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Bush Considers Abandoning UN Resolution
Forced into a diplomatic retreat, US officials said Thursday that President Bush may delay a vote on his troubled UN resolution or even drop it -- and fight Iraq without the international body's backing. France dismissed a compromise plan as an "automatic recourse to war."

Amid a swirl of recrimination and 11th-hour posturing, the White House called France's position unreasonable while UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan raised the possibility of a global summit "to get us out of this crisis."

Iraq braced for war, lining the streets of Baghdad with fighting positions and foxholes, while the Pentagon moved B-2 stealth bombers from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri to bases close to Iraq.

The government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein exulted in the diplomatic tumult over a US-British backed resolution that would demand that Iraq disarm by Monday. "I don't think the United States will succeed," said Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri.

Bush spent a fourth straight day on the telephone, consulting leaders of Britain, Bulgaria, South Korea, Poland, El Salvador and Norway.

But trouble loomed at every diplomatic turn.

Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, visiting Bush at the White House, said, "If there is not a resolution, Ireland cannot engage in support of military action, because we work under the UN resolution."

Bush sent a letter to incoming Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Vice President Dick Cheney called the leader. But Turkey still suggested that it wants a UN resolution before allowing US troops to invade Iraq from its borders.

The chief UN nuclear inspector urged the Security Council to compromise on proposed disarmament conditions for Iraq, with staggered deadlines and no ultimatum for war.

"I think there's a keen desire globally to do everything before resorting to war," Mohamed ElBaradei told The Associated Press.

In Baghdad, Sabri rejected a British compromise plan that would list six disarmament requirements Baghdad would have to meet or else face "serious consequences." Bush had signaled he would be willing to push back the March 17 deadline seven or 10 days if the gesture would help Blair.

Russia said it would consider the plan. China's UN ambassador, Wang Yingfan, said he doubted the plan could lead to consensus.

The French dismissed the effort outright, sparking a trans-Atlantic shouting match.

"We cannot accept the British proposals insofar as they are part of a logic of war, a logic of automatic recourse to war," said French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin.

White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said of France: "They rejected it before Iraq rejected it. If that isn't an unreasonable veto, what is?"

Bush, meanwhile, backpedaled on his pledge to have a UN vote by Friday. Fleischer told reporters a tally could slip beyond the weekend.

Aides said the president has pushed for a UN vote thus far out of respect for Blair, whose support of Bush has drawn severe criticism in Britain.

Several top administration officials said a growing number of advisers believe the resolution is doomed and they want the president to cut his losses and withdraw it. Others still hold out hope for the measure.

The officials, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity, agreed that a key is whether Blair wants Bush to give diplomacy another weekend.

Bush and his advisers debated Thursday whether to press forward with the vote or withdraw the measure and pivot quickly to war footing. Bush has long planned to address the nation shortly after the UN debate is resolved and give Saddam a final ultimatum, probably including a deadline, for war.

"We are still talking to members of the council to see what is possible," Secretary of State Colin Powell said. "The options remain, go for a vote and see what members say or not go for a vote."

That's a chance of policy since last week, when Bush said he wanted UN members to "show their cards" even if that meant the measure failed.

In London, Iain Duncan Smith, leader of the opposition Conservative Party, emerged from a meeting with Blair to say the prime minister believed war was more likely because "the French have become completely intransigent."

US officials did not dispute that reasoning.

While the British plan would give Saddam several more days to comply, they said, Bush could move even quicker against Iraq if he abandons the UN route. They said that option was being considered more seriously than ever.

Powell, testifying on Capitol Hill, said the "day of reckoning is fast approaching" for Iraq.

He cited several allies that stand ready to back the United States if the UN won't, including Britain, Australia, Bulgaria, Italy, Spain, Japan and eight eastern European countries.

Bush had long been scheduled to attend a St. Patrick's Day celebration at Capitol Hill, but the trip was canceled at the last minute so he could work the phones. The White House also scuttled early planning for a potential European summit between Bush and Blair.

(China Daily March 14, 2003)

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