By empty (2/6/2003 issue of the CACI Analyst)
Any \"mistakes\" in handling the Iraq crisis will risk a clash of civilisations, Iran\'s Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi has said. He said he would use talks with UK leaders on Thursday to seek ways of avoiding war in Iraq and persuading Baghdad to comply more fully with UN Security Council resolutions. Mr Kharrazi repeated that if any further measures were to be taken against Baghdad as a result of non-compliance, those measures must be decided and taken by the United Nations, not unilaterally.
Any \"mistakes\" in handling the Iraq crisis will risk a clash of civilisations, Iran\'s Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi has said. He said he would use talks with UK leaders on Thursday to seek ways of avoiding war in Iraq and persuading Baghdad to comply more fully with UN Security Council resolutions. Mr Kharrazi repeated that if any further measures were to be taken against Baghdad as a result of non-compliance, those measures must be decided and taken by the United Nations, not unilaterally. People in the Islamic world were suspicious about the intentions behind the proposed war, he said in the speech to the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London. Dr Kharrazi made it clear that his country had no particular love for Iraq. Iran, he said, had been the target of Iraqi military aggression during the 1980s. But he repeated Tehran\'s opposition to war and its intention not to support either side should a conflict erupt. The Iraq crisis, he insisted, must be handled through the United Nations. Tehran would condemn any unilateral action by the United States or Britain. Dr Kharrazi spoke of the importance of continuing consultations. The current situation, he said, was critical. \"That is exactly the deep concern that we have - that this war may lead to a clash of civilisations,\" he said. \"The reason is the suspicion which prevails in the Islamic world about the real intention behind this war - if it is the question of Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi regime, or it is the question of the whole Middle East and the Islamic world? \"In Islamic communities in that part of the world, you find that everyone is suspicious to the real intention behind all of these war drums.\" Dr Kharrazi stressed that Iran supported the idea of a democratic system emerging in Iraq in the future. However, he said, such changes should happen as a result of action by the Iraqi people themselves, rather than being imposed by force from outside. (BBC)