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War on Iraq could boost international terrorism: Russia
December 26, 2002
AFP
Russia warned that military strikes against Iraq could take the world's focus
off the ongoing military campaign in Afghanistan and lead to the spread of
international terrorism.
"Switching the focus off Afghanistan and shifting it to Iraq may augment
the threat of international terrorism which is coming from Afghan territories
that are not under Kabul's control," Deputy Foreign Minister Yury Fedotov
told the ITAR- TASS news agency.
He reiterated Russia's view that the international community currently had no
proof of a link between the Iraqi regime and international terror organizations.
"Nobody has been able to provide any evidence of this link," said
Fedotov in reference to one of the main arguments from Washington in favor of
toppling President Saddam Hussein's regime.
Russia is opposed to a unilateral US military intervention against Iraq that
has been threatened by Washington if Baghdad should be considered to be in
material breach of UN Security Council resolution 1441, which orders it to
completely give up weapons of mass destruction.
Both Washington and London have criticized Iraq's weapons declaration,
presented to the UN on December 7, as inadequate.
But Russia argues that a military campaign must not be launched without
backing from the UN Security Council, where it wields veto power as a permanent
member.
The Security Council "must rule on its own whether Iraq is complying
with resolution 1441, and whether it is in breach of this document or not,"
Fedotov said.
The second inspectors' report to the UN Security Council is to be presented
on January 27 and several US newspapers have reported that Washington plans to
launch an assault on Iraq the following month.
However NATO Secretary General George Robertson -- who has been approached by
Washington for assistance in any campaign - - said on Thursday that the Bush
administration was prepared to consult the United Nations, despite "a
certain amount of rhetoric."
"Up to now the United States has kept very rigidly to the United Nations
route. They still do, the inspectors are still there," Robertson told the
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
"There is a certain amount of rhetoric, but in reality President Bush
has strongly placed his country in the fold of NATO and also within
international, multilateral institutions," he added.
Fedotov confirmed that Moscow wanted Iraq to fully comply with weapons
inspections and for the United States and Britain to give the investigators time
to do their work before drawing up war plans.
And as one of Iraq's main backers in the international arena Fedotov said
Russia would press for a re-evaluation of a UN sanctions regime against Iraq
should Saddam's government provide unfettered access to inspectors.
"As Iraq's cooperation with the international community grows, we have
to clarify the prospects of lifting the existing sanctions against Iraq,"
said Fedotov, who oversees Russia's negotiations with the United Nations.
Iraq on Tuesday accused the United States and Britain of blocking contracts
worth 7.4 billion dollars from being approved under the current UN oil-for-food
program.
Iraq has been under UN trade sanctions since its invasion of Kuwait in 1990.
The oil-for-food program, instituted in 1996, allows Iraq to buy food, medicine
and other basic necessities in exchange for oil exports.
Russia -- which holds a large chunk of the Iraq oil export contracts and has
major investments in the country's all-but- frozen oil industry -- is seeking to
simplify the sanctions list during ongoing negotiations with the United States.
Only a lifting of sanctions, along with Iraq's cooperation on weapons
inspections, "can lead to a long-term solution to the Iraqi problem,"
Fedotov said.
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