Canada Says Bush Has
No Right To Invade Iraq

By David Ljunggren
10-3-2
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada on   Wednesday noticeably hardened its line against the idea of a unilateral U.S. strike   on Iraq, saying Washington had no right to take action that could destabilize   large parts of the world.
Ottawa   -- whose foreign policy is based on multilateral diplomacy -- has   consistently stressed the Iraq crisis should be handled through the United   Nations and is showing increasing signs of alarm about the damage the world   body could suffer.
Foreign   Minister Bill Graham said that while the U.N. charter did, in special   circumstances, allow one nation to launch a pre-emptive strike against another,   such an attack could not be justified now.
Article   51 of the U.N. charter allows a state to take action in self defense. It   doesn't allow you to invade somebody just because you want to invade   them, he told CBC radio.
Canada   does not want to see war. We do not believe we have a right to invade.   However much we may detest Saddam Hussein we have a strong belief in the   integrity of the international community that we have created, and there are   certain rules and we want to continue to obey those rules...we are there to   enforce the rules, not to enforce something else.
U.S.   President George W. Bush is pressing the U.N. Security Council to produce a   tough new resolution on the return of arms inspectors to Iraq and has made it   clear Washington would act alone if necessary to destroy the weapons of mass   destruction it says Baghdad is stockpiling.
Graham   said a unilateral strike would not be justified because it was generally felt   that Baghdad did not have the capacity or ability to produce such weapons.
So   then you move the argument one (step) further back: Well, what if he gets   them? Then he might..., he said.
The   further you move the argument away from an actual direct threat to a  suggestion that, well perhaps, one day maybe... then of course you are   opening the door to a basic destruction of the world order as we presently   know it.
Graham   -- who said on Tuesday that a unilateral U.S. attack could destabilize large parts   of the world -- dismissed the idea that a strike would have limited   after-effects.
People   who want to attack Iraq say 'Well it's just Iraq, it's just all about Saddam   Hussein'. It isn't just about Iraq, it isn't just about Saddam Hussein, it's   about the world order we've constructed over the last 50 years, he said   vehemently.
You   can't talk about Iraq in isolation. That's the whole point. That's why we are   having these huge debates because Iraq is a litmus test of where the world is   going to go for (its) future peace and security.
Graham   insisted that Saddam had to allow the inspectors back in but added that   Baghdad should only be deprived of its arms of mass destruction.
I  don't think we'd want to go to the point where Iraq would be weakened to the   point where it would then start to disintegrate, he said, adding that   this could destabilize the entire Middle East.
Another   advantage of acting through the U.N. would be that the Iraqis would have   nothing to fear if the inspectors gave the country a clean bill of health,   Graham told CBC.
That   also puts an end to discussions about something else called regime change...   You can't then say 'Oh by the way we got all we wanted on that, now let's move for a regime change' he said.
We  don't want the United Nations to be accused of being the tool of any one country, however powerful it may be, because that in turn also undermines the   integrity of the system.
Graham   later said U.N. chief weapons inspector Hans Blix had requested four   Canadians be part of a team to go to Iraq. He also played down the idea that   Ottawa would quickly be in a position to send troops to the region.
We  would have to look at the circumstances but clearly our approach to any such   request would be very different if it was coming from the (U.N.)   Secretary-General and the Security Council than if it was coming from just   one side, he said.
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