http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/3/14/112209.shtml


French and Russian oil and gas contracts signed with the Saddam Hussein
regime in Iraq "will not be honored," Kurdish Prime Minister Barhim Salih
said in Washington Friday, just before a series of high-level meetings with
Bush administration officials.
"A new Iraqi government should not honor any of these contracts, signed
against the interests of the Iraqi people. The new Iraqi government should
respect those who stood by us, and not those who stood beside the dictator,"
Salih added.

Russian and French oil corporations have each signed draft contracts with
Iraq, to come into force only when the United Nations sanctions are lifted,
for exploration, development and exploitation of the country's energy
resources -- which geologists believe may be the world's second largest
after Saudi Arabia. The value of the draft contracts, if fully taken up, is
estimated to have a potential of more than $20 billion.

Although there have been dark hints that French and Russian opposition to a
second U.N. resolution in the Security Council could have economic
consequences, this is the first clear threat from a leading opposition
figure from inside Iraq that their oil contracts will not be honored.

"France and Russia should make a decision where they stand," Barhim Salih
added, speaking to U.S. policy experts and reporters at the prestigious
Council on Foreign Relations Friday. "We would rather see them stand with
us. They cannot have it both ways."

The only democratically elected political leader in Iraq, Salih is prime
minister of the Kurdistan regional government in northern Iraq, and is
expected to be one of the most powerful political figures in Iraq after the
fall of Saddam Hussein. The Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq, protected for
a decade by British and U.S. warplanes enforcing the no-fly zone, has become
an island of democratic and representative government.


While there is no guarantee that Salih will be elected to a high position in
whatever new government emerges after Saddam, the Iraqi Kurds as the
best-organized and most cohesive group are expected to play a decisive role.

Fearful of Turkish Military

Prime Minister Salih went on for talks with senior Bush administration
officials on plans for rebuilding post-war Iraq and for creating political
stability. His top priority was to persuade the Bush administration from
giving the Turkish military any role in the Kurdish region on northern Iraq.

"Turkish military involvement will invite other neighbors to intervene, like
Syria and Iran. This would open Pandora's box. It would create havoc, and
compromise the real mission, which is to install representative government
and democracy in a stable Iraq, at peace with its neighbors."

He also said that the 70,000 Kurdish troops, mostly with light weapons, at
his government's disposal would come under U.S. command in the event of war.
And he confirmed intelligence reports that Iraqi troops had affixed
explosives to the oil wells near Mosul and Kirkuk.

"Saddam wants to instigate an environmental catastrophe. This is his
Armageddon," Salih said. "We are in touch with the Iraqi military, telling
them to ignore orders to destroy the wells. We think very few of them will
fight. Senior officers at border crossing have asked us to let them know
when the moment (for attack) comes so they can escape."

Prime Minister Salih, 42, with a Ph. D in computer science from a British
university, said he did "not expect to see Western-style democracy
overnight, but some form of representative government will emerge, based on
a federal system with wide measures of autonomy for the various regions."



xponent
Kurds In The Way Maru
rob


Aint nothin' gonna change
If you can go away
Im just gonna stay here and always be the same



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