VIENNA,
July 5 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan failed to deliver answers on Iraqi questions including
disarmament, the nature of inspections, UN-Iraqi relations and U.S.
threats of using force against Baghdad, causing the failure of
negotiations with the Iraqi delegation, led by Foreign Minister Naji
Sabri.
Iraqi
officials admitted Friday, July 5, 2002, that talks on the return of
UN weapons inspectors to Iraq, seen as a step towards lifting the
12-year-old UN embargo against the country, broke down, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"The
Iraqis didn't say yes" to a return of UN weapons inspectors,
Annan said after talks with Sabri.
The
UN "will stay in contact" with Iraq, Annan said after two
days of talks with Sabri at the United Nations offices in the Austrian
capital.
"We'll
maintain contact," Sabri told a press conference after Annan
left, admitting that the negotiations failed.
Having
responded positively to all Security Council Resolutions on the
crisis, Baghdad insisted that the crippling embargo in place since
Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait must be lifted before UN weapons
inspectors can return.
Earlier,
Annan said there was some progress. "There will be a new round of
negotiations," said Annan, but did not give a date or location
for the next talks.
Annan
dissociated himself from threats by the United States to topple Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein as part of its (so-called)
"anti-terrorism" drive, on the grounds that Iraq is believed
to be developing weapons of mass destruction.
"I
was not here to stop an attack. I was here to get the inspectors
back," Annan said.
UN
arms inspectors, accused, by Iraq, of espionage, were pulled out on
the eve of joint U.S.-British air attacks launched against Iraq in
December 1998.
They
have not been allowed back since, although a lifting of the embargo
depends on the elimination of banned weapons programs in Iraq being
certified by international inspectors. Iraq insists it has no programs
of banned weapons.
During
the talks, Sabri demanded answers on issues including disarmament, the
nature of inspections, UN-Iraqi relations and threats of force against
Baghdad, but Annan focused on the practicalities of the return of the
inspectors.
After
two days of negotiations in Vienna, Annan failed to persuade Sabri to
allow back the UN weapons inspectors, according to BBC’s online news
service.
UN
officials warned not to expect too much from the meeting in Vienna -
the third such meeting this year - even though Annan said the
atmosphere was positive after the first day.
On
the second day, the talks continued longer than was scheduled.
But
at the end, Annan conceded that the sticking point - the return to
Iraq of the inspectors as demanded by the UN Security Council - had
not been resolved.
"There
has been some movement, but obviously not enough."
The
session between Annan and Sabri followed detailed talks by officials
from both sides on how any return of inspectors would be handled on
the ground.
The
multinational UN team wants to check accusations that Iraq is
developing chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.
Under
Security Council resolutions, sanctions imposed 12 years ago can be
lifted only when inspectors certify that Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction have been destroyed, along with the long-range missiles
that could deliver them.