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Iraqi parliament condemns U.N. resolution on weapons inspectors

By Sameer N. Yacoub The Associated Press
Tuesday November 12, 2002

BAGHDAD, Iraq — Iraqi lawmakers denounced a tough, new U.N. resolution on weapons inspections Monday as dishonest, provocative and worthy of rejection — despite the risk of war. But parliament said it ultimately will trust whatever President Saddam Hussein decides. 

One after the other, senior lawmakers rejected the resolution, the latest in a long effort to ensure Iraq scraps its weapons of mass destruction. This time, however, the United States and Britain have made clear they will attack Iraq if it does not fully comply. 

Parliament speaker Saadoun Hamadi said the resolution was stacked with “ill intentions”, “falsehood”, “lies” and “dishonesty.” Salim al-Koubaisi, head of parliament’s foreign relations committee, recommended rejecting the resolution but also advised deferring to the “wise Iraqi leadership” to act as it sees fit to defend Iraq’s people and dignity. 

“The committee advises ... the rejection of Security Council Resolution 1441, and to not agree to it in response to the opinions of our people, who put their trust in us,” al-Koubaisi told fellow lawmakers. 

Saddam has used parliament’s action as cover for difficult decisions in the past, and harsh rhetoric does not necessarily mean parliament will reject the proposal. Saddam ordered parliament to recommend a formal response, and lawmakers were expected to vote on recommendations for the Iraqi leadership Tuesday. 

According to the resolution, Iraq has until Friday to accept or reject the resolution, approved unanimously last week by the U.N. Security Council. 

U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said there are numerous interpretations for the deadline — the minute the resolution was adopted, the minute Iraq was notified, the end of business Friday, or midnight on Friday. It is up to the Security Council to interpret its own resolution, Eckhard said. 

Anne Power, a spokeswoman with the British mission at the United Nations, said Britain intepreted the deadline to be seven 24-hour periods from the minute the resolution was adopted. That would mean that Iraq has until 10:17 a.m. EST Friday, Nov. 15 to respond. Other Security Council members could have different interpretations however. Chinese deputy ambassador Zhang Yishan, the current council president, said he was checking on the exact deadline. 

If Saddam fails to follow through, a Pentagon plan calls for more than 200,000 troops to invade Iraq. 

Parliament’s advice on the new U.N. resolution, which demands Iraq cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors or face “serious consequences,” will go to the Revolutionary Command Council, Iraq’s ruling body headed by Saddam. 

Should parliament recommend acceptance, it would allow Saddam to claim the decision was the will of the Iraqi people and more smoothly retreat from previous objections to any new resolution governing weapons inspections. 

In Washington, President Bush’s national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, rejected the legitimacy of the parliament debate. 

“One has to be a bit skeptical of the independence of the Iraqi parliament from Saddam Hussein,” she said. “I don’t think anyone believes this is anything but an absolute dictatorship and this decision is up to Saddam Hussein.” 

She also said Iraq has no right to accept or reject the resolution. “They are obligated to accept, but the U.N. thought it best to ask for return-receipt requested,” Rice said. 

On Sunday, Arab League foreign ministers ended meetings in Cairo, Egypt, with a final communique urging cooperation between Iraq and the United Nations. The Arab ministers also called on the United States to commit to pledges Syria said it received that the resolution could not be used to justify military action. They also put forward a united position of “absolute rejection” of military action. 

In a statement Monday, Saudi Arabia urged the Iraqis to accept the resolution “in order not to provide any opportunity for harm to come to the Iraqi people.” 

Parliament is stacked with Saddam’s allies. During opening speeches aired live on Iraqi television, lawmakers applauded every mention of Saddam’s name in speeches praising “His Excellency Mr. President, the holy warrior leader Saddam Hussein.”