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Russia says war on Iraq decided
Baghdad -
Germany issued its strongest denunciation yet of looming military
action against Iraq on Wednesday and pledged to work with France to
prevent war.
But a Russian military source said
Washington and its allies had already decided to launch military
action from mid-February.
"Our people can count on the
German and French governments combining our powers and efforts to keep
the peace, prevent war and maintaining the security," German
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder wrote in the Berliner Zeitung newspaper.
President Jacques Chirac, speaking
later alongside Schroeder in Paris, said France, which has the power
to veto any U.N. Security Council resolution, shared Berlin's view on
Iraq.
Those comments and the report carried
by a Moscow news agency quoting a senior military source signaled a
sharp increase in tensions surrounding the possibility of war against
Iraq, accused by Washington of hiding banned weapons.
U.S. President George Bush is massing
more than 150,000 troops in the oil-rich Gulf and has made clear he is
ready to use them, with or without a new mandate from the Security
Council, if he considers Iraq has not disarmed.
But Bush is hoping U.N. weapons
inspectors will back his view when they report back Monday and he says
the decision on whether to launch a strike has not yet been taken.
"I will let you know when the moment has come," he said
Tuesday.
Interfax news agency's specialist
military news wire AVN quoted an unnamed high-ranking source in the
Russian general staff as saying U.S.-led operations would be launched
anyway once an attacking force had been assembled in the Gulf.
"According to the information we
have, the operation is planned for the second half of February. The
decision to launch it has been taken but not yet been made
public," the source told the agency, which has generally
authoritative contacts in the Russian military and political
establishment.
The source did not indicate how the
Russian military had obtained such information, but added that the
main aim of the operation was not so much to topple Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein but to secure U.S. control over Iraqi oilfields.
Russia has a major commercial
interest in Iraqi oil and has made clear its eagerness to exploit
Iraq's huge reserves once U.N. sanctions are lifted.
"The war will be short, lasting
about one month," the Russian source was quoted as saying.
Moscow and Paris, which is also a
permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, are cautioning against
U.S action in Iraq now while U.N. arms inspectors are continuing to
search for evidence of weapons of mass destruction there.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage flew to Moscow Wednesday for talks with First Deputy
Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Trubnikov aimed at trying to convince the
Russians that diplomatic options were "just about
exhausted."
But Russian Foreign Minister Igor
Ivanov said Tuesday "most countries" believed diplomacy had
a long way to run.
France has hinted strongly that it
might veto a resolution authorizing force and Germany, which holds a
non-veto Security Council seat, said Tuesday it would not vote for
one.
Schroeder met Chirac in Paris
Wednesday for celebrations their 40-year special relationship as the
political and economic driving force of the European Union.
Hans Blix, head of a U.N. weapons
inspection team which has been searching for banned weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq for two months, is due to report back to the U.N.
Monday.
Mohamed ElBaradei, the U.N. nuclear
agency chief who will report with Blix, said the inspectors needed
"quite a few months" more to finish their work. He told
Reuters: "I am pleading for the inspection process to take its
course."
Bush showed impatience with such
statements Tuesday.
"It's clear to me now that he is
not disarming," Bush said of Iraq's President Saddam Hussein.
"Time is running out."
"How much more time do we need
to be sure he is not disarming? This looks to me like a re-run of a
bad movie and I'm not interested in watching it."
Oil prices hit two-year highs as the
Pentagon ordered two more aircraft carriers and 37,000 troops to the
Gulf.
Britain, his main military ally, has
also ordered thousands of troops to the region. Australia said
Wednesday it was sending troops and the transport ship Kanimbla to the
Middle East this week for a possible war with Iraq.
On January 31, Bush hosts British
Prime Minister Tony Blair at Camp David which some see as a possible
council of war.
Turkey, a staunch NATO ally which has
misgivings about helping start a war on its own doorstep, is to host a
meeting of regional foreign ministers in Istanbul Thursday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal
Kharrazi, in comments carried by the official IRNA news agency, made
clear he would call for everything possible to be done to prevent
conflict.
"Iraq's neighbors must prevent
the outbreak of a war and the interference of foreign powers in Iraq's
internal affairs." -- Reuters
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