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Jordan's King Rebukes Uncle, Urges Restraint over Iraq

Abdullah criticized his uncle for attending Iraqi oppostion meeting.jpg

AMMAN, July 29 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Jordan's state news agency Monday, July 29,  highlighted King Abdullah II's public rebuke to his uncle, Prince Hassan bin Talal, during an interview with the Times of London, in what amounted to the king's first open criticism of a member of the royal family.

Petra reproduced Abdullah's remarks to the paper Monday concerning Hassan's attendance at a London meeting of Iraqi opposition two weeks ago, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.

"Prince Hassan blundered into something he did not realize he was getting into and were all picking up the pieces," Abdullah told the Times.

Abdullah and his uncle have enjoyed strained relations in the past. The two competed for power in February 1999 when the late King Hussein, on his deathbed, tapped his son Abdullah as his successor over brother Hassan, who had served as crown prince for decades.

Besides making harsh comments about his uncle, Abdullah told the Times he was strongly opposed to any potential U.S. invasion of Iraq.

"In the light of the failure to move the Israeli-Palestinian process forward, military action against Iraq would really open a Pandora's Box," Abdullah said, two days before he travels to see U.S. President George W. Bush at the White House.

Prince Hassan attended a July 12 Iraqi opposition meeting, which Jordan immediately said did not reflect the state's official position towards Iraq.

Hassan's "participation is a personal choice," Information Minister Mohammed Adwan was quoted as saying by Petra on July 13.

For his part, Hassan said he attended the three-day conference on a personal invitation.

Abdullah and Hassan's Hashemite clan ruled in both Jordan and Iraq until a military coup toppled Iraq's royalist regime in 1958, AFP said.

Meanwhile in Washington,  King Abdullah told CNN television that dialogue is the best course to take with Iraq.

"In Jordan that we have always believed that dialogue with Iraq is the only option," the monarch said amid widespread speculation about a U.S. plan to remove Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

"And when I say 'Jordan,' I also can speak probably on behalf of anybody else in the international community, from China to Russia to all our colleagues in the European Union."

"We have always felt that dialogue is the best way of dealing with Iraq, trying to bring Iraq back into the international community, that we've always been concerned that the use of force might create tremendous instability in the Middle East, especially in the light that the movement on the Israeli-Palestinian front is not moving the way that we want," he added.

The monarch added that there had been no discussion with the United States of the possibility of deploying U.S. troops in Jordan in the event of an attack on Iraq, AFP reported.

"That has not happened and, I don't think, will ever happen," he said.

"We got an apology from some ... American official that -- the way he described it to me is, 'Some young officer in the American Pentagon probably tried to impress a girlfriend, wanted to come up with a story that there was something that he knew about and referenced Jordan.' But we have no American troops in Jordan, at this stage," the king added.

The United States has invited six Iraqi opposition leaders to Washington for talks on the country's future in a meeting either on August 9 or 16.

Washington has repeatedly threatened to take military action against Iraq and unseat Saddam Hussein.

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