http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45640-2003Mar5.html

Bitter enmity between Iraq and Kuwait erupted in a vitriolic name-calling
match on Wednesday at an Islamic summit meant to unite the voices of the
world's one billion Muslims against war.
In a clash caught on live television before the Qatar state broadcaster shut
down transmission, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's top aide Izzat Ibrahim
departed from his text to zero in on the Kuwaitis sitting across the
conference chamber.

"Shut up you minion, you (U.S.) agent, you monkey. You are addressing Iraq,"
Ibrahim said. "You are insolent. You are a traitor to the Islamic nation,"
he spat out as Qatar's Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani tried to shut him
up.

A Kuwaiti delegate responded that the insults were "the words of an infidel
and a charlatan," as the two sides shouted and gesticulated angrily at each
other.

Key U.S. Gulf ally Kuwait, which is publicly grateful to Washington for
leading a coalition that liberated it from Iraqi occupation in 1991, is
hosting thousands of U.S. Army and Marine forces in preparation for a
possible invasion of Iraq.

Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al Ahmad al Sabah told reporters the
clash proved that only the voluntary exile of Saddam and his leadership
could avert war.

This step was "the only thing and the miracle that can end this matter and
the miracle is in the Iraqis' hands," he said.

Muslim leaders had hoped the emergency summit of the 56-member Organisation
of the Islamic Conference (OIC) would send a clear message opposing an
attack on Iraq.

But no new initiatives to halt the drive toward war were discussed, and the
summit only agreed a broad statement on Iraq which said diplomacy should be
given more time.

The written statement was not read on Qatar television, which only broadcast
general closing remarks.

"Islamic countries would not participate in any military action which
targets the security and territorial integrity of Iraq or any Muslim
country," the statement said.

In fact, several Gulf states plus OIC member Turkey host U.S. forces and
bases which would be used in an attack on Iraq. As Muslim leaders flew out
of Doha, U.S. heavy transport aircraft were flying in, continuing the
military buildup.

Only a quarter of OIC members sent their heads of state to the one-day
gathering, the latest in a series of top-level Muslim or Arab gatherings
called at short notice in a desperate but so far unavailing bid to halt the
slide to war.

RELIGION UNDER THREAT, SAYS IRAQ

Ibrahim, second-in-command of Iraq's Revolutionary Command Council told the
members of the world's largest Islamic grouping that they were all at risk
from "the reckless and foolish United States" and said Baghdad expected
"concrete steps to support Iraq against this tyrant."

"There should be a point-blank refusal of any aggression and no help should
be given to this enemy... We hope Islamic nations can face the challenge
that is before them," he said.

"In the face of this bitter reality, we must rally our forces and the
foremost condition for our success is joint Muslim action," Ibrahim added.
"We must not allow anyone to break our ranks or religion will be wiped out
and our territories placed under foreign control."

Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri again rebuffed proposals that Saddam go
into exile to avert war, telling reporters it was President Bush who should
"step down and leave other people to live in peace."

"Any call for stepping down should be asked to Mr. Bush. He is causing his
people and his country to be hated all over the world, isolated all over the
world, becoming Public Enemy Number One all over the world."

OIC Secretary General Abdelouahed Belkeziz said the Islamic nation "with all
its political weight, power and resources" could make its voice heard if it
was united and sincere.

But recent Arab and Muslim summits on the Iraq crisis have been marred by
arguments and initiatives lost in dispute.

"I think the Arab and Islamic world is divided because we do not know what
we want to do," Qatar Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr
al-Thani told the summit's closing news conference. "We do not speak with a
single voice."



xponent
ROFLMAO Maru
rob

smart patrol
nowhere to go
suburban robots that monitor reality
common stock
we work around the clock
we shove the poles in the holes



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