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Anti-war front collapses as Iraq gold rush begins

BERLIN, Wednesday (Reuters) They couldn't prevent the war, but that hasn't stopped the "Non-Nyet-Nein" coalition of France, Russia and Germany from staking their individual claims to a role in shaping, and profiting from, the new Iraq.

Even before the fighting stopped, the three European powers were moving to build bridges to the United States and Britain to ensure their companies get a share in rebuilding the infrastructure in Iraq.

France says it wants to be pragmatic, Germany says it is an honest broker because it has no economic interests in Iraq, and Russia says it will consider Washington's call to forgive some $8 billion in Soviet era debt.

All three have sounded conciliatory in the past week, while saying they want to see the United Nations play the lead role in post-war reconstruction - tactics widely seen as an effort to avoid being locked out of business deals by the United States.

Their fears are understandable, especially after the U.S. House of Representatives passed a measure last week to bar French, Russian and German companies from winning business in Iraq after the war they resisted. The measure did not become law.

"Nobody in France is under any illusion about France's place in the reconstruction of Iraq in terms of the contracts that will be awarded," said Barthelemy Courmont, researcher at the French Institute for International and Strategic Relations.

"Even before the outbreak of hostilities, we knew we would get nothing." France led the drive to prevent a war and threatened to use its veto at the U.N. Security Council to block any resolution authorising military action against Iraq.

But Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin recently warned against a "victor's spoils" attitude in Iraq. "The idea that Iraq can be a sort of Eldorado, a cake that states can carve up, seems to me contrary to good sense," he said.

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who opposed an Iraq war in his 2002 re-election campaign, has been out of favour with President George W. Bush ever since. He has tried to tap his friend, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, to repair the damage.

"It's always good for mankind when a dictator is removed," said Schroeder, in the midst of a remarkable metamorphosis, at a meeting with Blair in Hanover. "No matter what the differences of opinions were before, it goes without saying healthy trans-Atlantic relations are necessary and we'll work towards that aim in the future."

Blair, eager to help Schroeder out of the "Non-Nyet-Nein" axis, called the German leader "a good friend of mine".

"Whatever the differences were before the war, the state of our bilateral relations is extremely strong," Blair said.

In Washington, Bush administration officials have made clear the president will attend a G8 summit of industrialised nations in Evian, France on June 1.

But U.S. officials have made clear in recent days that Bush is unlikely to reach out to mend diplomatic ties with the anti-war coalition, and they may well feel the sting of retribution.

The likely result is that those who opposed the U.S.-led war in Iraq may well take a back seat when a new Iraqi government hands out business such as valuable oil contracts, and may be left out of the discussion in future international crises.

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