Sender: owner-imap@webmap.missouri.edu
Date: Wed, 31 Dec 97 10:20:42 CST
From: bghauk@berlin.infomatch.com (Brian Hauk)
Subject: Washington Pushes For `Unconditional' Inspections In Iraq
Organization: InfoMatch InternetVancouver BC
Article: 24841
To: BROWNH@CCSUA.CTSTATEU.EDU
Washington has not let up in its campaign of war threats against Iraq,
pushing the United Nations Security Council to demand December 22 that
Baghdad allow outside weapons inspectors
full access to any
and all
buildings, equipment, documents, and vehicles. The
Security Council warned that failure by the Iraqi government to grant
unconditional access to any site or category of sites is
unacceptable and a clear violation of relevant resolutions
a
pretext it could try to use to justify a new military attack on that
Middle Eastern nation.
The U.S. government failed to get the Security Council to approve the
wording in its original draft to condemn
Baghdad for ruling
some areas off limits. Russian ambassador Sergei Lavrov, as well as
representatives from China and Paris voiced opposition to condemning
Iraq. Lavrov also asked for language making the record in favor of
Iraqi sovereignty, which was absent from the UN statement.
The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, William Richardson,
insisted that Washington's spies be permitted to investigate any
facility in the country. He said his government might launch a
military assault, over the objections of Paris and Moscow, if it
deemed such a move necessary. It is our view that there are enough
justifications in existing UN resolutions to proceed with military
force,
Richardson said on the December 21 NBC television program
Meet the Press.
He warned that the Clinton administration has
not ruled any options out, including the military option.
One week before the Security Council meeting, Russian foreign minister
Yevgeny Primakov told a December 17 NATO conference in Brussels, We
are against the use of force [against Iraq].
Australian official Richard Butler, the chief UN arms
inspector,
claimed he had evidence that Baghdad was hiding
weapons in presidential buildings and other facilities that the Iraqi
government calls sovereign sites. We have finally had evidence or
reason to believe that prohibited items have been or do exist
in
these places, Butler proclaimed December 20.
Iraqi newspapers charged that Butler was a liar who provided the
United States with a new excuse to continue its hostile and feverish
activities against Iraq.
Washington has been organizing surveillance
flights over Iraq,
including a four-hour mission of U-2 spy planes that, according to
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon, took place December 22 or 23. It
did what it was supposed to do. It came back unchallenged,
Bacon
added.
Meanwhile, Baghdad announced December 21 it will submit a new plan
under the UN-imposed food for oil
deal. The agreement permits
the government of Iraq to sell $2 billion of oil every six months,
dictating that 30 percent of the revenue be used to pay Gulf War
reparations
and other alleged UN costs. The rest is earmarked
to buy food and medicine.
Iraqi trade minister Mohammed Mehdi Saleh said the new proposed pact would include some changes on buying spare parts for water sanitation, agricultural, and other equipment. The proposals are aimed at easing the devastation on the Iraqi people, who have been hard hit by the U.S.-led seven years of sanctions. Over 1 million Iraqis have died - including 500,000 children -because of the embargo.