Posted on 07/28/2002 10:27:36 AM PDT by RCW2001
Jordan's king says it's `somewhat ludicrous' to intervene in Iraq while Israeli-Palestinian conflict rages
WILLIAM C. MANN, Associated Press Writer
Sunday, July 28, 2002
©2002 Associated Press
URL: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2002/07/28/national1314EDT0562.DTL
(07-28) 10:14 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --
Jordan's King Abdullah II finds "somewhat ludicrous" the idea of intervention in Iraq while the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has the Middle East in turmoil.
Also, despite speculation in Washington and elsewhere, the United States is not sending troops into Jordan to prepare for an invasion of Iraq to oust President Saddam Hussein, Abdullah said Sunday.
"That has not happened, and I don't think will ever happen," Abdullah said on CNN's "Late Edition."
The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Joseph Biden, who plans hearings this week about Iraq, said he does not expect imminent military action.
Abdullah, who meets President Bush in Washington on Thursday, said he will not talk with Bush about any plans to attack Iraq. Rather, the king will try to advance the idea of an international conference to find a solution to Israel's bitter, decades-long confrontation with the Palestinians. He also will explain to Bush the humanitarian crisis facing the Palestinians.
"The problem is, trying to take on the question of Iraq with the lack of positive movement on the Israeli-Palestinian, Israeli-Arab track seems, at this point, somewhat ludicrous," the king said.
Bush and other administration officials have talked openly of waging a war against Iraq with the single purpose of achieving a "regime change" by removing President Saddam Hussein. Bush accuses Saddam of supporting terrorists and trying to amass weapons of mass destruction in violation of commitments he made after losing the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
The United States has invited six Iraqi opposition groups to Washington next month for talks about the country's future.
The New York Times reported this month that administration planners planned to launch airstrikes and commando raids from Jordan against neighboring Iraq once Bush gave the word to go. Jordan immediately denied it, even escorting journalists on a tour of a desert air base to knock down it was being upgraded to serve the Americans.
Biden, D-Del., disagreed with Abdullah's assertion that dialogue would be a better solution in Iraq than violence. "Dialogue with Saddam is useless," Biden said.
He said, however, that "absent serious provocation by Iraq," he does not expect military action at least before November.
On Wednesday, Biden opens committee hearings that he said are not aimed at causing trouble with the White House.
"This is just beginning to raise the issue, what's at stake here, what's the nature of the threat when we go in, and if we go in?" Biden said. "Will it require tens of thousands of troops to be there for three, four, five years? These are questions the American public has a right to have some knowledge about."
As he has previously, Biden said Bush should do nothing before he lays out to Congress his rationale for striking, explains his post-Saddam plans for Iraq and wins congressional support.
Meanwhile, King Abdullah also said:
* Palestinians have the right to decide their own leaders. "I think it's unfortunate when we get into the cycle of, as outsiders, trying to decide who should be the leaders of other people's countries," he said. In demanding democratic change within the Palestinian Authority, Bush decreed that Yasser Arafat was unfit to continue as the authority's leader.
* Said the Israeli-Palestinian conflict "has definitely delayed and hampered the international struggle against extremism" by making it politically impossible for Arabs to participate actively.
©2002 Associated Press
If the U.S. establishes a strong influence in the region, then Israel will have a far easier time dealing with the Palestinians. Bush has big plans for the ME and the U.S. role in it. Iraq is the first step.
Memo to King Abdullah: Watch and learn. My guess is you won't be laughing. If you're lucky, you might survive.
We know Sadaam has biological weapons because we gave him the Ames anthrax strain. We know he has chemical weapons because of the GI's involved in the incineration of his weapons dumps in the Gulf War.
We know that he would like to perfect nuclear weapons. The only problem that he has is no delivery systems that could approach the United States. Now my question is: What threat does Sadaam pose to the United States in real terms?
My answer to that is that he poses a real threat to any American troops stationed in the Mideast. He also poses a threat to the Israelis with his Scud missiles.
We counter this threat by preparing an invasion force and subjecting more troops to his threat? Do you think Israel is going to stand by and let its people be attacked by chem and bio weapons?
So when Israel launches a nuclear attack, our troops get peppered with nuclear fall-out as well as the Iraqis. The only sane policy in this whole equation is, we have to warn Sadaam that the first time he attempts to launch an WMD attack, Iraq will be obliterated with nuclear missiles. Then be prepared do just that. Anything else is nonsense.
As he has previously, Biden said Bush should do nothing before he lays out to Congress his rationale for striking, explains his post-Saddam plans for Iraq and wins congressional support.
Loath though I am to second Biden on anything this time he got it right. We do need a national discussion on Iraq. I see from this morning's paper that Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter also submmitted a resolution asking that Bush get congressional approval before launching any attack. It's good to see (a few) members of congress waking up to their responsibilties, rather than essentially saying to the president, "Here, you make all the decisions for us. Call us when it's over."
We did warn Saddam exactly that during the first Gulf War, one of the reasons I expect he didn't fire any SCUDS at Israel with biological or chemical weapons. Also, if I'm not mistaken, Israel has warned Saddam that if he fires WMD at Israel, she will respond with nuclear weapons. Unless Saddam has a death wish (and a need for more glass surfaced parking lots in Baghdad) I can't see what he hopes to gain in attacking U.S. troops in the Middle East or Israel.
Half Arab and half British = duplicity with good manners. This is a good thread, not logjammed with the clueless and deceived.
Lawrence: Yes, you were great.
Feisal: ..nine centuries ago...
Lawrence: Time to be great again, my Lord.
Feisal: ...which is why my father made this war upon the Turks. My father, Mr. Lawrence, not the English. Now my father is old. And I, I long for the vanished gardens of Cordova. However, before the gardens must come fighting. To be great again, it seems that we need the English or... Lawrence: ...or?...
Feisal: ...what no man can provide, Mr. Lawrence. We need a miracle!
And, I love the line beneath the photo.
Personaly, I'm rooting for Abdullah and hope he answers history's call.
Muna remained married to Hussein, father of the present King, until 1977, over 15 years, and was the mother of twin girls.
Muna never did really like the Middle East, and raised this Abdullah mostly in England, where she resides today. Abdullah is the first Arab monarch to have learned Arabic as a second language. Still, as the Hashemite heir he is at little risk of assassination by Islamic fundamentalists.
Thanks, I messed up.
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