Pressure on Bush to
Back Off: Global Outcry Against Iraq Attack
by Nicholas Watt,
Richard Norton-Taylor and Lucy Ward
Published on Thursday, August 29, 2002 in the
Guardian/UK
President George Bush was facing overwhelming pressure from across
the world last night to step back from the brink of military action to oust
Saddam Hussein.
Alarmed by growing rhetoric from leading hawks in Washington,
key countries from China
to Saudi Arabia
warned of the devastating consequences of a US-led assault against Iraq. Even Downing Street, which has gone
out of its way to support Mr Bush, highlighted increasing tensions between London and Washington when it
insisted that UN weapons inspectors should be given a chance to visit Iraq.
As Tony Blair flew home from his French holiday, his official
spokesman said Saddam Hussein could "resolve the issue" by giving
unfettered access to UN weapons inspectors. The remarks were in contrast to US vice-president
Dick Cheney's insistence this week that America should be free
to take "pre-emptive action" against Iraq because
President Saddam had rejected a "viable" inspections system.
Such harsh rhetoric, which included a warning from the US defense secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, that the Iraqi leader was
behaving like Adolf Hitler, prompted a flood
of warnings on the dangers of military action.
Saudi Arabia, which has
already insisted that the US cannot use its
bases in the kingdom for an attack on Iraq, warned that
the US had no right to
oust Saddam. The Saudi foreign minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, told the BBC it
was up to the Iraqi people to decide who should be their leader.
"If they don't have the option, squeezing them and attacking
them will force them into backing their government, rather than the
reverse," the prince said. "What makes us so gullible as to think we
know what is better for the Iraqi people than the Iraqi people
themselves?"
China reassured Baghdad that it opposed
military action. During talks in Beijing, its foreign
minister, Tang Jiaxun, told his Iraqi counterpart, Naji Sabri, that "using
force or threats of force" would "increase regional instability and
tensions".
Kofi Annan, the UN
secretary general, called for the return of inspectors, adding pointedly:
"The UN is not agitating for military action."
Such warnings may fall on deaf ears in Washington after Mr Rumsfeld said that Mr Bush was prepared to take unilateral
action against Iraq. Speaking to
3,000 marines in California on Tuesday, Mr Rumsfeld said: "I've found over the years that when
our country does make the right judgments, the right decisions, that other
countries do cooperate and they do participate."
Mr Rumsfeld even likened Washington's position to
Winston Churchill's wilderness years in the 1930s when the future wartime prime
minister was a lonely voice warning of the dangers of Hitler.
The prime minister's official spokesman insisted yesterday that he
would not be drawn into a "running commentary" on every utterance by
US cabinet ministers. He also insisted that Mr Blair and Mr Bush were
"100% agreed" on the need to deal with Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction.
But the foreign secretary Jack Straw will today reiterate Britain's determination
to give weapons inspectors a chance to return to Iraq. In his formal
response to the House of Commons foreign affairs select committee report on the
war against terrorism, Mr Straw will make clear that Britain is considering
whether to push for a deadline on an agreement over weapons inspectors.
Britain's stress on the
importance of weapons inspectors is partly designed to reassure Labour MPs. It
also highlights genuine unease at Washington's bellicosity -
a point that was underlined by the former US diplomat
Richard Holbrooke. Writing in the Washington Post,
the architect of the Dayton peace accord on
Bosnia said that a
senior adviser to Mr Blair had told him that Washington "was
giving Blair nothing" in return for his unstinting support".
Mr Holbrooke continued: "At least
half a dozen have spoken to me about their concerns in the last six months.
They're telling me: 'It's not that they don't listen to us. It's that they
don't take into account the prime minister and his government's need for us to
go through the security council system on this [Iraq]."
However, senior British military sources said Mr Bush had already
made up his mind to attack Iraq. The US was beginning
to "warm up its public relations machine, to prepare the general
public", one said.
© Guardian
Newspapers Limited 2002
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