A
U.K. newspaper, the Guardian reported that during the
traditional Friday sermon, the preacher talked of war, and the women
wept. Among them was Um Satar, who like others willing to talk to
reporters gave only an Arab nickname derived from the name of her oldest
son. Um Satar means “mother of Satar.”
“Why
not cry?” asked the 46-year-old woman, adding, “I lost relatives in
the war with Iran, five cousins. I don’t want to lose my sons this
time.”
Um
Fahd, 36, who has two sons and two daughters, complained that other Arab
nations were not supporting Iraq and said she was weary of U.S.-Iraqi
tensions, the Guardian said.
Bush
threatens war with Iraq if Baghdad fails to give up its weapons of mass
destruction as required by U.N. resolutions adopted after the 1990 Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait. Iraq insists its weapons programs were destroyed
during and after the war, the Guardian reported.
Sermons
at Baghdad mosques came as the Iraqi government-controlled press voiced
skepticism about Bush’s declaration Thursday that he hoped the crisis
over Iraq’s alleged weapons program could be settled without war.
One
preacher told a story of how God led earlier Muslim soldiers to victory
over a stronger infidel army, but his message failed to hearten the
faithful who fear war with a modern foe – America, the
Guardian
reported.
At
the Mother of All Battles Mosque - which takes its name from President
Saddam Hussein’s label for the Gulf War - preacher Thaer Ibrahim
Al-Shomari told the old story to hearten Iraqis who are bombarded by
their media and leaders with U.S. threats of war and Baghdad's pledges
to defeat any invader.
“The
Arab tribes, with their modest armies and modest weapons, confronted the
infidel army,” Al-Shomari said. “We have to learn the lessons of
this story from the Quran. ...Don’t lose hope, O Muslims.
“God
save the Iraqi people and give them victory over the Americans. ... God
ruin their tanks, their soldiers, their weapons and their cannons,”
Al-Shomari prayed, the Guardian said.
On
Thursday, Bush said he was “hopeful we won’t have to go to war,”
but he still expressed skepticism about Saddam’s intentions.
The
government daily, Al-Iraq, asked “has Bush suddenly
become rational again and wakened from his illusions, has he thought
about the consequences of his aggression and its destructive effects?”
The
paper answered its own query, saying the president’s words were
“only ... aimed at cooling the atmosphere and reducing the heat of the
world's public anger caused by his threats and preparations for war.”
The
arms inspectors had a routine day Friday. They revisited the Al Rasheed
Co., southwest of Baghdad, which makes missile propellants, and the Al
Basil chemical company on the capital’s outskirts. They also went to a
former storage facility and test site for chemical weapons in the desert
125 miles west of Baghdad, the Guardian reported.
U.N.
officials gave no indication of what the weapons experts found in their
inspections as is their custom.
According
to the Guardian, Iraq asserts that five weeks of resumed
U.N. inspections have turned up nothing to prove Baghdad has breached
Security Council resolutions on weapons of mass destruction.
But
in New York, U.N. chief weapons inspector Hans Blix said Friday that he
had “a couple of questions” to raise with Iraqi officials about
their weapons declaration when he returns to Baghdad this month.
Blix
said last month that Iraq’s declaration had not provided sufficient
details about its production of missile engines, recovery of 50
destroyed conventional warheads, the loss of 550 mustard gas shells,
production and weaponization of the deadly VX nerve agent and its
unilateral destruction of biological warfare agents, the Guardian
said.
In
Kuwait, a U.S. congresswoman said Washington could not be sure Saddam
does not have weapons of mass destruction unless U.N. inspectors
interview hundreds of Iraqi scientists.
According
to the Guardian, Rep. Ellen Tauscher, a California
Democrat and member of the House Armed Services Committee, said finding
out what Iraq’s scientists have done since U.N. inspections were
suspended in 1998 was vital to getting the true picture of Saddam’s
arsenal.
The
U.N. resolution which returned the inspectors in late November allows
private questioning of any Iraqi scientist and provides for them to be
taken out of the country.