Several Security Council members call for more inspections in Iraq
7 March – Several Security Council members today called for the continuation, enhancement and acceleration of
inspections in Iraq after hearing reports from two top United Nations disarmament officials on efforts to rid the
country of weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
Speaking at the outset of the ministerial-level meeting, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said given the current
progress reported by the inspectors there was no need for a second resolution declaring that Iraq had failed to take the
final opportunity offered it in resolution 1441 to disarm.
He noted that the inspections could not go on forever but that the alternatives were clear, disarmament of Iraq by war
or disarmament by exhausting all peaceful means. "The progress of the last few days have shown we have efficient
alternatives to war in Iraq," Mr. Fischer said. "By taking this path we will strengthen the relevance of the United
Nations and the Security Council."
Syria's Foreign Minister, Farouk Al-Shara, also noted the elements in the inspectors' report that referred to recent
Iraqi cooperation. "If given that Security Council resolution 1441 does not set a time frame for the inspectors' work,
what then could be the background of the arguments that the time is up and that Iraq had only days left to comply or
else?" he said.
Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez of Mexico regretted Iraq's "lack of active, immediate and effective cooperation,"
called on it to "radically change its attitude" and stressed the need to search for the widest consensus among Council
members. "Mexico is convinced that we have to explore all paths and take advantage of all opportunities to solve this
issue through a peaceful way," he said.
For his part, Igor Ivanov, Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation, asked whether it was now reasonable, in view of
the reported progress, to halt the inspections, adding that the Council did not need new resolutions. "We have enough of
those," he said. "We now need active support of the inspectors as they carry out their tasks."
Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said France, as a permanent member of the Security Council, would not allow
passage of a resolution that automatically authorized use of force. He proposed a three-point plan for continued
inspections: that inspectors set a priority list of disarmament tasks, that they give a progress report every three
weeks and that full implementation be assessed after 120 days as prescribed by Council resolution 1284, or even sooner
if inspectors deem it feasible.
"The military agenda must not dictate the calendar of inspections," Mr. Villepin said. "We agree to timetables and to an
accelerated calendar. But we cannot accept an ultimatum as the inspectors are reporting cooperation. That would mean
war."
The Foreign Minister of China, Tang Jiaxuan, noted the progress reported by the inspectors and urged Iraq to show fuller
cooperation. "We believe that as long as we stick to the road of political settlement, the goal of destroying Iraq's WMD
could still be obtained," he said. "Under the current circumstances there is no reason to shut the door to peace.
Therefore we are not in favour of a new resolution, particularly one authorizing the use of force."
Soledad Alvear Valenzuela, Foreign Minister of Chile, called on Iraq to cooperate more fully, saying that even at this
late stage its attitude was insufficient. But today's reports indicated that a peaceful resolution was still possible
through strengthening inspections with clear deadlines and demands, she added.
Angolan Deputy Foreign Minister Georges Chikoti noted that Iraqi cooperation remained relatively insufficient and that
progress normally occurred when associated with specific benchmarks and dates. "Such an endeavour appears to be, under
the present circumstances, the most suitable way to maintain the Council's unity, to uphold a course that can lead to a
peaceful solution of the crisis, and spare the Iraqi people, the region and the world from an armed conflict and its
dangerous consequences," he said.
Cameroon's Permanent Representative to the UN, Martin Belinga-Eboutou, said the viability of inspections rested on
unconditional Iraqi cooperation but the inspections could not go on indefinitely. Appealing to the Council to unite, he
said a credible alternative to war must be sought. The Iraqi authorities must be compelled to comply unconditionally and
fully.
Ambassador Stefan Tafrov of Bulgaria said recent progress would have been impossible without the threat of military
force and the presence of a large number of US and British troops that made that pressure credible. Bulgaria would
therefore support the resolution declaring that Iraq had failed to take the final opportunity to disarm as an effective
means to further pressure Baghdad.
Munir Akram, Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the UN, said Iraq must fully comply and the best assurance for
success of peaceful disarmament was Council unity, but he added that there was no imminent threat to international peace
and security. "The cost of delay would be much less than the cost of war," he said.
Foreign Minister François Lonsény Fall of Guinea, which holds the Council Presidency this month, said he would strive to
ensure consensus. Guinea was in favour of inspections but understood that they could not go on indefinitely. He believed
that if the Council managed the crisis in an effective manner, its credibility would be enhanced.
Addressing the Council at the end of its discussion, Ambassador Mohammed A. Aldouri of Iraq said the inspectors had
borne out Iraq's contention that it had no WMDs. The real reason for military force was to take over Iraq's oil and
dominate the Arab region politically and economically, he added.
"The possibilities of launching a war of aggression against Iraq have become imminent despite what the Security Council
will decide and in spite of the official and public international stance strongly rejecting aggression and war and
demanding a peaceful solution," he said.