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
Albania and the European Union today end their latest round of talks on the country’s efforts to join the EU and its preparations for 2005 parliamentary elections, the Ministry of European Integration said
more »
A European caretaker Commission may have to manage for a while if the team with Jose Manuel Barroso as president fails to win the European Parliament's approval
more »
Poland's interior minister said on Saturday he has suspended an agreement between a Polish and a Belarusian police academy because of recent police violence against protesters in Belarus
more »
Hungary, as the region's neighbor, is interested in Macedonia's stability and development, Hungarian Ambassador to Macedonia Ferenc Poka said Thursday at a press conference
more »
Demetrios Kristofias, president of the House of Representatives of Cyprus, is in Armenia on a two-day official visit
more »
Not on the job yet and already under attack: Jose Manuel Barroso
more »
Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev told visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing on Thursday that his country stands ready to further strengthen cooperation with China
more »
Five caucuses of the pro-government parliamentary coalition left the Verkhovna Rada session on 19 October
more »
Democratic Moldova Bloc Representatives, Heads of Western Diplomatic Missions to Moldova Meet in Chisinau
more »
Legislative polls in Lithuania, electing its first parliament after joining the EU and NATO, have been carefully watched by Iraqi politicians
more »