Iraqi official: Bush, Saddam should fight duel

By SAMEER N. YACOUB -- Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- An Iraqi vice president offered a unique 
solution to the U.S.-Iraq standoff: a duel between George W. Bush and 
Saddam Hussein.

Taha Yassin Ramadan said the duel could be held at a neutral site and 
with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan as the referee.

Ramadan, wearing a green uniform and a black beret, made his remarks 
without giving any outward sign that he was joking although reporters 
who were present detected a note of irony in his voice.

"A president against a president and vice president against a vice 
president and a duel takes place, if they are serious, and in this 
way we are saving the American and the Iraqi people," Ramadan told 
the Associated Press Television Network.

Iraq has two vice presidents, and Ramadan did not say whether he or 
Taha Muhie-eldin Marouf would take on Dick Cheney.

Ramadan also said that his government was not concerned by U.S. 
lawmakers' support of a congressional resolution that would authorize 
President Bush to use military force against Iraq.

"We pay no attention to this issue," he said, adding that approving 
such a resolution "makes no difference" to Iraq.

Ramadan criticized U.S. efforts to delay the return of U.N. weapons 
inspectors to Iraq until the Security Council adopts tougher measures 
that would give the inspectors broad new powers to hunt for weapons 
of mass destruction and provide them with military backing.

He said such efforts were aimed at "hampering the inspection process."

"They (the Americans) were surprised by the agreement reached by Iraq 
and the United Nations. So their reaction was unbalanced," he said, 
referring to the deal in Vienna on Tuesday between Iraq and chief 
U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix.

Under the agreement, Iraq agreed to an unconditional return of the 
inspectors under the existing U.N. Security Council resolutions and a 
1998 agreement that put the so-called presidential sites -- including 
Saddam's palaces -- off-limits to surprise visits.

At the United Nations, the United States was pursuing a tough 
resolution that would end the exemption for those sites, give Iraq 30 
days to compile an "accurate, full and complete" inventory of all 
aspects of its weapons programs -- and provide U.N. inspectors 
military backing to carry out their search.

But the three other veto-wielding members of the Security Council -- 
Russia, China and France -- have said they are not ready to authorize 
force before inspectors have time to test Iraq's willingness to 
comply.

<http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWS/iraqduel_oct3-ap.html>
-- 
Yoshie

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