“Access
has been provided to all sites we have requested to inspect,” Blix
told the Security Council.
However,
Blix was sharply critical of Baghdad government in his keenly-awaited
report to the Security Council, highlighting some areas of
non-cooperation, according to the BBC’s online news service:
1.
Iraq may still have stocks of anthrax
2.
Baghdad has failed to account for up to 300 rocket engines
3.
The Iraqi weapons declaration last December contained no new material
“Iraq
appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance - not even today - of
the disarmament which was demanded of it,” he said.
He
said Baghdad had refused to grant a request for the use of U-2 spy
planes and cited “strong indications” that Iraq had produced more
anthrax than admitted in a report filed last month.
Blix
also said that proof rather than presumptions are required to
determine whether Iraq has proscribed weapons of mass destruction.
“Presumptions
do not solve the problem. Evidence and full transparency may help,”
Blix said.
Blix
and Mohamed ElBaradei, director-general of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), appeared before the top U.N. body to report on
progress in their first two months of work hunting down Iraq’s
alleged weapons of mass destruction, amid mounting U.S. threats to
wage a solo war on Iraq.
More
Time Needed
For
his part, Baradei said that IAEA inspectors had not identified any
illegal nuclear activities in Iraq but he asserted that Baghdad needs
to be more “pro-active” in helping nuclear experts do their work.
He also called for several months for his inspectors to finish their
work, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
ElBaradei
said that U.N. weapons inspectors should be able to provide
“credible assurance” that Iraq has no nuclear weapons within a
matter of months.
Only
minutes before the report was presented, U.N. Secretary General Kofi
Annan said he expected the Security Council to give weapons inspectors
more time to complete their work in Iraq.
“If
they do need time, they should be given the time to finish their
work,” Annan told reporters. “I suspect the council will allow for
that time,” he added.
Following
the report, France and Egypt said they supported giving U.N. weapons
inspectors more time to complete their mission in Iraq, following a
meeting, in Paris, between the foreign ministers from the two
countries.
French
Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin told reporters it was
“important that the inspectors’ work be carried out within the
time needed.”
His
Egyptian counterpart Ahmed Maher said it was “necessary to accept
the inspectors’ work.”
For
its part, Russia insisted that Iraq was providing “adequate”
cooperation to U.N. weapons inspections and the report by the chief
U.N. arms inspectors showed that they needed to pursue their work.
As
the United States called on the U.N. Security Council to face its
responsibilities and warned the inspections were “running out of
time,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Yuri Fedotov hammered home
the opposite message, according to AFP.
The
report by ElBaradei and Blix “does not mark the final stage in the
inspectors’ work in Iraq,” Fedotov said, in comments made shortly
after the long-awaited briefing.
“It
is only a preliminary account of their work and sets out the main
principles for the future. Inspections in Iraq must be pursued in line
with existing U.N. Security Council resolutions,” he added.
The
Russian diplomat said that the U.N. inspectors were getting
“adequate” cooperation from Iraq in their search for weapons of
mass destructions after two months of activity, but they needed more
information.
“The
inspections are taking place with adequate cooperation from the
Iraqis, who are providing timely access for the inspectors to all
sites,” he noted. “But at the same time there are questions about
which UNMOVIC and the IAEA want to get more information from the
Iraqis.”
There
was “no need at this stage to draw up a new U.N. Security Council
resolution on Iraq,” the deputy foreign minister said.
U.S.
Wants “Action” in the Days Ahead
However,
the United States told other members of the U.N. Security Council it
expected them to decide to enforce resolutions on Iraq “in the days
ahead”.
“There
is little time left for the council to face its responsibilities,”
U.S. ambassador John Negroponte told other members in consultations
behind closed doors, according to a transcript of his remarks
published by his office.
The
council went into consultations after hearing an hour-long briefing in
public from Blix and ElBaradei.
Negroponte
noted that under council Resolution 1441, Iraq was obliged to make a
full and accurate declaration of its weapons of mass destruction and
provide the inspectors with “immediate, full and active
cooperation.” Iraq “failed both tests,” he claimed.
“In
the days ahead, we believe the council and its member governments must
answer the following questions,” the transcript of his remarks said.
“What
message does council irresolution send to Iraq and other
proliferators? Are Security Council resolutions to be honored and
enforced, or cast aside without consequence? Will the United Nations
serve the purpose of its founding, or will it choose to make itself
irrelevant?”
Minutes
after the report was presented, Negroponte, in a clear grumbling tone,
dismissed the call for more time needed by the inspections to complete
their mission.
Ready
to Answer Questions: Iraq
For
his part, Iraqi ambassador to the United Nations Mohammed Aldouri said
that Iraq has a “sincere willingness” to clarify any question
relating to its alleged weapons of mass destruction.
The ambassador spoke after Blix and ElBaradei delivered their reports
on Iraq to the United Nations Security Council.
Baghdad
has a “sincere willingness to clarify any question,” Aldouri said.
“We
are doing everything. We are cooperating in every way,” he said,
hoping to “finish the inspections as soon as possible.”
The
ambassador emphasized that his country has given “unconditional and
immediate access” to the U.N. weapons inspectors.
“There
is no more need for inspections or inspectors,” he added. “We are
willing to cooperate fully.”
Aldouri
bemoaned the difficulty of life in Iraq under the United Nations
sanctions imposed after the end of the Gulf war.
“We
need this game to finish one day,” he said.