Bush Urges U.N. to End
Iraq Sanctions
April 16, 2003 06:19 PM EDT |
"The quality of the workmanship that goes into the aircraft that you build here is one of the main reasons why we were successful in making the world a more peaceful place," he said. "Just one month ago, the forces of our coalition stood at the borders of Iraq with orders to advance hundreds of miles through hostile territory against a ruthless enemy," Bush told about 1,000 Boeing workers and military personnel on the factory floor. "Today, organized military resistance has virtually ended; the major cities of Iraq have been liberated." After Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, the United Nations imposed sanctions that cut off investment and development in the country. Some oil sales were permitted to finance purchases of food and medicine. "Now that Iraq is liberated, the United Nations should lift economic sanctions on that country," Bush said. White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Bush would soon call for a U.N. resolution lifting the sanctions. That could be complicated by a requirement under previous resolutions that U.N. inspectors certify Iraq's banned weapons programs are dead. The United States has not invited U.N. inspectors to return to Iraq. The U.N. Security Council has scheduled an April 22 briefing by chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix. U.N. diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Security Council members want a much better idea of what the U.N.'s future role will be before agreeing to any suspension or lifting of sanctions. Bush used symbols of America's military might as the backdrop for his speech. The Boeing plant here assembles F/A-18 Super Hornet jets, the newest and most advanced strike fighters in the Navy's inventory. Thirty-six of the fighters are deployed to the Iraq region. He walked the cavernous production facility before his speech, donning clear safety goggles even though manufacturing was shut down for his appearance. Bush, a former Air National Guard pilot, peered into several of the half-finished machines, their wings not yet attached. Wires and hoses spilled from the forward fuselages, which are fused here to aft fuselages that are manufactured near Los Angeles by Northrop Grumman. The planes can reach speeds of 1,330 mph and cost $57 million each. Before leaving for St. Louis and a long weekend on his Texas ranch, Bush signed a $79 billion supplemental budget measure that will finance combat, reconstruction and domestic anti-terror efforts. Bush signed the measure with no ceremony and no lawmakers present - the kind of treatment he reserves for bills he does not particularly like. He devoted just two sentences to the spending bill in his speech. White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Bush was concerned by what he viewed as the lack of latitude the measure gives him and the Pentagon in spending the money. But the day brought multiple successes for Bush. Washington and Pyongyang agreed to talks in Beijing as early as next week on North Korea's nuclear program, discussions to be attended by top Chinese officials as well. The inclusion of China marked a victory for Bush, who had rejected Pyongyang's demands for one-on-one talks. Bush spoke early Wednesday morning with Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi about the North Korean crisis. The White House also was heartened by the capture in Iraq of terrorist mastermind Abul Abbas. Bush had said last fall that Baghdad was harboring him. Bush did not mention the capture, but said in his speech: "In Iraq, our coalition has now removed an ally of terrorists and a producer of weapons of mass destruction." The president's visit here was his 10th to Missouri, which he barely carried in 2000 and which he has identified as vital to his re-election. There are only two states he has visited more: Pennsylvania and Florida. The latter decided the 2000 election. Bush planned no public appearances during his Wednesday-to-Monday trip to his ranch. |