MOSCOW,
July 8 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Russia denounced on Monday,
July 8, as “absolutely inadmissible” any military action against
Iraq, in a direct warning to the United States.
“The
Iraqi problem can only be resolved through political-diplomatic means
on the basis of U.N. Security Council resolutions,” the Russian
foreign ministry said in a statement, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
“Any
other options, especially military, are absolutely inadmissible,” it
added.
The
U.S. administration has repeatedly threatened to launch a military
strike on Iraq to topple the regime of Saddam Hussein, which it
accuses of developing weapons of mass destruction.
U.S.
daily newspaper, the New York Times, reported Friday, July 5, that a
top secret U.S. military document outlines a massive, three-pronged
attack on Iraq by land, sea and air with as many as 250,000 troops and
hundreds of warplanes.
“Hundreds
of warplanes based in as many as eight countries, possibly including
Turkey and Qatar, would unleash a huge air assault against thousands
of targets, including airfields, roadways and fiber-optics
communications sites,” the paper added.
The
daily also said special operations forces or covert C.I.A. operatives
would strike at depots or laboratories storing or manufacturing
Iraq’s suspected weapons of mass destruction and the missiles to
launch them.
“None
of the countries identified in the document as possible staging areas
have been formally consulted about playing such a role,” officials
said, underscoring the preliminary nature of the planning.
The
existence of the document that outlined significant aspects of a
“concept” for a war against Iraq as it stood about two months ago
indicates an advanced state of planning in the military even though
President Bush continues to state in public and to his allies that he
has no fine-grain war plan on his desk for the invasion of Iraq, the
paper noted.
Yet
the concept for such a plan is now highly evolved and is apparently
working its way through military channels, the paper added.
According
to the New York Times, Bush received at least two briefings from Gen.
Tommy R. Franks, the head of the Central Command, on the broad
outlines, or “concept of operations,” for a possible attack
against Iraq. The most recent briefing was on June 19, according to
the White House.
“Right
now, we’re at the stage of conceptual thinking and brainstorming,”
a senior defense official said. “We’re pretty far along.”
Administration
officials say they are still weighing options other than war to
dislodge Hussein. But most military and administration officials
believe that a coup in Iraq would be unlikely to succeed, and that a
proxy battle using local forces would not be enough to drive the Iraqi
leader from power, the paper reported.
Although
senior administration officials continue to say that any offensive
would probably be delayed until early next year, there are several
signs that the military is preparing for a major air campaign and land
invasion.
Thousands
of marines from the First Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp
Pendleton, Calif., the marine unit designated for the gulf, have
stepped up their mock assault drills, a Pentagon adviser said.
The
military is building up bases in several Persian Gulf states,
including a major airfield in Qatar called Al-Udeid. Thousands of
American troops are already stationed in the region, the paper
reported.
The
prospect of U.S. military action was heightened last week after talks
between Baghdad and the United Nations on the return of U.N. weapons
inspectors to Iraq broke down.
The
Russian foreign ministry, however, called for a resumption of dialogue
which would lead to renewed cooperation by Baghdad with U.N.
inspections in return for an end to U.N. sanctions imposed for its
1990 invasion of Kuwait.
U.S.
President George W. Bush’s administration, which has labeled Iraq -
along with Iran and North Korea - as the world’s “axis of evil,”
is demanding the return of arms inspectors barred from Iraq since
pulling out in December 1998.