Posted on 04/03/2003 5:06:07 PM PST by blam
US warned that oil cannot provide funds
By David Usborne in New York
04 April 2003
A senior British official at the United Nations warned the United States yesterday that it should think twice before assuming it can administer post-conflict Iraq on its own terms.
Mark Malloch Brown, the director of the UN Development Programme, also said Iraq's crippled oil industry would not finance reconstruction after the war.
His candid remarks preface what is shaping to become another mammoth struggle between the powers in the UN Security Council over the role of the UN in running Iraq and helping it back to self-government. He said: "Maybe there are people in Washington who can't see round the next corner in the road and don't know where it goes, but eventually will."
There is growing alarm in UN circles at what appears to be plans by Washington to install its own government in Iraq, headed by retired Lieutenant-General Jay Garner. He and a group of carefully selected US officials are in Kuwait waiting for the moment to transfer to Baghdad and take over Iraqi ministries.
While Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general, has kept fairly quiet about the UN role after the war, Mr Malloch Brown has decided to start speaking out. "We will be pushing to make as international and broad-based as possible the management of humanitarian and reconstruction needs," he said.
He added that achieving agreement on a resolution granting UN powers in Iraq may yet be hard and several weeks away given the bad diplomatic blood spilt when the war started. "The emotions are still high and a lot of damage has been done. But everything drives you back to that little table [in the Security Council] and a new resolution." General Garner, he predicted, "will not be left there indefinitely".
Any attempt by Washington to stifle the UN's role is likely to be resisted by other governments, Mr Malloch Brown asserted. "An international, UN-sanctioned administration of the country is likely to be condoned by many as indispensable," he said.
He quipped that the "triangulated Tony Blair" was "in maximum leg-split" as he attempted to stand by President George Bush while responding to the "European concern for a UN international role for post-conflict Iraq".
He also questioned any US calculations that depend on oil flows from Iraq to bankroll the reconstruction costs.
"My numbers don't add up like theirs do," he said. "The oil industry in Iraq needs a sustained burst of new investment before it can contribute significantly to the capital costs of reconstruction".
Then we can rid New York and the US of this pestilent UN.
Send a detailed memo to the UN Security Council by next week, we'll get back to you. Time for the US to teach the French all about that UN veto.
To put it nicely.
Or like in my regular e-mails to the UN,'GET OUT OF THE USA YOU GODLESS BASTARDS'.
By Stephen Castle in Brussels
04 April 2003
Independent (UK)
Colin Powell, the US Secretary of State, promised the UN "a role" in post-war Iraq yesterday, but made it clear that America will take the lead in forging the country's future after Saddam Hussein.
A day of frantic diplomacy in Brussels saw signs of a modest thaw in transatlantic relations but failed to resolve the crucial issue of how much power the US will relinquish once the war is won.
European countries see a central role for the UN as the prerequisite for an EU contribution to rebuilding Iraq or for another idea discussed yesterday: peace-keeping by Nato.
But after talks with senior EU officials and Nato foreign ministers, Mr Powell made it clear that, having sacrificed the lives of their soldiers, the victors of the war would take the lead in the creation of the post-war administration.
"It was the coalition that came together and took on this difficult mission, at political expense at at the expense of the money that it cost, and at the expense of lives as well," Mr Powell said. "When we have succeeded and when we look down the road to a better life for the Iraqi people, to rebuild their society after these decades of devastation wrought by Saddam Hussein, I think the coalition has to play the leading role in determining the way forward."
But the US Secretary of State added that this was "not to say that we have to shut others out" or to deny the importance of "partnership with the international community and especially with the UN". Mr Powell also restated the US commitment to push the Middle East peace process.
Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, said: "We are all agreed on the need to have a role for the UN but there needs to be a lot of discussions."
After the most serious transatlantic rift for years there was a conciliatory response from France, which had led the opposition for the US-led war. The French Foreign Minister, Dominique de Villepin, called for a "central role for the UN, which is the source of international legitimacy" but said the international community should be "pragmatic" while Iraq is being made secure.
He acknowledged that the US would have to run Iraq until it was made safe. And he did not rule out a peace-keeping role for Nato, although he said discussions were "premature".
Mr Powell said US and British forces would be responsible for stabilising the security situation and finding weapons of mass destruction. "At the same time ... we will quickly want to establish an interim authority," he said.
But George Papandreou, Foreign Minister of Greece, which holds the EU presidency, said a fresh UN resolution "will be a prerequisite of full involvement of the EU in post-conflict reconstruction".
Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, Nato's secretary general, said the alliance's role needed to be considered carefully. "Some nations favoured it and none excluded it," he added.
SCREW THE UN!!
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