PARIS,
March 21 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - In a new diplomatic
stunt for the United States, a growing numbers of countries on Friday,
March 21, snubbed a U.S. request to expel Iraqi diplomats as the
U.S.-led occupation forces pushed into Iraq for a second day of
unjustified invasion.
Strong
anti-war governments such as France, Germany, and Russia rejected the
request to close Iraq's embassies and expel its diplomats until new
authorities were installed in Baghdad, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
"France
has been asked by the American authorities to expel Iraq diplomats and
shut the embassy," said foreign ministry spokesman Francois
Rivasseau.
"France
believes this request is a matter of sovereignty. At the moment there is
no reason to respond positively," he stressed.
On
Thursday, March 20, the U.S. State Department said it had instructed
embassies in the 62 nations where Iraq has a diplomatic presence to ask
the host governments to suspend the accreditation of ambassadors for
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and expel his senior diplomats.
Illegal
Russia,
another outspoken opponent to the U.S-led aggression against Iraq, said
it will refuse any demands to expel Iraqi diplomats.
"If
we were to receive such a request, it would have no legal force and we
would react accordingly," Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov told
reporters in the State Duma, the lower house of parliament.
Asked
whether Russia would back a new regime installed in Baghdad as a result
of the U.S.-led war, Ivanov said that "any actions taken in regard
to Iraq, or inside Iraq, (should) be taken on a legal basis."
Germany
Has No Plans
Germany
has "no current plans" to comply with a new U.S. request to
expel Iraqi diplomats, a foreign ministry spokesman said Friday.
"We
have been informed of the U.S. request, but there are no current plans
to take any action," the spokesman said.
Portugal
Turns Down Request
Portugal,
a staunch supporter of the U.S. hard-line policy on Iraq, said Friday
that it would not expel Iraqi diplomats as requested by Washington.
"We
do not intend to close Iraq's embassy nor are there any motives to expel
the Iraqi diplomats," the Lusa news agency quoted Prime Minister
Jose Manuel Durao Barroso as saying at a meeting of E.U. leaders in
Brussels.
“No
Reason”
The
Netherlands government has rejected a request by Washington to expel all
Iraq diplomats currently on Dutch soil, the Foreign Ministry said
Friday.
"We
got the request but we do not see any reason at this moment to expel the
personnel of the Iraqi embassy," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Hannah Tijmes said.
Indonesia
Adamant
Indonesia
also dismissed the American call for countries to sever diplomatic
relations with the Iraqi regime and said it would not ask Iraqi
diplomats to leave.
"There's
no need for that," foreign ministry spokesman Marty Natalegawa told
a press conference, adding a third country should not tell Indonesia how
to conduct its relations with foreign missions.
"That
issue is something to be decided by the host country and the related
country," he asserted.
"It
is not for a third country to recommend us to take or not take action as
far as foreign missions in Indonesia are concerned," he stressed.
Malaysia
To Maintain Iraq Ties
Malaysia
refused sever ties with the ruling Iraqi regime and shut down the Iraqi
mission here as demanded by the United States.
Foreign
Minister Syed Hamid Albar said Kuala Lumpur does not see any reason why
it should end ties with Baghdad or expel Iraqi diplomats from Malaysia.
"Our
position remains the same. We see no reason why we should break ties
with Baghdad. We have not severed our ties or closed our embassy,"
he told reporters in the new administrative capital south of Kuala
Lumpur.
Malaysia
has condemned the U.S.-led aggression against Iraq and calling it a
"black mark in history" that would undermine the campaign
against terrorism.
Iraqi
Mission Opened
Kenya
said Friday it would ignore any U.S. request to shut down and freeze the
assets of Iraqi diplomatic mission, stressing it took a neutral stance
in the war.
"The
government has not received any formal request from the U.S. request to
shut down Iraq's embassy in Kenya, and even if it did, it shall ignore
it.... we will not close it," said a government official who asked
not to be named.
"Our
policy is to retain 'positive neutrality' in the crisis in Iraq in order
to avoid falling victim to some obvious repercussions," the
official added.
Iraq
has a diplomatic presence in 63 countries, via 56 embassies, six special
interests sections and one consulate, and is also represented at the
United Nations.