Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, July 28, 1992, Page 8, Image 8

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Oregon Daily
Emerald
Chief U.N. inspector
hopes Iraqis serious
MANAMA.
Bahrain (AB) —
The? chief U N
weapons in
Monday thal Iraq has promised
to refrain from further interfer
ence with efforts to catalog and
destroy its weapons of mass de
struction.
"But my experience is such
that I can t take that for grant
ed," said Rolf h'kcus, who
heads the U.N. special commis
sion for Iraqi disarmament and
led negotiations that ended the
tense standoff over Inspection
of the Agriculture Ministry in
Baghdad.
Backed by U S throats of
fort e. Ekcus on Sunday got Iraq
to allow the search on the con
dition it is carried out by offi
cials from nations that did not
send combat forces in (lie Per
sian Gulf War.
"We've assurances from the
Iraqi side that this is the end of
confrontation," said likens aflor
arriving in Bahrain. He was fly
ing to Baghdad on Tuesday.
Iraq’s deputy prime minister,
Tariq A/.i/., told Iraqi TV that
“difficult consequences" would
follow if IJ N. inspection teams
acted in a "provocative" or "in
sulting" mannor, the official
Iraqi News Agency reported.
In Washington, a senior Pen
tagon official, speaking on con
dition of anonymity, said the
United States, unmoved by
Iraq's decision to allow inspec
tors into the Agriculture Minis
try, was sending Patriot mis
siles to Kuwait and a third air
craft carrier lo the Persian Gulf
region
Aziz said tho leaders and
people of Iraq were not shaken
by tho threats, one half or one
quarter of which would have
frightened a superpower."
Meanwhile. Iraq got some
good news and some bad nows
Monday from the U.N Security
Council.
A commission drawing post
Gulf Wur boundaries affirmed
for the first time Iraq's access to
tho sea through the Umm Qasr
port complex on the Persian
Gulf. It had said earlier that Ku
wait was entitled to other parts
of the port.
The bad though not unex
pected news was the council's
decision, ufter a bimonthly re
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UNIVERSITY
OF OREGON
view, to retain economic sanc
tions Imposed after Iraq invad
ed Kuwait in August 1090. The
council said Baghdad still had
failed to satisfy ceaso-firo re
quirements.
U N weapons experts sus
pect the Agriculture Ministry
contained documents on Iraq's
missile, chemical, biological
and nuclear programs.
Ekeus said he doubted much
information remains there now.
But he said without elaborating
that inspectors would be able to
toll if anything had been re
moved since inspectors last
week lifted their 17-day vigil
outside the ministry.
To get Iraq's approval, the
United Nations agreed to
change the composition of the
inspection team to remove
most Britons and Americans,
whom the Iraqis branded as
spies.
Six U.N. inspectors going to
Baghdad with Ekeus included
two Germans, a Swiss, a Finn, a
Swede and a Russian. Two
American experts and a Rus
sian will remain outside the
Agricuturo Ministry to analyze
documents u n d material
brought out Ekeus will not go
inside.
The original team included
seven Americans, two French
men and a Briton, plus the Rus
sians.
Ekeus denied Sunday he let
Baghdad dictate the team’s
make-up. Ho also said the
threat of force "put an element
of reality” into negotiations
with Iraq.
Saddam Hussein, who was
reported to have met with his
army general staff, made no
comment Monday. On Sunday,
beforo the agreement was an
nounced, he warned that the
“mother of ail battles'' he
promised during the Gulf Wur
was not yet over.
President Bush noted Sunday
that Saddam's violation of oth
er cease-fire terms "continues
in other important areas."
"The real test of his behavior
will be in future U.N. inspec
tions Behavior along the linns
we've just witnessed will not
bo tolerated."
He said Iraq has to comply
"in timely fashion" on redraw
ing the lraq-Kuwait frontier, re
turning stolen property and
ending the repression of Kurds
and Shiite Muslims within
Iraq's borders.
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