress report by his staff to the UN Security Council due January 27 would mark "the beginning of the inspection and monitoring process, not the end of it."

Blix also announced separately the deployment of 60 new inspectors to Iraq and said they would continue working there at least until March, when he is due to present another, more detailed report to the council.

Bush had earlier described the January 27 report as the start of "the final phase," leading to a US decision on whether to use military might to force Iraq to give up its alleged nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs.

Blix and International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei are due in Baghdad this weekend for talks with their inspectors and with Iraqi officials.

ABC News meanwhile quoted unnamed sources as saying Bush was preparing to take his case for war to the United Nations soon after January 27 regardless of the inspectors' preliminary findings.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri, following up on Blix's admission last week that no "smoking gun" had yet been found, told Iraqi satellite television, "The inspectors have come and found nothing. And if they stay on and search every corner of Iraq, they will find nothing because there is nothing for them to find."

Amid the signs of the Bush administration's growing impatience for action, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said he still believed Baghdad could be disarmed without a war.

"I am both optimistic and hopeful that if we handle the situation right and the pressure on the Iraqi leadership is maintained, and the inspectors continue their work aggressively, we may be able to disarm Iraq peacefully without going to war," he said.

He warned the consequences of a military attack on Iraq "could be quite substantial and negative," notably in the numbers of refugees it would produce.

Meanwhile, Arab heavyweights Saudi Arabia and Egypt called for redoubling diplomatic efforts to resolve the Iraqi crisis in a bid to avert war.

That word followed talks in the Saudi capital of Riyadh between Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz, the oil-rich kingdom's de facto ruler.

UN arms experts meanwhile inspected 10 suspect sites in Iraq as they dug in for a long haul and prepared to receive more reinforcements to bolster the hunt for any banned weapons programs.

Blix said his teams had found cases where Baghdad had imported weapons-related material in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.

"Whether these discoveries or these items are related to weapons of mass destruction is a matter that we still need to determine," he said.

www.peaceinsrilanka.org

www.2000plaza.lk

Vacancies - Sri Lanka Ports Authority

www.eagle.com.lk

Crescat Development Ltd.

www.helpheroes.lk


News | Business | Features | Editorial | Security
Politics | World | Letters | Sports | Obituaries |


Produced by Lake House
Copyright 2001 The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd.
Comments and suggestions to :Web Manager


Hosted by Lanka Com Services