U.S. Unveils New U.N. Resolution on Iraq 

UNITED NATIONS - Security Council nations gave a generally positive 
response to the U.S.-British blueprint for a post-occupation Iraqi 
government but several demanded greater Iraqi control over security 
and the U.S.-led multinational force that will try to restore 
stability. 

The introduction of a draft resolution Monday by Iraq (news - web 
sites)'s occupying powers set the stage for intense negotiations with 
longtime critics of the war, such as France and Germany, who are 
demanding that Iraq's interim government be the key decision-maker on 
security issues. 

In Berlin on Tuesday, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer called 
the U.S.-British plan a "very good foundation" for efforts to reach a 
consensus at the United Nations (news - web sites). 

In Paris, French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said the draft 
resolution "needs improvements" and France hopes to have a say in new 
talks over Iraqi sovereignty. He declined to elaborate. 

France led the opposition to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, insisting 
that military intervention needed U.N. backing to be legitimate. 

The United States and Britain unveiled the long-awaited plan hours 
before President Bush (news - web sites) said in a nationally 
televised address that American forces would stay in Iraq until it 
was free and democratic. 

The resolution is an attempt by the Bush administration to win 
international backing for the post-occupation plans in Iraq, which 
have been severely shaken by violence. With his approval ratings 
sinking after repeated setbacks in Iraq, Bush is also seeking to 
rebuild support at home. 

Under the resolution, the multinational force would be authorized to 
take "all necessary measures" to maintain security and prevent 
terrorism, while no mention is made of the Iraqi army � except the 
need for training. 

The mandate for U.S.-led forces in Iraq would be reviewed after a 
year � or even earlier if a transitional government due to take power 
after January elections requests it. But U.S. deputy ambassador James 
Cunningham said the United States will keep its promise "that we will 
leave if there's a request from the government to leave," which he 
called highly unlikely. 

Council members said one of the major concerns raised during closed-
door discussions after the resolution was introduced on Monday was 
the question of whether sovereignty is really being restored � or 
whether the occupation would continue under another guise. 

Doubts over the government's legitimacy would undermine Washington's 
claims that the June 30 handover of power represents a major change 
in Iraq, with the official end of the U.S.-led occupation that many 
Iraqis resent. 

Many in Iraq and in Europe fear that the interim government will not 
be seen as legitimate if it doesn't have a credible voice in the 
operations of armed forces on its own soil. 

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said the new Iraqi 
government "must be able to make decisions over security issues or 
else it won't be truly sovereign." 

Moscow has yet to give its official reaction but a Russian diplomat 
said the draft raises numerous questions and needs changes. The 
unnamed diplomat spoke to the Interfax news agency. 

China expressed support for the plan and urged the early 
establishment of a new Iraq with "political sovereignty, independence 
and territorial integrity." 

French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier told reporters that Paris 
seeks a timeline for handing over control of Iraqi armed forces. The 
Iraqi government should "in time" have "authority over police forces 
and the Iraqi army," he said. 

Human Rights Watch criticized the draft, saying the United States and 
Britain will retain ultimate responsibility for security and human 
rights and Iraq's new interim leaders will not have full authority to 
govern the country. 

Cunningham and Britain's U.N. Ambassador Emyr Jones Parry insist that 
the resolution will return all sovereignty to the Iraqis � and they 
argued that neither the United States, Britain nor the Security 
Council should be dictating to a sovereign Iraq what it should and 
shouldn't do. 

"The important thing is that the political responsibility for taking 
decisions for the presence of the multinational force, for the 
development of a constitution, for the development of the political 
process, are going into Iraqi hands," Cunningham said. "It's not for 
the Security Council to tell them how to do it. It's for them � it's 
their process." 

With the June 30 transfer of sovereignty looming, Washington and 
London decided to start negotiations on the 2,400-word resolution, 
even though U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is still working on the makeup 
of the interim government. Key areas of the text will need to be 
filled in after Brahimi returns and the interim government is 
established � including how it will coordinate with the multinational 
force. 

U.S. and British officials said once the government is formed, the 
multinational force commander is expected to send a letter spelling 
out how the force will relate to the interim government. The new 
Iraqi leadership is also expected to send a letter welcoming the 
Security Council resolution and U.N. help in the political process, 
and agreeing that the multinational force should remain in Iraq, the 
officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

A British official said London hopes the letters will create a 
National Security Committee on which Iraqis would sit, giving them 
veto power over major military operations � like April's offensive in 
Fallujah that outraged many Iraqis. Germany has called for such a 
council as a vehicle for sharing power. 

On Tuesday, Iraqi Deputy Foreign Minister Hamed Bayati told The 
Associated Press the resolution and Bush's speech "included many 
positive points such as the decision to give full sovereignty to 
Iraqis rather than limited sovereignty and giving a role for the UN 
which Iraqis kept pushing for." 

"After 12 months this government will advise the UN and the U.S. 
whether to stay or leave. Another positive point is that this very 
government will be in control of Iraq's oil revenues," he said. 

In Baghdad, Mahmoud Othman, a Sunni Kurd member of the Governing 
Council, said the multinational forces should be under United 
Nations' command � a possibility ruled out by the Americans and U.N. 
Secretary-General Kofi Annan



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