Annan warned ahead of
UN assembly:
Iraq in danger of civil war
The UN secretary general warned yesterday that Iraq was in danger of
sliding into anarchy and civil war. Addressing an international aid
conference at the UN, Kofi Annan said: "If current patterns of
alienation and violence persist much longer, there is a grave danger
that the Iraqi state will break down, possibly in the midst of
full-scale civil war." Mr Annan's bluntest warning to date came on a day
when the bloodshed in Iraq claimed more than 50 lives, and on the eve of
one of the most important - and difficult - UN general assemblies in
years.
In a week of fraught meetings, members of the Bush administration
will be forced into the presence of many of their most bitter foes. All
parties to the conflicts in the Middle East and Darfur will also be
represented. Despite the chaos in Iraq, however, it is the issue of
Iran's nuclear programme that will command closest attention. President
Bush will use his speech this afternoon to press home the need for a
tough stance, including the imposition of sanctions.
Uncomfortably, though, the arcane rules behind the assembly's running
order has meant the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, will address
the assembly hours later. White House aides will have to ensure there
are no chance encounters between the two after Mr. Bush's announcement
last week that he would not meet his Iranian counterpart.
The Americans are conscious of the embarrassment to President Clinton
at the general assembly in 2000 when he shook hands with Cuban leader
Fidel Castro. Washington has made it clear that no negotiations with
Tehran will be allowed until the Iranians have suspended their nuclear
programme. "The conditions are quite clear and quite unmoveable," a
western diplomat said.
Leading European politicians, including the foreign secretary,
Margaret Beckett, and representatives of France, Germany and Russia,
will dine with the US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, tonight to
discuss ways in which the deadlock can be broken.
There are also likely to be talks through the week, on the margins of
the official debates, about how to proceed with sanctions. Iran will not
be the only diplomatic hornets' nest.
The Arab League is pressing for a meeting of the security council
over the Lebanese crisis in which the Palestinian president, Mahmoud
Abbas, and Israel would be represented. The Bush administration is
opposing such a meeting unless it can be convinced that something useful
will come of it.
Also on the agenda is Darfur. With the African Union ready to end its
peace mission in less than two weeks, calls are mounting for action to
halt a conflict that has cost at least 250,000 lives.
(Guardian) |