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U.S., U.N. seek billions to
rebuild Iraq
By BARRY SCHWEID, AP Diplomatic Writer
Madrid, Spain -
American and Iraqi officials urged nearly 80 nations at a
donors conference Thursday to pledge billions of dollars to rebuild
Iraq, but a senior European official said expectations should be kept
low.
"You cannot expect European
taxpayers, who felt pretty hostile to military intervention, to feel
terribly enthusiastic about spending a large amount of money in Iraq,"
Chris Patten, the European Union 's external affairs commissioner,
told reporters as the conference began.
In fact, Patten said, Iraq would have
difficulty absorbing even the contributions already promised, which
include about $20 billion by the Bush administration and $1.5 billion
by Japan.
Nevertheless, American officials
think that when the pledges begin Friday, they will significantly
exceed most expectations, with Persian Gulf countries offering
considerable aid, said a U.S. official who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
The senior U.S. official in Baghdad,
L. Paul Bremer, who attended the session with scores of Iraqi
officials and business leaders, said it was too early to know what
donations would be.
Asked about World Bank
estimates that Iraq could absorb only about $5.6 billion in aid the
first year, Bremer said that spending the money President Bush
has asked for would not be a problem.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan ,
opening the conference, called for generous contributions. But despite
approval last week of a U.N. resolution setting out Iraq's future
course, Annan acknowledged that lingering divisions over Washington's
role in running the country might deter some donors.
Annan
urged that such concerns be set aside and said, "The long-term
challenge of reconstruction has to be faced by all of us."
Both Annan and Secretary of State
Colin Powell sought to lower expectations that Washington would
come away with the entire amount it wants at the conference — $35.8
billion through 2007.
Powell acknowledged "it may take time
to meet the goal" of more than $55 billion set by the World Bank,
which includes the Bush administration's pledge of about $20 billion.
Security remains a primary constraint
"both now and into the foreseeable future," Annan said, but a start on
reconstruction cannot be deferred until order is restored.
Bremer, for his part, said attacks on
coalition forces posed no strategic threat. But he said terrorism was
a significant problem, as well as crimes committed by some of 100,000
convicts that Saddam Hussein freed from prison before he was
overthrown in the U.S.-led war.
Treasury Secretary John W. Snow,
urging American companies to invest, said Iraq tax rates are low and
foreign investors now can own up to 100 percent of investments in the
country with the exception of oil, gas, mineral and real estate
rights.
Bremer said Iraq was saddled with a
debt of about $125 billion and had to spend about $7 billion to $8
billion a year just to service it.
"The United States intends to take
the lead in pushing for substantial reduction," he said.
Iraqi Governing Council member
Mouwaffek al-Rubaie called for countries like France, Russia and the
Persian Gulf states to cancel Iraq's debt and reparations load, the
result mainly of Saddam's wars with Iran and Kuwait.
France and Germany, leading opponents
of the U.S.-led war, have both cited concerns about the slow pace of
restoring Iraq's sovereignty for their refusal to pledge any new money
now.
In London, a British aid group
contended Thursday that the U.S.-appointed body governing Iraq has
failed to account for billions of dollars allocated for rebuilding the
country. Christian Aid said the Coalition Provisional Authority had
explained how it had spent only $1 billion of the $5 billion it had
been given. The funds include $1 billion from the former U.N. Oil for
Food program, $2.5 billion in assets seized from Saddam's former
government and $1.5 billion in oil revenue.
That money is separate from the money
being raised in Madrid, most of which goes into a trust managed by the
World Bank, the United Nations and a committee of Iraqis.
American officials stressed, however, that the United States would
administer all U.S. contributions. --
Associated Press
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