WASHINGTON,
September 23 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Deeply angered by
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s rejection of an upcoming U.S.
war on 12-year-sanction-hit Iraq, the United States snubbed Monday,
September 23, his election win saying he would have a lot of work to
heal poisoned ties.
Schroeder's
strong opposition to military action against Iraq and an alleged comment
by the former justice minister comparing President George W. Bush to
Adolf Hitler caused deep offense at the White House, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) said.
White
House spokesman Ari Fleischer ignored reporters' questions on whether
Bush had contacted Schroeder after the Chancellor's win.
Although
Bush routinely offers congratulations by telephone, Fleischer curtly
said the U.S. State Department was the appropriate agency from which to
seek reaction.
But
at the State Department, officials said spokesman Richard Boucher was
preparing only to "note" Sunday's results without any
laudatory comment, the diplomatic equivalent of a slap in the face.
A
senior official traveling with Bush on a trip to New Jersey said it
would take a considerable effort by Schroeder's government "to
improve relations, which have been damaged between the
governments."
"Chairman
Schroeder and his government have a lot of work to repair the damage
that he did by his excesses during the campaign," the official told
reporters on condition of anonymity.
A
State Department official said Boucher would not go beyond
"noting" the election results in which Schroeder's Social
Democrat Party and the Green Party which squeaked to victory.
"We
will say that the rhetoric of the campaign was harsh, but we have a
common agenda and we intend to continue to work on that agenda,"
the official said.
"It
will be something anodyne but which makes our displeasure known and
keeps the coolness in place," the official said on condition of
anonymity.
By
contrast, Boucher was expected to "welcome" weekend elections
in Slovakia, where four moderate parties took power at the weekend, the
official said, adding: "The difference between the reactions will
be noticeable."
The
White House first made blistering criticism of the Schroeder campaign
last week. At the weekend, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
told a German newspaper the chancellor had "poisoned"
U.S.-German relations, a comment repeated Monday by Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld.
"The
way it was conducted was notably unhelpful and as the White House has
indicated had the effect of poisoning a relationship," Rumsfeld
told reporters in Warsaw, where he is attending a NATO meeting.
Schroeder
has been vocal in his opposition to a U.S. military strike on Iraq and
has been critical of Bush, but the U.S. has been angered by German
Justice Minister Herta Daeubler-Gmelin’s alleged comparison of Bush's
methods on Iraq to those of Adolf Hitler.
Both
Bush and Rice were enraged by the reported comments and Schroeder
apologized Friday, September 20, after Secretary of State Colin Powell
telephoned his German counterpart Joschka Fischer to express U.S.
"outrage".
Schroeder
announced earlier Monday that Daeubler-Gmelin, who has vehemently denied
making the remarks, would not have a place in his new government.
The
Chancellor, whose anti-U.S. stance on Iraq helped propel him to victory
over conservative Edmund Stoiber in the extremely tight race, also said
he was confident that relations with the United States would improve.
Schroeder
said the current difficulties "will be quickly resolved because the
relationship is intact," adding that Washington and Berlin would
continue to discuss issues in a "fair and open" manner.