http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/1820896

Most of the helicopters used by U.N. weapons inspectors were flown to Syria
today en route to Cyprus, Iraq said, after a Western insurance company
suspended its coverage for the aircraft.
The move follows growing fears of an imminent U.S.-led invasion as the
leaders of the main three nations pushing for military action -- President
Bush, Tony Blair of Britain and Jose Maria Aznar of Spain -- were holding an
emergency summit today in the Azores islands.

Also today, Germany issued a new travel warning urging its citizens to leave
Iraq "immediately" and said it would close its embassy once they left.
Diplomatic sources in Baghdad said other European diplomats were scheduled
to leave Monday.

Saturday, President Saddam Hussein placed Iraq on a war footing, placing his
son and three trusted lieutenants in charge of four military regions to
defend against any attack.

The decree by the Revolutionary Command Council -- Iraq's highest executive
body -- appeared to signal Baghdad's resignation that war may have become
inevitable. Nonetheless, the government continued its efforts to avert war
by destroying more of its banned missiles and handing over videotapes of
mobile laboratories to inspectors in compliance with U.N. resolutions.

The council placed Saddam's son Qusai in charge of the regime's heartland --
Baghdad and the president's hometown of Tikrit. Qusai has for years been in
charge of the elite Republican Guard Corps and his father's own personal
security, leading many to speculate that he could be his father's successor.

Saddam's cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid was placed in charge of the key southern
sector facing U.S. and British troops massed in Kuwait. Al-Majid is known
among Saddam's opponents as "Chemical Ali" for his role in the 1988 campaign
against rebellious Kurds in northern Iraq in which thousands of Kurds died,
many in chemical attacks.

Saddam's deputy, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, was placed in command of the
strategic northern region. An area that includes the Shiite Muslim holy
sites of Karbala and Najaf was placed under Mazban Khader Hadi, a member of
the ruling Revolutionary Command Council.

Saddam himself retained sole authority to order the use of
surface-to-surface missiles and aviation resources, the decree said.

The U.N. spokesman in Baghdad, Hiro Ueki, said he had no immediate comment
on Iraq's announcement that five of the eight U.N. helicopters had departed.
They have been used by the inspectors since January to travel across Iraq to
visit sites suspected of involvement in the manufacture of weapons of mass
destruction.

The five that left were U.S.-made Bell-212 helicopters. The three remaining
are Russian-made Mi-8s, which are insured by another company and would
continue to be used in the inspections, according to a statement by the
National Monitoring Directorate, the Iraqi state agency that liaises with
the inspectors.

Iraq, meanwhile, destroyed more of its banned Al Samoud 2 missiles on Sunday
and also handed over videotapes and photographs of mobile laboratories
suspected by the United States and Britain of being used to develop or
retain biological agents, Ueki said. He gave no details.

Inspectors also visited a technology college in the town of Karbala south of
Baghdad, according to the Information Ministry.

On Saturday, Saddam's scientific adviser, Lt. Gen. Amer al-Saadi, said the
government had invited chief U.N. weapons inspectors Hans Blix and Mohamed
ElBaradei to Baghdad to discuss outstanding disarmament issues.

At U.N. headquarters in New York, Blix said he would study the invitation
and discuss it with the council. Asked if the Iraqi invitation was a stunt,
he told CNN: "I certainly wouldn't call it a stunt. ... We'll have to give
serious thought to what the answer will be."

With nearly 250,000 U.S. and British troops in the Gulf ready to strike,
Iraq has been emboldened by stiff opposition to war at the Security Council,
where France and other nations have insisted inspectors should be given more
time.

An Iraqi newspaper, Al-Jumhuriya, on Sunday gloated over the stiff
opposition to U.S. plans, saying the "arrogance of force" shown by Bush and
Blair would not achieve any goals because "Iraq is more prepared than ever
to confront and defeat any aggression."

France, Russia and Germany, meanwhile, issued a joint statement Saturday
insisting there was no reason for war, but calling for foreign ministers to
meet this week at the Security Council to set a timetable for Iraq to
disarm.

Monday, Blix is to present the Security Council with his plans for upcoming
inspections. He has said recently that Baghdad is showing more "proactive"
cooperation with inspectors, but the United States and its allies insist
that Saddam is deceiving the inspectors.

Blix and ElBaradei have visited Baghdad twice since the United Nations
resumed weapons inspections in Iraq in November after a four-year break.
Each time they have pressed the Iraqis for greater cooperation with their
mission to verify that the country is rid of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons. Iraq says it no longer has such weapons.



xponent
Coming Soon Maru
rob

Along the drifting cloud the eagle searching down on the land
Catching the swirling wind the sailor sees the rim of the land
The eagles dancing wings create as weather spins out of hand


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