Powell: No need to use force against Iran (Agencies) Updated: 2005-03-06 11:40
WASHINGTON - Former Secretary of State Colin Powell on Saturday said he saw
no need for military action against Iran for its suspected development of
nuclear weapons, given strong diplomatic efforts to address the issue.
Powell told Fuji Television in an interview that although military force
remained an option, US President Bush had made it clear that he wanted to
find a diplomatic solution.
Former U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell said he saw no need to use military forces
against Iran for the suspected nuclear weapon program. Colin
Powell is seen in this January 19, 2005 file photo during his farewell
address at the State Department in Washington.
[Reuters] | "Just because there is the possibility
you could use military force, I don't see any need to think about that right now
because there are ... strong diplomatic efforts under way," Powell told Fuji
Television's "Hodo 2001" program.
"The international community has come together to make it clear to Iran that
they should not develop nuclear weapons and we are developing the efforts of the
European Union ... and we are working with the International Atomic Energy
Agency, so the issue of conflict for Iran I don't think arises yet," he told the
Japanese television station in a live interview.
Bush last week edged toward backing Europe's offer of incentives to Iran to
abandon nuclear arms, but U.S. officials say it could take several weeks to work
out agreement on the issue.
The United States would like Britain, France and Germany, the so-called EU3
who are trying to negotiate an end to Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program,
to back taking Iran to the U.N. Security Council and perhaps imposing U.N.
sanctions.
The EU3 have offered Iran economic and political incentives if it abandons
its uranium enrichment program, which could produce fuel for nuclear power
plants or atomic weapons.
Tehran has temporarily frozen most of the program but has refused to abandon
it.
Washington accuses Iran of developing nuclear weapons under cover of a
civilian atomic energy program. Tehran denies that, insisting its aim is the
peaceful generation of electricity.
Powell, whose preference for diplomacy over military solutions put him at
odds with some hard-liners with the Bush administration over Iraq, said North
Korea's nuclear program also posed a threat but he believed diplomatic efforts
would succeed in that case.
He said the cases of North Korea and Iran were different from the situation
in Iraq, primarily because there was a "hot conflict going on" with then-Iraqi
leader Saddam Hussein over his repeated violations of U.N. resolutions.
"They were violating UN resolution after UN resolution after UN resolution,
and it was time to do something about Iraq," he said. "But I think there is time
for democratic efforts to produce a solution to the effort with North Korea and
with Iran."
He acknowledged that he had differences with some U.S. officials, including
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, over how much time to give the United Nations
to resolve the dispute with Iraq before the United States declared war.
But he insisted that Washington's preference was "always to try to find a
peaceful solution to the problem and not look for an opportunity to go to war."
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