-Caveat Lector-

You have been sent this message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] as a courtesy of the 
Washington Post - http://www.washingtonpost.com

 A little "blowback" for entering into "entangling alliances" ... you don't always get 
the upper hand ...

 To view the entire article, go to 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19221-2003Jan20.html

 France Vows to Block  Iraq War Resolution

 By Glenn Kessler  and Colum Lynch
 UNITED NATIONS, Jan. 20 -- France suggested today it would wage a major diplomatic 
fight, including possible use of its veto power, to prevent the U.N. Security Council 
from passing a resolution authorizing military action against Iraq.

  France's opposition to a war, emphatically delivered here by Foreign Minister 
Dominique de Villepin, is a major blow for the Bush administration, which has begun 
pouring tens of thousands of troops into the Persian Gulf in preparation for a 
military conflict this spring. The administration had hoped to mark the final phase in 
its confrontation with Iraq when U.N. weapons inspectors deliver a progress report 
Monday.

  But in a diplomatic version of ambush, France and other countries used a high-level 
Security Council meeting on terrorism to lay down their markers for the debate that 
will commence next week on the inspectors' report. Russia and China, which have veto 
power, and Germany, which will chair the Security Council in February, also signaled 
today they were willing to let the inspections continue for months.

  Only Britain appeared to openly support the U.S. position that Iraqi President 
Saddam Hussein has thwarted effective inspections.

  "If war is the only way to resolve this problem, we are going down a dead end," de 
Villepin told reporters. "Already we know for a fact that Iraq's weapons of mass 
destruction programs are being largely blocked, even frozen. We must do everything 
possible to strengthen this process."

 The United Nations, he said, should stay "on the path of cooperation. The other 
choice is to move forward out of impatience over a situation in Iraq to move towards 
military intervention. We believe that today nothing justifies envisaging military 
action."

 Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, in the face of such comments, departed from his 
prepared text on terrorism and implored his colleagues to remember that the Security 
Council resolution passed unanimously Nov. 8 gave Iraq "a last chance" to meet its 
obligations. "We must not shrink from our duties and our responsibilities when the 
material comes before us next week," Powell said. He used a variation of the phrase 
"must not shrink" three more times as he addressed the council.

  During the weeks of debate on the Iraq resolution, French officials had indicated 
they were open to some sort of military intervention if Iraq did not comply. But now 
the French appear to have set much higher hurdles for support.

  Rising opposition to war, particularly in France, appears to have played a role in 
the hardening positions on the Security Council. Foreign officials are also aware of 
polls in the United States suggesting that support for a war drops dramatically if the 
Bush administration does not have U.N. approval.

 While the United Nations was debating today, U.S. military officials announced that 
the Army is sending a force of about 37,000 soldiers, spearheaded by the Texas-based 
4th Infantry Division, to the Persian Gulf region. It is the largest ground force 
identified among an estimated 125,000 U.S. troops ordered to deploy since Christmas 
Eve, the Associated Press reported.

 At the United Nations, several foreign ministers said a war in Iraq would spawn more 
terrorist acts around the globe and, in the words of Germany's Joschka Fischer, have 
"disastrous consequences for long-term regional stability."

  "Terrorism is far from being crushed," said Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov. 
"We must be careful not to take unilateral steps that might threaten the unity of the 
entire [anti-]terrorism coalition. In this context we are strictly in favor of a 
political settlement of the situation revolving around Iraq."

  Powell replied: "We cannot fail to take the action that may be necessary because we 
are afraid of what others might do. We cannot be shocked into impotence because we are 
afraid of the difficult choices that are ahead of us."

  But when the foreign ministers emerged from the council debate and addressed 
reporters, it appeared that Powell's pleas had made little impact. Although  President 
Bush said last week he was "sick and tired of games and deception," Fischer said the 
inspections were a success.

  "Iraq has complied fully with all relevant resolutions and cooperated very closely 
with the U.N. team on the ground," Fischer said. "We think things are moving in the 
right direction, based on the efforts of the inspection team, and [they] should have 
all the time which is needed."

  Chinese Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan said Monday's report should be regarded as a 
"new beginning" rather than an end to inspections. The chief weapons inspectors "have 
been talking about that there is more work to do in terms of the inspections and they 
need more time. I think we should respect their opinion and support their work."

  De Villepin, in a lengthy and at times theatrical news conference, was asked whether 
France would use its veto power to thwart Washington's campaign for quick action. He 
said France "will shoulder its responsibilities, faithful to the principles it has."

  France would never "associate ourselves with military intervention that is not 
supported by the international community," de Villepin added. "We think that military 
intervention would be the worst possible solution."

  France, as chair of the Security Council this month, had organized today's meeting 
on terrorism in part to draw attention to its contention that the Iraq situation has 
detracted from the more pressing need to confront international terrorism.

  De Villepin reacted coolly to suggestions, made by senior Bush administration 
officials Sunday, that Hussein and his top advisers be offered political asylum 
outside Iraq to avert  a war. "The problem is something more difficult than a question 
of change of regime," he said. "Let us not be diverted from our objective. It is the 
disarmament of Iraq."

  U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan also indirectly criticized the prospect of war 
when he addressed the council on terrorism. "Any sacrifice of freedom or the rule of 
law within states -- or any generation of new disputes between states in the name of 
anti-terrorism -- is to hand the terrorists a victory that no act of theirs could 
possibly bring," he said, alluding to frequent U.S assertions that the confrontation 
with Iraq is part of the larger war on terrorism.

  The only sign of support for the U.S. position came from its closest ally, Britain. 
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said "time was running out" for Hussein and his "cat and 
mouse" game. But Straw added that Britain preferred a U.N. resolution authorizing 
force.

  "Iraq has a responsibility now to avoid a conflict, to avoid a war," Powell told 
reporters. "There is no question that Iraq continues to misunderstand the seriousness 
of the position that it's in.

 "If the United Nations is going to be relevant," he added, "it has to take a firm 
stand."

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