http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14404-2003Feb15.html

U.S., Britain Reworking Iraq Resolution 
By DAFNA LINZER

The Associated Press
Saturday, February 15, 2003; 9:31 PM 

Rattled by an outpouring of anti-war sentiment, the United States and Britain 
began reworking a draft resolution Saturday to authorize force against Saddam 
Hussein.

Diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the final product may be a 
softer text that does not explicitly call for war.

Before Friday's dramatic Security Council meeting, where weapons inspectors 
gave a relatively favorable accounting of Iraq's recent cooperation, U.S. and 
British diplomats said they had been preparing a toughly worded resolution that 
would give them U.N. backing for military action.

British diplomats had said then that any resolution would have to include an 
authorization of force. They described working versions of the draft as short, 
simply worded texts that found Iraq in "material breach" of its obligations and 
reiterated that Saddam now faces "serious consequences" as a result.

In diplomatic terms, coupling the consequences with material breach would be 
tantamount to an authorization.

But the measured reports by inspectors, in addition to massive global 
opposition to war - expressed both in the council and in the streets - came as 
a blow to their plans.

The two English-speaking allies had hoped to push through a new resolution 
quickly, and there had even been talk of a Saturday council meeting to 
introduce it. But their plans were put on hold Friday after staunch opposition -
 led by France, Russia and China - drew rare applause inside the council 
chamber.

British and American diplomats conceded they would need to go home, consider 
the views of others and soften the tone of the draft.

Adding to the pressure, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in an interview 
Saturday with Abu Dhabi Television that another resolution, following up on 
Resolution 1441, which was passed in November, would be necessary if force was 
used against Saddam.

"I think a second resolution, following through on the conditions of 1441, is 
necessary," Annan said.

Pakistani Ambassador Munir Akram said, "The situation is very fluid and so is 
the language right now."

He said a resolution giving Saddam an ultimatum to relinquish power or be 
removed by force was still an option. But Akram said it would be very hard for 
Pakistan - a key ally for the United States despite an anti-American population 
at home - to vote in favor of any resolution authorizing war.

Others council members agreed.

While Secretary of State Colin Powell said after Friday's meeting that there 
was no talk of compromise yet, some diplomats said privately that it was the 
responsibility of the five council powers - the United States, Britain, France, 
Russia and China - to negotiate a way out of the impasse over Iraq.

Unless that happens, President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair are 
unlikely to gain U.N. support for a war to disarm Iraq. While they may be 
prepared to act without it, U.N. backing would offer international legitimacy 
and a guarantee that reconstruction costs would be shared.

U.N. backing is particularly important for the British government, which faces 
strong public opposition to a war. More than 750,000 people attended an anti-
war protest in London on Saturday, police said, and millions more joined in 
similar demonstrations across the globe.

Noting the opposition, diplomats from Mexico, Chile, Angola and Bulgaria - key 
swing votes thought by the United States to be likely supporters - were 
considering abstaining in a vote as long as the five powers were unable to 
agree.

At NATO headquarters Saturday, Belgium, trying to end a bitter dispute within 
the NATO alliance, said it would join France and Germany in endorsing a U.S. 
proposal on war planning as long as it was clear that preparations to help 
Turkey were defensive in nature and not seen as pushing the alliance toward war 
against Iraq. The compromise offer was to be discussed in an urgent session 
Sunday.

For the past month, Germany, France and Belgium have blocked a U.S. proposal 
for NATO to send early warning planes, missile defenses and anti-biochemical 
warfare units as a precaution to Turkey, the only NATO country bordering Iraq. 
The other 16 NATO allies say the delay undermines the alliances credibility 
while sending a signal of weakness to Saddam Hussein's regime.

A Monday meeting of the European Union will be the first opportunity to gauge 
readiness on the continent to negotiate. On Tuesday, the Security Council is to 
hold an open meeting on Iraq, designed mostly to embarrass the United States by 
providing a forum for non-council members to air their opposition to war.

But diplomats say that by the middle of next week, Washington and London will 
have a better idea about how soon they can circulate a draft.

All sides acknowledge they want to avoid forcing France, Russia or China to 
veto the resolution. So the draft will have to be considerably reworked or be 
designed to be withdrawn - a diplomatic strategy that would demonstrate Britain 
and the United States want U.N. support but not at any cost.

A similar situation occurred in the run-up to NATO's bombing of Kosovo in 1999 
when a resolution authorizing force was withdrawn in the face of a threatened 
Russian veto.

At the end of the 78-day bombing campaign, the United Nations then came 
together to pass a resolution authorizing a U.N. administration of Kosovo and a 
framework for its reconstruction. Several council diplomats, who spoke on 
condition of anonymity, said a similar play on Iraq may be the best way around 
the current split in the council.

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