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E.U., Germany Urge Second U.N. Resolution on Iraq

"The inspections could take in the vicinity of a year," said Solana

BRUSSELS, January 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The E.U. has cautioned against any U.S.-led military action against Baghdad without securing a second U.N. resolution to authorize war if Iraq refused to disarm peacefully.

E.U. foreign policy chief Javier Solana called for more time to be given to U.N. weapons inspectors on the ground, BBC News Online reported Tuesday, January 14.

E.U. members were coming to a common position to allow inspectors to complete their work as well as on how to proceed if the process failed, BBC quoted Solana as saying.

"If (U.N. chief arms inspector Hans) Blix says he needs more time then he should get more time.

"I don't think 27 January is the end. It is an important date but Blix has another date in March," Solana said.

"A second U.N. resolution may be necessary, I am for that."

Supporting Solana’s stance, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder on Tuesday called for the first time for a second U.N. resolution before any military action is launched against Iraq, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

He said Germany, which joined the U.N. Security Council earlier this month, and its partners in the 15-nation European body would likely work together to try to have a second vote called.

"I think that is sensible," he told a press conference in Berlin.

At the same time, he said Germany would make its opposition to any war and its refusal to participate in military action "unmistakably clear" in the U.N. Security Council.

"We are ready [to give] solidarity. But this country under my leadership is not available for adventure" the Guardian quoted Schroeder as telling the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

"We didn't shy away from offering international solidarity in the fight against international terrorism.

"We did it because we were, and are, convinced that it is necessary; because we knew that the security of our partners is also our security.

"But we say this with equal self-confidence: we're not available for adventures, and the time of check book diplomacy is over once and for all."

Schroeder said E.U. members wanted to see if it was going to be possible to draw up a common position on Iraq, although he expressed doubt that Britain would sign up to Germany's stance.

Schroeder said Germany would make its opposition to war "unmistakably clear" in the U.N. Security Council

However, he said he wanted Iraq to comply "fully" with U.N. resolution 1441, which is aimed at identifying its alleged program of weapons of mass destruction, and so avoid a conflict.

The chancellor's anti-war stance is popular domestically. It helped his ruling coalition narrowly win re-election last year.

But his refusal to say how Germany would vote on any war resolution has worried left-wing members of his government.

They fear he may be softening his position, having already agreed that U.S. and NATO forces would be allowed to use German bases and airspace in the event of a war, and that German soldiers would help crew AWACS surveillance planes over Turkey, Guardian said.

Blix had expressed concern that his work might be interrupted by war, with thousands of U.S. and British troops deploying in the Gulf.

Blix said that a crucial report to the council on January 27 would mark "the beginning of the inspection and monitoring process, not the end of it."

In a BBC interview, Blix added he would present to the U.N. Security Council a set of key remaining disarmament tasks by the end of March.

But there was "a certain momentum in the (military) build-up and that worries a great many people including myself," he added.

Blix added that inspectors were spreading their net after receiving fresh Western intelligence - but needed more concrete information on the location of suspect sites.

The head of the UNMOVIC team, Dimitris Perrikos, said the new sites would also test the Iraqi co-operation.

"It's true the Iraqis are opening doors, but they are opening installations they know we are aware of.

"The real test will be when we start going to facilities where they will be surprised," Perrikos told the Greek daily Ta Nea on Monday, January 13.

The inspections could take "in the vicinity of a year" and it is worth to wait to get a sustainable and long-term peaceful solution, Blix told CNN.

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed El-Baradei said Monday the inspectors needed "a few months".

The IAEA chief said he could not set a specific date for the conclusion of inspections, and tried to minimize the January 27 meeting.

"I would like to make it clear in advance that our work will continue after that date," El-Baradei said.

"I think now that the international community now understands that this process is going to take some time."

But U.S. President Gorge Bush, who previously said it was important that the inspectors had time to do their jobs, had said that the January 27 report would be the start of "the final phase" leading to a U.S. decision on whether to use military might to force Iraq to disarm.

Citing unnamed sources, ABC News said the Bush administration was preparing to take its case for war to the United Nations soon after January 27, no matter what U.N. weapons inspectors say in their report.

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