March 20
— By Andrew Roche
LONDON (Reuters) - The opening salvos of the Iraq war Thursday
earned the United States polite applause from some traditional
allies, expressions of regret from others and furious condemnation
from its usual enemies.
Russia, France, Germany and China, which strongly opposed
military action to disarm Iraq, called for a swift end to
hostilities and expressed fears of a humanitarian catastrophe.
The call was accompanied by a wave of protests which swept across
the globe, with tens of thousands of people taking to the streets in
Asia, Europe and the Middle East and converging on U.S.
embassies.
"No matter how long this conflict lasts, it will have serious
consequences for the future," said French President Jacques Chirac,
who helped stymie U.S. and British attempts to win U.N. backing for
military force against President Saddam Hussein.
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, whose vocal opposition to
war angered Washington, said a war would mean "thousands of people
will have to suffer terribly."
"The world must find its way back to the path of peace as quickly
as possible for the sake of its common future," he said in a
televised address.
"Military action ... is a big political error," Russian President
Vladimir Putin said.
In the Islamic world, opposition was the norm but not quite
total. Iran, Iraq's neighbor and listed by President Bush on the
same "axis of evil," called the attack "unjustifiable and
illegitimate."
The 22-member Arab League called for fast and effective
international and Arab action to stop the war.
Turkey's President Ahmet Necdet Sezer questioned the legitimacy
of what he called unilateral U.S. action against Iraq, just hours
before Turkey's parliament agreed to open Turkish airspace to U.S.
military flights.
Turkey's close military alliance with the United States has been
badly strained by its refusal to allow its soil to be used as a
launch pad for U.S. forces to open a second front in northern
Iraq.
BUSH A 'REAL MAN'
But many in Muslim Kuwait, invaded by Iraq in 1990 and freed by
U.S.-led forces, were relieved to see what they hoped was the
beginning of the end of Saddam.
"Bush is a real man," Ahmad Hussein Ahmad said, fiddling with
prayer beads. "His dad liberated Kuwait and now the son will
liberate Iraq." Some Kuwaitis held a party on the border to
celebrate what they hoped was the end of Saddam.
Few elsewhere in the Arab world were as enthusiastic.
"This war is a sin," Cairo taxi driver Youssef said.
"The people will pay the price," said Atef, a Beirut concierge.
"Saddam is like Osama (bin Laden). Even if they spend their whole
lives searching for him, they won't find him."
Palestinian Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat expressed concern that
Israel might intensify a crackdown against a Palestinian uprising
while the world's attention was diverted. The militant group Hamas
called for an anti-U.S. jihad, or holy struggle.
Saudi Arabia said it regretted the outbreak of war. The United
States closed embassies in Jordan and Pakistan and urged Americans
to leave Lebanon.
China surprised analysts who had expected it to issue only
moderate criticism for the sake of good relations with Washington.
Instead it called for a halt to "a violation of the U.N. Charter and
the basic norms of international law."
Malaysia outdid most in anti-American invective, with Deputy
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi calling the attack "a black
mark in history" with "the world now seeing might is right."
PRAISE RESTRAINED
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan called on both sides in the
conflict to do everything possible to protect civilians during the
fighting.
"My thoughts today are with the Iraqi people, who face yet
another ordeal. I hope that all parties will scrupulously observe
the requirements of international humanitarian law and will do
everything in their power to shield the civilian population from the
grim consequences of war," Annan said.
Praise for the attack was much more restrained than the
criticism.
"At this time ... I understand, and I support the start of the
use of force by the United States," Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi said, putting a security alliance with the United
States ahead of Japanese public opinion.
President Roh Moo-hyun of South Korea, like Japan a beneficiary
of U.S. military protection, expressed support, said, "We will make
diplomatic efforts to ensure that this war does not worsen our
relations with North Korea."
Bulgaria, also providing military help, expressed backing as did
Denmark and Romania.
But in most of Europe there was little support for war.
Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt said his country was
"profoundly disappointed" and said Iraqis were "caught between the
anvil and the hammer."
EU President Greece said it regretted the crisis had not been
solved peacefully and with international unity. The Vatican said it
was "deeply pained" by the resort to war and said Pope John Paul II,
one of the most powerful anti-war voices, had prayed for peace at
his daily morning mass.
photo credit
and caption:
Indonesian Muslim students shout
against U.S. military action against Iraq, in front of the
U.S. embassy in Jakarta on March 20, 2003. Indonesian Muslim
leaders condemned the opening of U.S.-led strikes on Iraq,
labeling it an attack on humanity and warning big protests
would break out in the world's largest Islamic community.
Photo by Beawiharta/Reuters
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