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 To view the entire article, go to 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A32281-2003Jan23.html

 U.S. Increasingly Isolated Over Iraq

  The Bush administration faced new problems today in its confrontation with Iraq as 
China and Russia joined U.S. allies France and Germany in rejecting early military 
action.


 The nations neighboring Iraq also convened a key meeting today in Turkey aimed at 
finding ways of averting a war.


 The stand taken by Paris, Beijing and Moscow means a majority of the five 
veto-wielding permanent members on the U.N. Security Council are against rushing into 
war. The other
two members are the United States and Britain, who continued their military buildup in 
the Gulf region today.


 The Bush administration has indicated it could launch military action without 
Security Council backing.


 In Berlin today, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder vowed he and French President
Jacques Chirac will do all they can to avert war. "War may never be considered 
unavoidable," he said.


 In Athens today, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said there were no grounds to 
use force at the moment.


 "There is still political and diplomatic leeway to resolve the Iraq issue," he said.


 Ivanov agreed with France and Germany that U.N. inspectors in Iraq should be allowed 
to press on with their job of looking for evidence of weapons of mass destruction.


 A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said Beijing's position was "extremely close 
to that of France."


 The Bush administration accuses Iraq of hiding nuclear, chemical or biological
weapons and has threatened to attack if Baghdad does not disarm in line with a U.N. 
resolution passed in November. Iraq denies possessing any banned weapons.


 The U.N. inspectors, who are due to present a key report Monday to the United 
Nations, have said they need several more months to complete their work.


 However, President Bush has warned that time is running out for Iraq.


 The United States is massing 150,000 troops in the region and has said it is ready to 
use them – with or without a Security Council
resolution – if it considers Iraq has not disarmed.


 In Istanbul today, foreign ministers and diplomats from Iraq's neighbors –
Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria – are meeting along with regional 
heavyweight Egypt, to discuss a way out of the crisis.


 "The countries ... (at) the Istanbul meeting all have friendly relations with the 
United States," Iraqi Ambassador Talip Abid Salih El Duleymi said. "We want them to 
use those
relations to dissuade the United States from its intention to attack."


 Iraq urged Turkey to reject U.S. requests for military support in any attack on 
Baghdad.


 The United States is looking to Turkey for use of its air bases and frontiers in the
event of military action.


 Ankara opposes war but may be hard pressed to deny help to its closest NATO ally.


 The United States has asked NATO to consider several measures to provide indirect 
military assistance in case of an invasion.


 NATO Secretary-General George Robertson today denied reports of a "bust-up" Wednesday 
over providing support.


 Diplomats said France, Germany, Belgium and Luxembourg had blocked a decision in NATO 
on whether to prepare supporting measures, notably defending Turkey's southern flank. 
But Robertson said the only disagreement was over timing, not substance.


 In Iraq today, U.N. experts continued their hunt for banned weapons as a local 
newspaper warned that U.S. troops faced a fate worse than the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks 
if there is a war.


 "The events of September 11 will be a picnic compared with what would happen to 
America if it commits aggression against Iraq," the Babel paper of President Saddam 
Hussein's son Uday
said today.


 In Iraq today, the U.N. inspectors visited at least five sites, including food 
stores, a fiberglass production plant, a missile complex and a university.

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