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Powell says US ready to attack Iraq alone
The United States said on Sunday it was ready to attack Iraq alone if allies peeled away, and Britain declared UN inspectors should have time, but not months, to decide if Baghdad was cooperating with them. Kicking off a week that could hasten or delay a US-led war to disarm Iraq, Secretary of State Colin Powellsought to win over a cagey Europe for a possible assault on Baghdad. He mixed reassurances that the Bush administration would be patient and consult its allies with warnings that time was short and the United States would not wait for ever. "Multilateralism cannot become an excuse for inaction," Powell told the World Economic Forumin the Swiss town of Davos. "We are in no great rush to judgment today or tomorrow, but it is clear that time is running out." The UN inspectors report to the Security Council on Monday on their two-month hunt in Iraq for any banned nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. Baghdad denies having such arms. Powell promised to work "patiently and deliberately" with US friends and allies, but added: "Let the Iraqi regime have no doubt, however. If it does not disarm peacefully at this juncture, it will be disarmed at the end of the road." King Hussein of Iraq's neighbor Jordan hit a pessimistic note, saying in Davos it would take a miracle to find a diplomatic solution to avert a US-led war on Baghdad. "Unfortunately I believe that we're now a bit too little, too late to see a way out, a diplomatic solution between Iraq and the international community," the king said from the same stage Powell had used hours earlier. "Today I think the mechanisms are in place. I think it would be very difficult, it would take a miracle to find a dialogue and a peaceful solution out of the crisis." APPEAL FOR TIME French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin told France 3 television for a Sunday broadcast that weapons inspections should continue for several weeks or a few months. France's Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said conflict with Iraq was not inevitable, but President Saddam Husseinmust cooperate with inspectors or face "a war of incalculable consequences." European Unionforeign policy chief Javier Solana was quoted as saying the inspectors should get more time if they wanted it and there should be a new resolution before any war on Iraq. UN chief arms inspector Hans Blix says Iraq has not filled holes in its arms declaration, is blocking confidential access to scientists and is balking at U-2 surveillance flights. Blix has said Iraq meets queries about data on anthrax, deadly VX nerve gas and Scud missiles with blunt denials, not evidence or documents to account for any missing material. The head of the UN nuclear watchdog agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, will tell the council his teams have not proved that Iraq is trying to develop atomic bombs, as Washington suspects. "(ElBaradei's report) won't reveal any prohibited nuclear arms program," said Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). "If we were to find a smoking gun, we wouldn't wait for an update report. We'd go straight to the Security Council." Iraq's influential newspaper Babel warned the United States that invading troops would go home in body bags, while ordinary Iraqis said they expected war whatever the inspectors say. "Even after 100 years, the inspectors still won't be convinced that Iraq does not have weapons of mass destruction. America wants war today, not tomorrow," Khazem Mansour, a 28-year-old engineer, told Reuters in Baghdad. COALITION BOMBS IRAQ The US military said US and British warplanes bombed five Iraqi communications sites on Sunday in a "no-fly" zone in southern Iraq that they enforce. Iraq said civilian targets were hit but reported no casualties. Teams from the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission and the IAEA searched 10 sites on Sunday, including a former research laboratory suspected of developing the deadly biological agents anthrax, botulium and ricin. British Prime Minister Tony Blairsaid Iraqi non-cooperation would breach Resolution 1441 that gave Iraq's President Saddam Hussein a last chance to scrap any arms of mass destruction or face serious consequences. "I don't believe it will take them months to find out whether he is cooperating or not, but they should have whatever time they need," Blair said on BBC television. Britain has sent thousands of troops to join a US military build-up in the Gulf, but many of its European partners and other nations around the world want more time for UN inspections. Blair is due to meet President Bushin Camp David on Friday to consider their next move in the crisis. "We will not shrink from war if that is the only way to rid Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction. We continue to reserve our sovereign right to take military action against Iraq alone or in a coalition of the willing," Powell said. 'CLEAR TIES TO TERROR' He said Iraq had "clear ties to terrorist groups including al Qaeda" and had made no strategic decision to obey last November's UN disarmament resolution. The United States has provided no evidence for its assertion that Iraq has links to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network, which it blames for the September 11, 2001 attacks on US cities. Washington is facing opposition at home and abroad to a swift unilateral move against Iraq. The leader of the opposition Democrats in the US Senate, Tom Daschle of South Dakota, told the CBS "Face the Nation" program on Sunday that Bush had more to do to make the case for war and that the arms inspectors should be given more time. "The president needs to make a compelling case that Iraq poses a very imminent threat to the United States and...that he has worked through the international community and exhausted all other options," Daschle said.
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