PRAGUE,
November 21 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Germany insisted
Thursday, November 21, it would not take part in any military action
against Iraq even after other NATO leaders pledged to take
"effective action" supporting U.N. efforts to disarm
Baghdad.
In
stark contrast to other NATO heads gathered for a landmark summit in
Prague, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said Berlin's position had
not changed, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"What
I said before applies now and will continue to apply," Schroeder
told reporters.
"Participation
does not come into the question."
The
message was reiterated by Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer and Defense
Minister Peter Struck.
They
made it clear that while Berlin would study a U.S. request for
possible assistance in the event of a strike on Iraq, it was on the
understanding that Germany would not take part.
Schroeder's
anti-war rhetoric helped his ruling coalition scrape to victory in
September elections, but angered U.S. President George W. Bush, who
was then further offended by a German minister comparing his methods
to those of Hitler.
U.S.-German
relations soured, and although both sides say the ice has since been
broken, there was still an obvious chill in the air at the Prague
summit.
Schroeder
and Bush have twice shaken hands here, once at a dinner Wednesday,
November 20, and a second time during proceedings Thursday, but there
was no prospect of a one-to-one meeting.
"We
greeted each other, cordially," Bush said of their first
encounter, an off-camera handshake.
Asked
to assess the state of relations, he responded business-like:
"Germany is an important friend of the United States.
"We've
got a relationship to maintain and we will maintain it."
By
the time he leaves Prague Friday, November 22, Bush will have had
talks with the leaders of Britain, France, Turkey and the Czech
Republic as well as NATO Secretary General George Robertson - but not
Schroeder, although the White House insists it "is not a
snub."
As
the second handshake was caught on camera, Schroeder told reporters
with a smile, insisting every good friendship had occasional
differences.
Although
his anti-war stance was a popular election message, politically it has
left him in a corner as it is also a key tenet of his coalition allies
the Greens, without whose support his government would collapse.
Fischer,
the Greens' figurehead, said the position "is unequivocal: we
will not take part. That is the situation."
Government
spokesman Bela Anda said Berlin had received a request from the United
States about potential military assistance.
"The
request has arrived and will be thoroughly studied on the clear basis
of a German non-participation in the possible military action against
Iraq and our alliance commitments and our legal possibilities,"
he added.
Anda
did not say what contribution the United States had sought.
Officials
in Washington have said the administration has sounded out around 50
nations for possible support in case of a war, such as troops,
equipment or bases.
Germany
would be obliged under a U.N. or NATO-led operation to give access to
military bases and overflight rights.
The
situation is less clear-cut if the United States decides to go it
alone or at the head of a "coalition of the willing," in
which case Washington would need Berlin's agreement to use German
airspace or bases.
Fischer
dodged a question on overflight rights, saying that "if there is
a request, we will examine it.