
#4
Russians sees chinks in Powell report but concedes Iraq
war certain
February 6, 2003
AFP
Russians took a skeptical view Thursday of new US "evidence" that
Iraq has weapons of mass destruction while still conceding that global sentiment
was shifting in favor of strikes against Baghdad.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell on Wednesday presented the UN Security
Council with declassified information that he said proved Iraqi leaders were
"concealing their efforts to produce more weapons of mass
destruction."
His briefing led Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov to issue a prepared
statement in New York declaring that the burden of proof on disarmament was now
laying squarely on the regime of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. But Ivanov
stuck firmly to Moscow's official line that UN weapons inspections in Iraq
should continue, a view echoed by China and France, which like Russia are
veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council.
And both state and private media in Moscow stuck to an often caustic line.
"The United States failed to achieve its main goal -- to win new
allies," declared Russia's state-run Rossiya television network in a
morning news bulletin.
"After the UN Security Council session, the balance of power among
nations who are for and against the use of force remained the same," it
said.
"What Powell said is little more than specualtion," agreed Andrei
Nikolayev, head of the lower house of parliament's defense committee.
"Even if weapons of mass destruction are found in Iraq, this is still no
reason to go to war," he said.
Vremya Novostei daily -- which media analysts suspect has close ties to
President Vladimir Putin's administration -- suggested Powell's report had
mostly succeeded in splitting the world into two camps.
"Powell's speech completely splintered the international
community," the paper said in a front-page banner headline.
"Powell spoke colorfully but not very convincingly, even though he spoke
for over an hour," it opined.
And the Vedomosti business daily concluded Powell's proof "remains, as
before, indirect."
But it noted his speech had caused the euro to slide slightly against the
dollar -- which it interpreted as a sign of weakening European resistance to a
US-led military campaign.
Russia has been treading a careful diplomatic line over Iraq, between its
close alliance with the US-led "war on terror" and Soviet-era ties to
Baghdad which include massive investments in the country's oil industry.
Moscow argues that a new UN resolution is necessary to win global legitimacy
for an attack on Iraq. It also insists that a new UN vote is required by the
most recent UN Security Council vote on Iraqi disarmament -- resolution 1441 --
which was approved unanimously by Council members.
Powerful Russian lawmakers meanwhile said Washington was pushing Saddam into
a corner with its tough line and leaving few incentives for Baghdad to cooperate
with inspectors.
"Saddam is actually facing a choice between dying and dying in heroic
resistance. He has been offered no other alternative," said deputy lower
house of parliament speaker Vladimir Lukin, Moscow's former ambassador to
Washington.
The latest public opinion poll released Thursday showed 60 percent of
Russians believed that war was imminent while 61 percent said Moscow should stay
neutral once a conflict breaks out.
Political analysts said Moscow remained indecisive in its diplomacy because
Putin was squeezed between a close alliance with Washington on the one hand and
intense pressure to resist war from Russia's anxious military hawks.
"Russia's military establishment has strong anti-US views and demands to
know how much more Putin intends to cede to Washington without gaining anything
in return," said Viktor Kremenyuk, deputy director of Moscow's USA-Canada
Institute.
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