http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A22210-2003Feb17.html

European leaders, trying to end their bitter dispute over Iraq, warned
Saddam Hussein on Monday he faces a "last chance" to disarm, but gave no
deadline and said U.N. weapons inspectors must have more time to finish
their work.

Insisting it had healed the rift over U.S. calls for military action against
Iraq, the EU emergency summit nevertheless left significant divisions, with
some states saying the United Nations could still disarm Iraq peacefully.

"War is not inevitable. Force should be used only as a last resort. It is
for the Iraqi regime to end this crisis by complying fully with the demands
of the Security Council," the 15 nations said in a statement.

That was seen as a setback for Germany, which has opposed war under any
circumstances.

"Baghdad should have no illusions. It must disarm and cooperate immediately
and fully. The Iraqi regime alone will be responsible for the consequences
if it continues to flout the will of the international community and does
not take this last chance," the leaders said in the joint declaration.

While that position will cheer the United States and Britain, which are
urging military action, there was still strong support for continued,
possibly increased U.N. weapons inspections. The statement gave no
indication of how much longer inspections should continue, but said they
could not go on forever without Iraqi cooperation.

"They must be given the time and resources that the U.N. Security Council
believes they need," the declaration said. "However, inspections cannot
continue indefinitely in the absence of full Iraqi cooperation."

France, which has blocked any swift move to military action, insisted its
position had been vindicated that only the U.N. Security Council can handle
the issue - an implicit rejection of U.S. statements that it has the right
to disarm Iraq alone if necessary.

"We all agree the elimination of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction is
absolutely imperative (but) only the Security Council can handle the means,"
French President Jacque Chirac said.

"There is no reason today to change the strategy," he added.

That suggests significant wrangling lies ahead if the United States and
Britain hope to get a second resolution from the U.N. Security Council
authorizing war. British Prime Minister Tony Blair wants the resolution
because of strong domestic opposition to war.

Chirac said France would oppose any effort to draft a new U.N. resolution
authorizing war at this time.

In an extraordinary outburst, Chirac publicly lambasted eastern European
nations seeking to join the EU for their support for Washington over the
Iraq crisis.

"It is not really responsible behavior, it is not well brought-up behavior.
They missed a good opportunity to keep quiet," he told reporters.

EU diplomats had hoped to mend the damaging rift after NATO managed to
overcome a disagreement on Sunday on planning on aiding Turkey in the event
of war with Iraq. France, Germany and Belgium had blocked the move for a
month, but a solution was worked out by moving the issue to a committee
where the French are not represented.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair appeared frustrated by the French stance,
saying he did not understand how EU states could agree Iraq was not
cooperating fully, but Baghdad had not been declared in material breach, or
violation, of U.N. resolutions - grounds for military action.

"If Iraq is not cooperating fully and everyone accepts they are not
cooperating, why is Iraq not then in material breach? I still don't know the
answer to that question," he told reporters.

Blair also appeared to be backing away from a push for a second U.N.
resolution to endorse military action against Iraq. He said the earlier
resolution demanding Iraq disarm made a convincing case for tough action.

Seeking not only to mend rifts in the European Union, but also with the
United States, the leaders also gave the American military buildup in the
Persian Gulf credit for forcing Saddam to work with U.N. weapons inspectors.

"We are committed to working with all our partners, especially the United
States, for the disarmament of Iraq, for peace and stability in the region,"
the leaders said.

European parliamentary leaders, who met with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan before he entered the summit, said Annan stressed, however, that he
did not want the weapons inspections to go on too long, suggesting the
threat of action had to be real to preserve the body's credibility.

The split had threatened the EU's ability to forge a foreign and security
policy. France and others want the EU to be a major power that can counter
the United States, but most European nations are reluctant to give up
control of their foreign policy, especially direct ties with Washington.



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Reverse Thrusters Maru
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________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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