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Iraq, UN Agree Return of Inspectors

Blix: “I am asked by the Security Council to do this job and I do it”

VIENNA, October 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - After two days of talks in Vienna, the United Nations and Iraq agreed on practical ways regarding the return to Iraq of UN weapons inspectors.

Announcing the deal, the head of the inspection team Hans Blix said Iraq accepted all inspection rights under existing UN resolutions, reported BBC's online news service Tuesday, October 01, 2002.

Blix said the inspectors would have access to all sites of suspected weapons of mass destruction, with the exception of eight presidential palaces which are covered under a separate agreement between Iraq and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.

An Iraqi spokesman told the news conference in Vienna that Iraq was happy with the agreement. He said he expected inspectors to arrive in Baghdad in about two weeks.

Officials close to the negotiations between UN weapons inspectors and Iraq said they were concerned that a new Security Council resolution proposed by the United States and Britain could undermine their mission.

The officials expressed concern about provisions in the draft which would allow the five permanent members of the Security Council to recommend which sites should be checked.

The draft resolution is also said to allow the permanent members to place their own nationals in the inspection teams - something the UN team say could affect their credibility in the eyes of Iraq.

Members of the previous UN inspection team - UNSCOM - are known to have relayed information to their national governments, giving substance to Iraqi claims of spying.

The issue leads to the wider allegation that the U.S. wants to use inspections to provoke an Iraqi obstruction and justify a military intervention.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell already suggested the Vienna negotiations should have been put on hold until Security Council deliberations on a new resolution are completed.

Powell said the UN weapons inspectors might have to wait for Security Council guidance before any plans for going back into Iraq are finalized.

However, Blix made it clear that he answers to the Security Council - not to the U.S.

"I'm asked by the Security Council to do this job, and I do it. I try to," Blix said as he headed into a second and final day of talks with senior Iraqis at the headquarters of the IAEA in Vienna.

The IAEA and UNMOVIC, the UN monitoring and verification commission, are the bodies that are aiming to carry out the inspections inside Iraq.

Earlier Tuesday, Baghdad accused the United States of trying to derail the resumption of U.N. arms monitoring as a prelude to an attack on Iraq, AFP reported.

With UN officials reporting progress in the first day of talks with Iraq in Vienna, Al-Rafidain, a weekly run by President Saddam Hussein’s elder son Uday, said it expected the inspectors to fly into Baghdad on October 16.

“There is no need for a new resolution since the Security Council already issued Resolution 1284 (in December 1999) that created UNMOVIC,” the U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, the official told AFP, requesting anonymity.

The administration of U.S. President George W. Bush turned up the heat on the inspectors “as soon as a positive step was taken in the direction of implementing their mandate,” said Abderrazzak al-Dulaimi, dean of the information faculty at Baghdad University.

“Iraq realizes that the Bush administration will try to obstruct the inspectors’ mission ... but it (Iraq) will handle the issue in such a way as to thwart Washington's hostile plans,” he told AFP.

“We are moving forward with our discussions under our mandate and will of course take into account any directions from the Security Council,” said spokeswoman Melissa Fleming of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“We are moving forward with our business. We have to proceed as if we will return,” she said.

The Iraqis were “trying their best ... to expedite our requirements for effective inspections,” Blix said after the first of two days of talks in Vienna.

Al-Rafidain, declaring that Iraq had “completed preparations to receive the inspectors,” quoted a senior Iraqi arms expert as saying the Vienna talks were proceeding “in a very positive way at the moment.”

Blix “told the Iraqi side he was determined to close the outstanding files (on prohibited weapons) as quickly as possible ... as a prelude to asking the Security Council to fulfill its own obligations under Resolution 687, chiefly the lifting of the embargo” in force against Iraq for 12 years, it said.

But the Bush administration will try to foil the talks as part of the “psychological war” it has been waging against Iraq to set the stage for an attack on the country, Al-Rafidain said.

Will Blix “be able to resist pressures, or will he, like his predecessors, become a tool in the hands of the United States, which wants to block inspections so as to perpetuate the UN embargo on Iraq?” the weekly wondered.

If the chief arms inspector means what he says, then six months should be enough to finish the work started by his predecessors, it added.

 

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