TASHKENT, Sept 5: Russia joined France and Germany on Friday in rejecting a US draft resolution seeking broader international help in Iraq, saying it needed “further, very serious work”.
But Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said the draft did go some way to meeting concerns that the United Nations would play a central role in solving Iraq’s problems.
“The US draft resolution shows some movement towards these principles,” he said at a regional cooperation meeting in Uzbekistan in Central Asia.
“But, naturally, for them to be reflected fully, this document still needs further, very serious work.”
He urged the United States to address itself to the fact the situation in Iraq was deeply troubled.
“In this respect, one cannot but express surprise at statements made by some Washington officials that life in Iraq is returning to normal and becoming better virtually day by day,” he said.
“One should not be misled — the situation in Iraq is becoming not better, but worse day by day.”
The United States, facing mounting losses among its forces, began pressing this week for the adoption of a new resolution encouraging other countries to contribute troops and money to reconstruction efforts.
But French President Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder rejected the proposal on Thursday, saying it did not hand enough responsibility to Iraqis or the United Nations. Mr Chirac said they were “very, very far removed” from an acceptable draft.
Both leaders, along with Russian President Vladimir Putin, denounced the drive to oust Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, launched without backing from the U.N. Security Council.
CLEAR U.N. ROLE: German government spokesman Bela Anda said Berlin wanted “a clear and comprehensive role for the U.N. in the shaping of the future of Iraq” and more details on “the transition to Iraqi self-government with the goal of a restoration of full Iraqi sovereignty as quickly as possible”.
French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin told the daily Le Figaro Paris wanted a rapid handover of civil and financial control to the provisional Iraqi administration and quick elections.—Reuters































