-Caveat Lector-

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/02/28/1046407751601.html
  Print this article |   Close this window Eyes wide shut as US, France go
to war over Iraq By Caroline Overington, Herald Correspondent in New York
March 1 2003

France and the United States went head-to-head over Iraq yesterday during a
bitter session of the United Nations Security Council, as Baghdad agreed in
principle to begin destroying illegal missiles. The closed meeting took
place just hours after the UN's chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix,
delivered another largely negative report on Iraq's attitude to
inspections.
UN officials and ambassadors offered a taste of the atmosphere of the
debate as they walked out of the meeting with eyes wide with shock.
However, they kept their descriptions of the talks neutral. Germany said
they were "intense" and France called them "very interesting" - which is
diplomatic speak for "We were tearing each other to pieces in there".
The Blix report, to be presented formally early this morning, Sydney time,
said Iraq had offered "very little" in the way of real disarmament after
four months of inspections.

But leaks said Dr Blix had some praise for Iraq. France said the
willingness to destroy the al-Samoud 2 missiles, deemed illegal because of
their range beyond 150 kilometres, was an example of how well the
inspections were working.
But there were doubts whether Iraq would begin destroying the missiles by
today's deadline set by Dr Blix. It demanded that weapons inspectors first
begin talks in Baghdad over how and when they will be dismantled. The
Security Council argument centred on the draft of the second resolution,
proposed by the US and Britain, so that a UN-sanctioned war on Iraq can
begin. A UN official who attended told the Herald that France and the US
were barely speaking to each other, except to vigorously disagree with
everything the other said. "It was verging on the personal," the official
said. "I mean, you know it's getting bad when they don't even try to hide
the fact that they can't stand each other's point of view. "Normally, they
would never say they can't agree. They prefer to find some kind of
compromise. But they are not bothering with that. They are deeply, deeply
divided, and I think today we saw a hardening of their positions, if
anything."
The four-hour meeting came to nought. There was no agreement on anything,
not even the date that Dr Blix should next appear before the Security
Council to discuss his latest report.
By the end of the debate, the council remained deeply divided. Two of the
five permanent members with vetoes - the US and Britain - want to go to
war. Another two, France and Russia, do not. The fifth, China, is likely to
abstain.
The 10 temporary members, elected for two-year terms, are also divided.
Spain and Bulgaria support the war, Germany and Syria do not, and Cameroon,
Guinea, Chile, Angola, Mexico and Pakistan find themselves stuck in the
middle of one of the most rancorous international disputes in recent
history.
Chile's ambassador to the UN, Juan Gabriel Valdes, said it was simply not
fair that six temporary members would effectively have to decide whether
the world goes to war. He scolded the permanent five for not being able to
find a way to disarm Iraq that was "effective and legitimate".
"This divided council is in fact throwing the decision on the shoulders of
the elected members. The permanent members are just sticking to their
positions, without making an effort to approximate their views." A summary
of Dr Blix's report, obtained by the Herald, says "the results in terms of
disarmament" of Iraq have been "very limited". He also criticises Baghdad
for not making "greater efforts" to locate the missing bombs, chemical
agents, anthrax and other weapons that Iraq is known to have had.
The report notes that it is "hard to understand" why Iraq was only now
making an effort to provide inspectors with information they have been
seeking since November.

Where the members of the UN Security Council sit

FOR WAR United States, Britain, Spain and Bulgaria AGAINST
France, Russia, China, Germany and Syria
UNDECIDED
Cameroon, Guinea, Chile, Angola, Mexico and Pakistan This story was found
at: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/02/28/1046407751601.html
-- Euphorian

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