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(en) Definite conditions for ending Iraq sanctions?
From
MichaelP <papadop@PEAK.ORG>
Date
Sun, 22 Feb 1998 18:22:02 -0800 (PST)
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London Independent February 23, 1998
Saddam and UN hammer out deal
By Robert Fisk in Baghdad
SADDAM Hussein can stay. That appears to be the deal that was cobbled
together in Baghdad between Kofi Annan, the United Nations
Secretary-General, and the Iraqi president yesterday. UN inspectors will
go on banging on the doors of presidential palaces at midnight if they
wish and UN weapons inspectors will go on watching Iraq's factories and
military sites through automatic cameras. But UN sanctions can end when
the organisation is satisfied that it has full compliance with inspections
and that no further biological or chemical weapons are being made.
The United States Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, whom UN officials
fear has developed a personal obsession with President Saddam, is likely
to be enraged by the type of agreement emerging here last night. For she -
and many politicians on Capitol Hill - have always defined UN Security
Council resolution 687 as a means of destroying the Iraqi president as
well as ridding him of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. Because
of its references to human rights, the Americans have argued, the UN's
harsh economic sanctions can only end when President Saddam goes.
But the deal which Mr Annan appears to have come up with seems to imply
that sanctions would end once the problem of weapons of mass destruction
is dealt with. This is a very different interpretation from that of Mrs
Albright. In other words, she and President Bill Clinton will no longer be
able to maintain sanctions as a method of ridding themselves of President
Saddam.
The UN spokesman, Fred Eckhard, arrived to tell us Mr Annan was "on the
verge of a breakthrough" to end the Iraqi crisis after three hours of
talks with resident Saddam. Mr Eckhard could have been standing above New
York's East River, deciding the future of war or peace; which, in a sense,
he was.
For if you believed what Mr Annan's spokesman was telling us - and how the
Americans must have been driven to distraction as they watched him - then
the Iraqi leader had done a deal which will force all the President's
soldiers and all the President's men to march back down the hill again,
pack up their Stealths and send a large part of their fleet out of the
Gulf.
So what was the deal? Mr Annan was meeting again last night with the Iraqi
deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz, to sort out one final detail. In the
grim hallways of the Republican Palace in south Baghdad the two men
discussed what has come to be called the "time element": exactly when UN
sanctions will be lifted. When the arms inspectors complete their work? Or
with the downfall of President Saddam (the American version)? Mr Annan
seems to have won agreement on the first - which means, if the United
States agrees, that the inspectors will be given access to the large
pseudo-Habsburg palaces around Iraq.
The palace sites may be visited by the inspectors with other foreign
officials present. Furthermore, President Saddam is known to have
complained to at least one foreign minister that cameras inside his
palaces could be used to watch his meetings and learn of his political
decisions; there would have to be rules to prevent this intrusion into the
"sovereign" affairs of Iraq.
But is this really the great "breakthrough" that Mr Eckhard promises us?
In one off-hand remark to a journalist, he said that Mr Annan would have
to "sell" his deal to the Security Council - which suggests that it is far
from being cut-and-dried. If the Americans accept the new system of
presidential site inspections, are they going to be able to represent
their massive military escalation in the Gulf as a political victory -
especially when it becomes clear that Saddam has acceded to the UN
inspectors in return for his own continued rule?
Last night, threateningly, Mrs Albright responded to news of Mr Annan's
negotiations: "It is possible that he will come with something we don't
like, in which case we will pursue our national interest."
Under the plan which Mr Annan appears to be defining, the UN would
recognise different categories of suspected weapons sites.
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