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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Chirac and Schröder oppose Bushs war ultimatum
By Peter Schwarz
19 March 2003
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Paris and Berlin have issued statements opposing US President
Bushs war ultimatum to Iraq.
Early Tuesday morning, just a few hours after Bushs
speech at 2 a.m. European time, the French presidential council issued a short
communiqué denouncing the decision to go to war as a violation of international
law.
Without any consultation of the United
Nations Security Council, Iraq has been posed an
ultimatum, the communiqué stated.
This one-sided decision contravenes the will of the
Security Council and the international community, which desired a continuation
of weapons inspections on the basis of Resolution
1441.
The communiqué declared that only the
Security Council is able to legitimise the use of force
and concluded with an appeal: France appeals to the
responsibility of all those who respect international law. Whoever undertakes to
cast aside the legitimacy of the United Nations and elevate force above the
power of law assumes a grave responsibility.
In a television speech a few hours later, German Chancellor
Gerhard Schröder expressed similar sentiments to those of the French president,
though in more moderate terms.
The world is on the eve of
war, said Schröder. My question
was and remains: does the extent of the threat posed by the Iraqi dictator
justify the imposition of war which will result in the certain death of
thousands of innocent men, women and children? My answer in this case was and
remains: no.
Schröder continued by saying that there was no reason to break
off the UN disarmament process. On that issue, he said, he is of the same
opinion as the overwhelming majority of our people, as
well as the majority in the Security Council and the peoples of the
world.
Similar responses to Bushs declaration of war
came from Moscow, Beijing, Ottawa, Jakarta and many other capitals. They all
voiced concerns about the legitimacy of war with Iraq. Aside from Britain and
Spain, only a few other countries expressed support for the White
House--Australia, Japan and Poland, for example--although in each case the
overwhelming majority of the population rejects such a war.
In Germany, the conservative opposition of the Christian
Democratic Party (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU) have backed Bush. Their
parliamentary fraction passed a resolution backing Bushs
48-hour ultimatum to Saddam Hussein. The chairperson of the CDU, Angela Merkel,
said that the conservative fraction would bear all the consequences which arose
out of the ultimatum to Iraq.
End of the old world order
The speed and tone of the French and German
governments reaction to Bushs declaration of
war came as a surprise to some commentators. For some time there has been
speculation that Paris and Berlin would work to close the political gap with
Washington once the decision for war was beyond any doubt.
This is has proven partly the case, at least in regard to the immediate
situation in Iraq.
Chancellor Schröder has repeatedly made clear that, despite his
vocal objections, he would not interfere in any way with the American war
efforts. The US Army and Air Force have been given unrestricted use of their
bases in Germany and German air space, although prominent legal specialists have
expressed doubts that such permission is compatible with the constitution.
German chemical detection vehicles remain in operation in
Kuwait, and the German military continues to man AWACS reconnaissance planes
that are circling the skies over Turkey--although there is every risk that these
forces will become involved in the war. The German government has also indicated
its willingness to take part in the
reconstruction of Iraq should
this take place within the framework of NATO.
The French government has announced similar intentions and
assured the US that should it have problems in Iraq it could count on France.
French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin declared recently,
We will not use the present crisis to come up with
arguments that could tomorrow further deepen the divisions within the
international community.... Should this situation come about, then we have to
close ranks and stand by the United States in the search for
solutions.
The communiqué by the French president makes clear, however,
that more is at stake than the reorganisation of Iraq. Before a single bomb has
fallen on Baghdad, the American war ultimatum has claimed its first victim: the
world order that secured comparatively stable relations between the great powers
for over a half a century has been reduced to rubble.
Although the French communiqué is short, its implications are
far-reaching. When international
law--i.e., the international rules and regulations drawn
up after the Second World War, largely at the behest of the United States--are
no longer respected by the US itself, how will future disputes between states be
settled? For trade disputes, differences of political opinion, or--as in the
present situation--decisions over war and peace, the sole operating principle
will be: might makes right.
This applies not only to conflicts with countries like Iraq, but
also to disputes between the great powers themselves. The world is threatened
with a return to a situation resembling that which prevailed in the first half
of the last century, when conflicting interests between the great powers erupted
in two world wars.
Commentaries in the European press have turned increasingly to
this theme over the past few weeks. Slowly the realisation is sinking in that
the Bush administration has irretrievably destroyed the old world order. The
Frankfurter Rundschau for example, commented recently:
Washingtons crude treatment of the UN,
NATO and the Europeans, and its blindness to the complex consequences of an
attack on Iraq, are a taste of the new world order à la Bush
junior.
The newspaper, which is close to the Social Democrats and the
Green Party and reflects the thinking in government circles, concluded:
The European Union has to develop into a world
power.
See Also:
The Bush administration repudiates international
law
[18 March 2003]
Paris, Berlin and the war against Iraq
[15 March 2003]
How to deal with America?
The European dilemma
[25 January 2003]
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