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Democratic legislator proposes
disarmament deadline
(Senator Joseph R Biden Jr is the ranking
Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. This op-ed
column was published in the Washington Post March 10 and is
in the public domain.)
Why we need a second UN resolution
By Joseph R Biden Jr
France, Russia and Germany are engaged in a
game of dangerous brinkmanship at the United Nations. Some
in the Bush administration have responded in kind. Together,
they threaten to drive the interests of our countries over
a cliff. There is still time to pull back from the precipice
and disarm Iraq without dividing the Atlantic alliance and
debilitating the Security Council. That will require real
leadership on both sides of the Atlantic.
President Bush was right to take the Iraq issue
to the United Nations; Secretary of State Colin Powell has
been valiant in his efforts to build consensus there. But
for some in the administration, not going to war has never
been an option, no matter what Iraq does. That became clear
last week when the White House -- in the middle of the diplomatic
endgame -- said that even if Iraq gives up all its weapons,
that's not good enough; Saddam Hussein has to go. I support
that goal. But regime change is not what the Security Council
endorsed in Resolution 1441. Moving the goalposts this late
in the game is a bad way to win friends and influence allies.
Similarly, for some in Europe, going to war
has never been an option, no matter what Iraq does not do.
Resolution 1441 requires Baghdad to make a full, accurate
and final accounting of its weapons programs and to actively
cooperate with the inspectors. Four months later, Iraq has
not done so. And just as it has spent the past 12 years shirking
its obligation to disarm, Iraq will spend the years ahead
building up an arsenal of destruction if we fail to enforce
the Persian Gulf War terms of surrender. Yet France and its
followers now demand more inspectors and more time, while
ruling out deadlines and the use of force. That tells Hussein
to sit tight and watch the West divide itself.
This standoff has produced an unprecedented
level of anger with our allies that is bound to corrode cooperation
beyond Iraq, including cooperation in the war on terror. The
best way out is a second Security Council resolution -- a
resolution that, for different reasons, the United States
and Europe share a profound interest in achieving.
For the United States, a second resolution is
not a legal requirement, but it is a strategic one. It would
give political cover to key allies such as British Prime Minister
Tony Blair and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar. And
it would greatly increase the number of countries willing
to join our coalition. This would help spread the risks of
military action and the massive burden of putting Iraq back
together -- something President Bush does not like to talk
about. Invading and occupying Iraq under a U.N., rather than
a U.S., flag would minimize resentment, making us less of
a target for malcontents around the world. Failure to achieve
a second resolution would isolate the United States instead
of Iraq.
For Europe, a second resolution is probably
the last best chance to avoid war. Solidarity at the United
Nations would concentrate Hussein's mind -- and the minds
of his senior advisers -- on the need to choose now between
giving up weapons and giving up power. There is a chance,
however remote, that Hussein will make the right choice, or
that the choice will be made for him. A French and Russian
veto would gravely wound the Security Council, denying both
countries an important forum for leveraging their power and
advancing their international agendas.
Getting to yes on a second resolution will require
hard-liners in the Bush administration to do something for
which they have shown little aptitude: compromise. Instead
of seeking a resolution that says the game is up and war is
on, we should show enough flexibility to bring the Security
Council with us while keeping the pressure on Hussein. The
resolution should combine points that France and others say
they want -- more time for Iraq to meet specific disarmament
demands -- with a bottom line that we need: a deadline and
a clear commitment to use force.
We should support a new resolution that lists
very specifically the tasks we believe Iraq must accomplish
to show it is disarming; sets an early deadline for compliance,
say the end of March; and makes clear that if Iraq does not
meet the deadline, the international community will use force
to disarm it.
Saddam Hussein is relentlessly pursuing weapons
of mass destruction, abusing his own people and making a mockery
of the United Nations. With or without a second U.N. resolution,
and barring a coup or last-minute conversion by Hussein, the
United States will act to disarm him. But we will be infinitely
better off if we act with the United Nations and with as many
friends as possible -- not in spite of them. We can succeed
if we show real leadership -- the kind of leadership that
inspires others to follow.
Source: Office of International Information
Programs, US Department of State
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