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Bush to Seek NATO Support Over Iraq at Prague Summit

It should not be taken for granted that there would be a war against Iraq: Robertson

BRUSSELS, November 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The threat of war on Iraq will cast a long cloud over a NATO summit this week, which officials hope will trumpet allied unity against Baghdad despite clear differences of view between America and Europe.

While the Prague summit of the Western military alliance could provide a perfect chance for U.S. President George W. Bush to drum up European backing, officials are playing down the prospects of talk of military action, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported Sunday, November 17.

“There should be an expression of allied unity at the Prague summit,” said a senior NATO official, ahead of the summit on Thursday and Friday, November 21-22.

But he added: “I wouldn’t lead you to believe that next week there will be efforts to put together a military coalition, because we are on a diplomatic track.”

The crisis over Iraq is expected to force its way onto the agenda of the 19-member bloc, which will notably discuss setting up a rapid response force, as well as a specialist anti-terror reaction unit.

The NATO summit comes at a crucial time in the Iraq crisis: three days after the first U.N. inspectors's arrival in Baghdad on Monday, November 18, following Iraq’s unconditional agreement to U.N. Security Council resolution 1441.

NATO chief George Robertson said it should not be taken for granted that there would be a war against Iraq in an interview published Sunday in the Madrid daily newspaper, El Mundo.

He said the countdown had started since the United Nations resolution on disarming Iraq had been approved by the Security Council, but the inspectors were now on their way to Iraq and it was possible that there would not be a war.

Last week’s U.N. Security Council resolution, setting a tight deadline for Baghdad to accept weapons inspections, was hammered out only after weeks of tough negotiations between the U.S. and its European allies, notably France.

But as the summit approaches, it seems clear that the United States, whose military threats are opposed notably by E.U. heavyweight Germany, would like to stick to reaffirming diplomatic solidarity.

“It would be unlikely that NATO would formally be involved,” British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told a parliamentary committee last week.

Above all the U.S. will be hoping that Germany, the E.U.’s biggest state and a key NATO ally, doesn’t repeat too publicly its opposition to military action in Iraq.

Meanwhile, Robertson, who has dubbed Prague the “transformation summit”, is battling to re-invent NATO as a key force in the new global war on terrorism.

The day after the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington, NATO for the first time invoked its “Article Five” declaring the atrocities to be an attack on the entire alliance.

But NATO has been accused of drifting into irrelevance, notably after it was sidelined in the international force in Afghanistan, the first U.S.-led response to the September 11 attacks.

With Washington’s second battle looming against Iraq, NATO is keen to play its part.

A key initiative to be agreed at Prague is a U.S.-proposed rapid response force, comprising 21,000 combat-ready troops who can be deployed anywhere in the world within days.

Some commentators say the force would be an ideal tool for the war looming in Iraq.

But apparently the force wouldn’t be ready in time, even if there were the political will to deploy it.

“Even if we move at warp speed, it’s going to take many months to establish,” said one official. 

 

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