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Powell Admits U.S. Administration’s Split On Iraq

Iraq "is a very serious issue and we discuss it in a very serious way."

WASHINGTON, Sept 4 (IslamOnline  & News Agencies) - U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, en route to Johannesburg late Tuesday, conceded there were differences in the U.S. administration over how to tackle Iraq but insisted that President George W. Bush was engaged in "serious" consultations on what action to take, news agencies reported.

Earlier Rumsfeld had dismissed any split as "baloney." ".. what's important is what the president says, and what's important is what the president decides," he said, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Powell, viewed as a moderate on potential military action in Iraq, was also insistent that the weapons program being conducted by Iraq under Saddam was a real "danger" to the international community.

Iraq "is a very serious issue and we discuss it in a very serious way." There are lots of views in the administration, outside the administration, up on the Hill, throughout the talk shows, the media, and throughout the international community.

The United States Tuesday dismissed as a ploy Iraq's latest offer to allow U.N. weapons inspectors to return and said it was committed to ousting Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein regardless of whether the inspections resume.

Iraq is unlikely to allow the thorough inspections needed to ensure Baghdad is not developing nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said, AFP reported.

"I haven't seen any indication on their part to agree to anything, except as a ploy from time to time," Rumsfeld said.

"There might be inspections. The inspections might be this, that or the other thing. And then you'll find at the last moment, they'll withdraw that carrot or that opportunity and go back into their other mode of thumbing their nose at the international community."

Rumsfeld and White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Washington wanted Iraq to live up to its commitment to allow inspections mandated by UN Security Council resolutions, but both insisted that would not be enough to satisfy the United States.

"The policy of the United States is regime change with or without inspectors," Fleischer said.

Two senior Iraqi officials earlier hinted at a resumption of inspections amid a flurry of diplomatic activity designed to avert a possible U.S. strike.

Visiting Cairo for Arab League meetings on the possibility of a U.S. attack, Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri said a "return of inspectors is part of UN Security Council resolutions, and we call for the application of these resolutions."

In Johannesburg, Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz said Iraq was ready to cooperate with the United Nations in ending the standoff with the United States.

President George W. Bush has labeled Iraq part of an "axis of evil" and said it threatens world peace by supporting terrorism and developing weapons of mass destruction.

Iraq has used chemical weapons against Kurdish rebels, and UN inspectors had found evidence of nuclear and biological weapons programs before leaving Iraq ahead of U.S.-British air strikes in December 1998. Iraq has not allowed the inspectors to return.

Bush's stance was echoed in London by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who offered to provide proof Baghdad continues to develop such weapons, in spite of assurances to the contrary.

"There needs to be some more work, some more checking done, but I think probably the best thing to do is to publish that within the next few weeks... We will produce whatever we have," Blair said.

Rumsfeld said the Bush administration could soon offer its own case against Saddam, perhaps at upcoming congressional hearings on Iraq, as lawmakers discussed when to schedule such hearings.

Leaders in the U.S. Senate said they expect Bush would seek congressional support for any move against Saddam, even though the administration insists it is not required by U.S. law.

Bush also has promised to consult U.S. allies before attacking Iraq, but has reserved the right to act unilaterally if necessary.

Many of Washington's European and Arab allies have demanded UN approval of such action.

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer warned that a strike on Iraq would be "a fatal error," while French President Jacques Chirac again said he opposed any unilateral action against Saddam.  

Former South African president Nelson Mandela called on Iraq to allow the UN inspectors back into the country, but said they needed to be representative.

Saddam meanwhile assured the Iraqi people they would beat their enemies. "We have won in the past and we will also triumph in the Mother of Battles," he said.

 

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