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United Nation Last Updated: Feb 18th, 2008 - 14:39:01


Annan warns Iraq on brink of civil war
By David Millikin
Sep 19, 2006, 09:08

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Middle East Online UNITED NATIONS - UN Secretary General Kofi Annan warned that urgent action is needed by the entire international community to drag Iraq back from the brink of all-out civil war.

Speaking as Iraqi leaders defended their policies to potential aid donors at the UN General Assembly, Annan appealed for an international effort to "bring Iraq back from the brink".

"If current patterns of alienation and violence persist much longer, there is a grave danger that the Iraqi state will break down, possibly in the midst of full-scale civil war," Annan said.

Following Annan's address, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani gave an impassioned defense of his government's strategy.

He also pledged to create a credible national unity government and institute wide-ranging economic reforms including guarantees for foreign investors, a sound national oil law and transparency on how money is distributed and spent, according to a senior US official who attended the closed-door talks.

The meeting of foreign ministers and other leaders on the so-called Iraq Compact came as another 62 Iraqis were reported killed in suicide bombings or ethnic carnage between the country's majority Shia and minority Sunni Muslim communities.

Annan said Iraq, which was invaded by a US-led force that toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003, had made "important progress" in the past two years with two national elections, a constitutional referendum and a constitutional process.

But he said much more needed to be done both by Iraq's leaders and the international community.

Monday's meeting was the biggest yet in a US-backed effort to create a new "Iraq Compact" -- an agreement between the government and international donors that would commit Baghdad to political and economic reforms in return for a major influx of foreign investment and aide.

The gathering was attended by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, officials from all Iraq's neighbors and a wide array of European governments, according to the senior State Department official.

Potential donors at the meeting were "very, very supportive and encouraging" following Talabani's presentation, the official said, noting that Iran and Syria, key US rivals in the region, were the only "discordant" voices.

"What (the Iraqis) heard was that everyone realises they have a stake, both in the region and outside, in the future of Iraq, in a stable, secure, peaceful Iraq," he said.

The goal of the Iraq Compact is to encourage donors to provide significant new aid to the country in the form of investment, grants, loans and debt forgiveness or rescheduling.

The US official voiced confidence the international community would respond, and he noted that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states which are owed vast sums by Iraq voiced support in principle for moving ahead with debt relief measures.

Following Monday's meeting, a smaller working group will draft the terms of the Compact, which Washington hopes can be formally adopted at a major conference at the end of November, possibly in Baghdad, the official said.

"This needs to be done as rapidly as possible," he said. "This civil conflict has to be brought to a close."

"For that to happen, the Iraqis need to take action, security has got to be restored, economics need to be revived and there has to be a reconciliation deal," he said.

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