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UN weapons inspectors invited to Baghdad
UN arms teams have been barred from Iraq since 1998
Iraq says it will talk to United Nations weapons inspectors with a view to allowing them into the country - the first time since 1998.
In a letter to the UN, the Iraqi foreign minister said inspectors should come to Baghdad for 'technical talks' which could lay the foundations for the lifting of sanctions imposed in 1990.
Iraq will have capabilities to re-constitute weapons manufacture.
I've said this before and stand by it, it does not mean they have. It's a positive step and should be treated seriously
Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri made the offer in a letter to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. It came amid growing speculation about an attack on Iraq by the United States, which sees President Saddam Hussein's programme of developing weapons of mass destruction as a major threat.
Mr Sabri said the chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix, and his experts were welcome to come to Iraq for talks, with a view to resuming weapons inspections. The UN has yet to comment on the invitation. US President George W Bush said on Thursday that he had not changed his view that a change of regime was needed in Iraq. His comments came after former UN weapons inspector Richard Butler had said that Iraq was producing biological and chemical weapons - and might be close to developing a nuclear bomb. Iraqi offer The BBC's Greg Barrow in New York says Iraq's invitation will be interpreted as a possible first step towards the return of UN weapons inspectors.
Verification of Iraqi weapons programmes is a key condition for the lifting of UN sanctions imposed after Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. The international community has put pressure on the Iraqi leader to allow the inspectors back in and the US has threatened to use force unless weapons inspections resume. The letter - news of which came on the eve of the 12th anniversary of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait - says preliminary talks would aim to establish a solid basis for the next stage of monitoring and inspection activities. But, correspondents say, diplomats at the UN have had their hopes raised and dashed before.
Thursday saw Mr Bush rebuff concerns by Jordan's King Abdullah over the danger of going to war with Iraq. Sitting alongside the Jordanian monarch in the White House Oval Office, Mr Bush said King Abdullah would "find out that I haven't changed my mind" about removing the Iraqi president. Mr Bush said the Iraqi Government was "poisonous" and that "the policy of my government, our government, of this administration is regime change". The day also Mr Bush renew the US economic embargo against Iraq, telling Congress that Baghdad "has continued to engage in activities hostile to US interests". Attack 'a mistake' Jordan, one of America's closest Arab allies and a neighbour of Iraq, has sought to dissuade America from taking military action against Iraq.
"In all the years I have seen in the international community, everybody is saying this is a bad idea," he said. Instead of declaring war on Saddam Hussein, King Abdullah said he would rather make an all-out effort to get Iraq to agree to let weapons inspectors back in. In Congress, a key Senate committee heard analysts warn that a post-Saddam Iraq could fall into chaos if the US and other nations were not prepared to take an active, expensive role in rebuilding it. The US Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Iraq was told that any new leadership to replace Saddam Hussein was unlikely to come from within the country. "After 30 years of repression, there is no political life in Iraq outside Saddam's leadership and Saddam's family," said Rend Rahim Francke of the Iraq Foundation, a Washington-based pro-democracy group.
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