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Britain has "absolutely no plans" for military aggression against Iran and Syria, said Blair
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LONDON,
April 3 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Differences between
London and Washington over the future of the Middle East intensified
when British Prime Minister Tony Blair implicitly condemned the
Pentagon's bellicose language against Syria and Iran.
Challenged
in the House of Commons by anti-war Labor MPs over speculation that
Syria and Iran might be the next “hit list” after Iraq in the
weekly question period Wednesday, April 2, Blair made it clear that
his country had "absolutely no plans" for military
aggression against either country.
U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld last week warned Syria against
supplying military equipment to Iraq.
He
also said the entry
into Iraq of "military forces, intelligence personnel, or
proxies" from Iran would be treated as a “hostile act”.
British
diplomats said Rumsfeld's harsh language was likely to inflame Arab
opinion and be counter-productive in Syria and Iran.
Syria,
the only Arab country currently on the U.N. Security Council.
vehemently dismissed the U.S. accusations, with its ambassador to the
U.N. saying they are only meant to cover a humiliating military
failure in Iraq.
And
Syrian President Bashar Assad described the U.S.-led war on Iraq as
"clear occupation and a flagrant aggression against a United
Nations member state."
“Not
True”
However,
the two staunchest allies in the war against Iraq did not find the
same ground for agreement on Syria and Iran.
Although
Rumsfeld also warned Iran to stay clear of Iraq and turn its armed
proxies away from the battlefield, British Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw said earlier that the Government would have nothing to do with
such an approach.
Iran
was an emerging democracy and "there would be no case whatsoever
for taking any kind of action", Straw told BBC radio.
President
George W Bush has already identified Iran as part of an "axis of
evil", Washington views the leadership in both Damascus and
Tehran as part of the global terrorist network.
Britain
was working hard to improve relations with Syria. But Straw urged the
Syrian government not to allow its territory to be used as a conduit
for military supplies to Iraq.
Blair
later emphasized that Britain would not find it acceptable if Syria
supported elements in Iraq attacking allied forces.
Straw
was asked whether he was worried that an impression was being created
that once Iraq had been tackled, Syria and Iran might be next in line.
"It
would worry me if it were true," he said. "It is not true,
and we would have nothing whatever to do with an approach like
that."
Straw
has made extensive personal efforts to improve relations between
Britain and Iran, while Blair has worked to improve contacts with
Syria, according to the British daily.
“Not
Americans”
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“We would have nothing whatever to do with an approach like that," said Straw
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Blair
assured in his weekly question time session that Iraq should be run by
Iraqi people as soon as possible after the war ended, an approach
contradicted with Washington’s plans to set an American, named as Jay
Garner, a former U.S. general, at the helm of the Arab country.
“Iraq
in the end should not be run by the Americans, should not be run by
the British, should not be run by any outside force or power,"
Blair told the Commons.
The
British prime minister believed that an Iraqi-ruled government is a
public request in Iraq.
"I
am quite sure that is what the vast majority of the Iraqi people want
to see," he stressed.
Downing
Street said it envisaged that there would be a three-stage transition
towards a new Iraqi government. As soon as the war was over, the
military would be in charge, followed by an "interim Iraqi
authority", leading to a "fully representative Iraqi
government".
The
rift between London and Washington first surfaced when Blair met Bush
at Camp David on Thursday, March 27.
Blair
insisted that a new U.N Security Council resolution is needed to
authorize an interim U.N. administration and release funds for
reconstruction.
British
companies complained
that a select group of U.S. construction firms are to land a
lucrative government contract to rebuild a postwar Iraq the U.N.
Development Program (UNDP) estimated it would cost up to 30 billion
dollars over the next three years.