- While there is little Russia can do to stop U.S. military
action against Iraq, Moscow should position itself as a "responsible
partner," pushing Washington to abide by international law and avoiding
rash moves that could jeopardize Russian interests in a postwar Iraq, foreign
policy and security experts said Monday.
-
- There is no need to view the United States as a potential
enemy, Iosif Diskin of the Institute of Socioeconomic Problems told a round
table.
-
- "It is not in Russia's interests to pursue a confrontational
strategy in its relations with America. ... We must not haggle; we must
seek a balance of interests based on international law," Diskin said.
-
- Russia's main diplomatic goal has been upholding the
authority of the UN Security Council, one of the few international institutions
where Moscow wields considerable influence.
-
- If Washington acts unilaterally, "the United Nations
will effectively be trampled to bits," Federation Council Senator
Anatoly Korobeinkov warned.
-
- Another important aim for Russia is to bolster the close
ties it has established with Western leaders since the 2001 terrorist attacks
and to use these relations to advance its national interests in trade and
international affairs, political analyst Sergei Markov said.
-
- Most of the speakers agreed that Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein poses an international security threat. But they felt this did
not justify, in Markov's words, Washington's "behaving like a cowboy
in a saloon" and could set a dangerous precedent.
-
- "Today they get rid of Saddam, tomorrow [North Korean
leader] Kim Jong Il. ... It is a flagrant violation of international law,"
said Fyodor Ladygin, who headed the Foreign Intelligence Service in 1992-97.
-
- If the United States firmly decides to oust Hussein,
it will do so, but what is important is the aftermath, State Duma Deputy
Alexei Arbatov said. Arbatov pointed out that restoring and policing Iraq
in the postwar phase is when Washington will need the most help from its
allies. He and many of the other experts also warned that getting rid of
Hussein by force would fuel a new wave of radical Islamic terrorism.
-
- Meanwhile, a delegation of several dozen scholars, journalists
and lawmakers, including Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov, arrived in
Iraq on Monday for a three-day visit meant to highlight Moscow's opposition
to military action, Interfax reported.
-
- Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov reiterated the official
position that war is a last resort and the Iraq crisis can still be resolved
peacefully through the work of international weapons inspectors.
-
- Itar-Tass said the UN has accepted "in principle"
Russia's offer of a reconnaissance plane to monitor Iraq, and they will
discuss details later this month.
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- http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2003/02/18/013.html
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