Asian countries including India, Pakistan or the Philippines could join a multinational "stabilization" force planned for Iraq, Polish Deputy Defence Minister Janusz Zemke said
Published:
6 May 2003 y., Tuesday
In Lisbon, Portuguese President Jorge Sampaio -- who opposed the Iraq war -- said he would support Portuguese participation in the planned force if this were backed by international organisations.
Eleven European countries had expressed interest in contributing to the force, in addition to the three planned core members -- the United States, Britain and Poland, Zemke said on Polish radio.
"We are also getting signs that certain Asian countries, for example India, Pakistan and the Philippines, would be prepared to send troops," he added.
Washington is said to be formulating a post-war plan carving Iraq into three or possibly four military sectors, each controlled by one of the partners that backed the US-led invasion.
The United States, Britain and Poland would administer three sectors and a possible fourth would be managed by a country yet to be decided, Polish Defence Minister Jerzy Szmajdzinski said Sunday. Details that have emerged of the US plan indicate that the United Nations would not be consulted and that Washington would bypass France, Germany, Russia and other nations that opposed the war.
In Paris, a government spokesman avoided direct comment on the proposed new multinational force, but reiterated the French position that the UN must have a central role in Iraqi reconstruction.
Šaltinis:
polandnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov will pay an official visit Slovenia on 15-17 March on invitation of Slovenian President Janez Drnovsek
more »
The Croatian government's failure to hand over war crimes suspect Ante Gotovina is expected to wreck the planned launch this Thursday of its talks for European Union membership
more »
There are still 79 launch pads for Topol ballistic missiles left in Belarus, but the work to dismantle them has been halted
more »
Latvian Prime Minister Aigars Kalvitis regrets that the Estonian and Lithuanian Presidents refused to participate in the celebrations of the 60th anniversary of the Victory in Moscow
more »
Romanian President, Traian Basescu supported yesterday, March 10, the cause of the Republic of Moldova in a speech delivered in front of the US Council on Foreign Relations
more »
The presidential elections will be held in Kazakhstan in December 2006
more »
It is taking longer than expected to set a date for a promised trip to Japan by Russian President Vladimir Putin in early 2005
more »
Macedonia hosts Southeast Europe Summit for Development of Cooperation
more »
Moldovan communists will solve the issue concerning the reelection of President Vladimir Voronin and there will be no new Parliamentary elections
more »
Poland's foreign minister sharply criticized Russia on Wednesday for withholding documents that could shed light on the 1940 massacre of 21,000 Polish officers and intellectuals by the Soviet secret police
more »