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While
asking Iraq to let weapons inspectors back in, Annan warns the
Bush not to take the law into his own hand
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UNITED
NATIONS, September 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – U.N.
Secretary General Kofi Annan will warn the United States from the
rostrum of the United Nations General Assembly Thursday, September 12,
about the dangers of acting alone against Iraq.
In
a speech, published by his spokesman’s office 11 hours before he was
to deliver it, Annan acknowledged that the U.N. Charter gave every
country the right to self-defense if attacked. However, he said,
“When states decide to use force to deal with broader threats to
international peace and security, there is no substitute for the
unique legitimacy provided by the United Nations,” according to
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Annan
is due to address the Assembly at 10:00 am (1400 GMT), before the
start of its nine-day debate of world leaders.
U.S.
President George W. Bush is the second scheduled speaker in the
debate, and is expected to lay out the case for military action
against Iraq, arguing that it is trying to acquire weapons of mass
destruction in defiance of the UN Security Council.
Annan
did not refer directly to the United States, but the thrust of his
remarks is unmistakable.
A
senior U.N. official said the speech is “a very strong restatement
of the multilateral faith on which the United Nations is based,” and
described it as one of the most important Annan has ever made.
He
said Annan sent the text of his remarks to the U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations, John Negroponte, “as a courtesy” on Wednesday,
September 11.
Asked
whether it amounted to a warning to Washington, the senior official
replied: “If it’s a warning, it’s an extremely friendly
warning,” and added that Annan “desperately hopes that the Iraqi
issue can be resolved peacefully.”
In
his speech, Annan said Iraq’s refusal to comply with U.N. demands
that it disarm was one of “four threats to world peace, where true
leadership and effective action are badly needed.”
“The
more a country makes use of multilateral institutions ...the more
others will trust and respect it, and the stronger its chance to
exercise true leadership,” he said.
The
liberation of Kuwait from Iraqi occupation by a U.S.-led coalition in
1991 showed that U.N. member states were “willing to take actions
under the authority of the Security Council which they would not be
willing to take without it,” he added.
Annan
urged Iraq to comply with council resolutions, “for the sake of its
own people and for the sake of world order.”
He
appealed to any country that had influence with Iraqi leaders “to
impress on them the vital importance of accepting the weapons
inspections.”
If
Iraq’s defiance continued, “the Security Council must face its
responsibilities,” he said.
In
his speech, Annan also called on the council to put aside its
traditional reluctance to act in a crisis unless the states
confronting each other asked it to do so.
It
is that caution - plus pressure from one or more of its permanent
members - which has often prevented the council from discussing, let
alone acting on, the conflicts in the Middle East and between India
and Pakistan.
“The
existence of an effective international security system depends on the
council’s authority, and therefore on the council having the
political will to act, even in the most difficult cases,” Annan
said.
In
a separately related development, Bush is expected to ask the
international community to support his tough line on Iraq when he
addresses the U.N. General Assembly Thursday, according to BBC's
online news service.
He is expected to push the case for a new
Security Council resolution, which would set a deadline for Iraq to
agree to the return of weapons inspectors, or face unspecified action.
Bush, for his part, will probably warn the
U.N. that if it does not act, then the U.S. will.
The U.S. Government says it has proof Iraq
has biological and chemical weapons and the potential for a nuclear
capability - a claim flatly rejected by Baghdad.
Bush is expected to argue that, in this case,
inaction is not an option.
“I’m going to the United Nations to give
this speech for a reason, because I believe this is an international
problem, and that we must work together to deal with the problem,”
the U.S. President said Tuesday.
Washington has been lobbying the other four
permanent members of the Security Council to support a possible
military strike on Iraq.
So far, only the U.K. pledged to back action
against Iraq saying there is enough evidence to justify America’s
fears.
France expressed its opposition to a
unilateral attack, while the Russian President said he is unconvinced
that there are grounds for an attack. China also opposes any military
action.
On Wednesday, former South African
President Nelson Mandela added his voice to those opposing military
action in the Gulf, accusing the U.S. of wanting to attack Iraq
because of oil and arms sales.
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