Bush May Send Rice to Help Calm Mideast New York Times
British Prime Minister
Tony Blair and
United Nations Secretary General
Kofi Annan called today for an international “stabilization force’’ to quell the fighting between
Israel and the
Hezbollah militia, while President Bush pungently suggested that Mr. Annan should pay more attention to reining in Hezbollah. Mr. Blair and Mr. Annan called for a deployment that would be far larger than the 2,000-member United Nations observer force currently stationed in southern Lebanon. Without such a force, “then I think it’s very difficult to see how we restore calm,’’ Mr. Blair said, according to Agence-France Presse. American and Israeli officials gave a tepid response to the idea, with Israel’s prime minister, Ehud Olmert, telling the Knesset that a ceasefire could only come after Hezbollah returns two captured soldiers and that Lebanese, not international soldiers should be deployed along the border, The Associated Press reported. Mr. Bush did not address the plan directly. But he expressed his unhappiness about Mr. Annan’s overall approach to the crisis quite bluntly and, unintentionally, quite publicly. His words were picked up by an open microphone while he and Mr. Blair chatted during a lunch that followed Mr. Blair and Mr. Annan’s joint statement on the final day of the
Group of 8 summit here. Leaning over the back of Mr. Bush’s chair, Mr. Blair first brought up trade discussions, as the president chewed thoughtfully on a roll. Mr. Bush then abruptly changed the subject to the Mideast, complaining about Mr. Annan’s approach to the crisis, and for holding the view — which is shared by many of the leaders here — that Israel and
Hamas and Hezbollah should halt the violence and then hash out their differences. The Americans have said that Israel would likely only stand down if Hamas and Hezbollah returned the soldiers they have kidnapped and ceased their shelling of Israeli towns. “I don’t like the sequence of it,’’ Mr. Bush said. “His attitude is basically ceasefire and everything else happens.” He went on to say the U.N. should directly enlist the Syrians to intervene. “I feel like telling Kofi to get on the phone with Assad and make something happen,” he said to Mr. Blair, referring to Syria’s president, Bashir Assad. “See, the irony is that what they need to do is get Syria to get Hezbollah to stop doing this "expletive deleted" and it’s over,” Mr. Bush said. Mr. Blair reiterated his argument, made earlier in the day with Mr. Annan, for an international force to be dispatched to the area. “I think the thing that is really difficult is you can’t stop this unless you get this international presence agreed,” Mr. Blair said. “You need to get this done quickly otherwise this thing will spiral out of cont...’’ Mr. Bush interrupted to say, “Yeah, she’s going. I think Condi’s going to go pretty soon.” Mr. Blair then argued that it would be less risky for him to take the lead in a visit to the region instead of Ms. Rice, saying her presence could put America’s prestige on the line. “If she goes out she’s got to succeed as it were, where as I can just go out and talk,” Mr. Blair said. At that point, Mr. Blair appeared to notice the nearby microphone, and leaned over to turn it off. Mr. Annan today said that the Security Council members would start working on a detailed proposal for the deployment of a stabilization force. At the United Nations, the Security Council went into its third session on Lebanon in four days, but beforehand
John R. Bolton, the American ambassador, discouraged talk of sending a multilateral force to the area. Mr. Bolton said that three major questions had to be addressed first. "Would such a force be empowered to deal with the real problem ?," he said. "The real problem is Hezbollah." The second, he said, was "Would it be empowered to deal with countries like Syria and Iran that support Hezbollah?" The third was how a new force would be different or better than the existing United Nations force which has been there for 28 years and whether it would undercut past Security Council resolutions which have sought to strengthen Lebanese institutions. Mr. Bolton was also asked why the United States was not backing an immediate ceasefire. "We could have a ceasefire in a matter of nanoseconds if Hezbollah and Hamas would release their kidnap victims and would stop engaging in rocket attacks and other acts of terrorism against Israel," he said. Mr. Bolton said that any Security Council action on Lebanon should await the return of a three-man mission that Secretary General Kofi Annan dispatched Friday to report back on the crises in Gaza and Lebanon. United Nations officials said the team was due back in New York the end of the week. The three, Middle East advisors Terje Roed-Larsen and Alvaro de Soto and Mr. Annan’s political advisor, Vijay Nambiar, have met with
Arab League officials and leaders of Egypt, Oman, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the Palestinian authority in Cairo and with Fouad Siniora, Lebanon’s prime minister, and the speaker of the Lebanese parliament, Nabih Berri, in Beirut. Mr. Nambiar said in Beirut Monday that the team was now going to Israel and might return to Lebanon afterwards. It is also scheduled to go to Syria and the Palestinian territories. "Our work will require the support and goodwill for my delegation from all the parties," he said. "But they should know that the consequences of failure could indeed be grave." In Jerusalem, a government spokeswoman said that it was too soon to discuss a buffer force. “We’re at the stage where we want to be sure that Hezbollah is not deployed at our northern border,’’ said the spokeswoman, Miri Eisin. On Sunday, during their meeting in St. Petersburg, the leaders of the Group of 8 countries blamed “extremist forces” and “those who support them” for the surge of Middle East violence. They urged Israel to exercise “utmost restraint” and expressed their “deepening concern for rising civilian casualties on all sides and the damage to infrastructure.” The leaders did not call for an immediate cease-fire but urged Hezbollah to restore peace by releasing captured Israelis and ending attacks on Israel, followed by the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza and the release of detained Palestinian legislators belonging to Hamas. The seeming unity of that statement papered over deep divisions between the nations. Those disagreements were underscored today when the French prime minister, Dominque Villepin, headed to Beirut to express “solidarity’’ with its beleaguered government, according to Agence-France Presse. At the lunch today at the vast Konstantinovsky Palace in this suburb of St. Petersburg, not all of what the open microphone, controlled by a Russian television service, was serious diplomacy. In another segment Mr. Bush told an aide asking him about his upcoming remarks, “I’m just going to make it up, right here — I’m not going to talk too damn long like the rest of them.” He added, “Some of these guys talk too long.” A foreign counterpart was heard to agree, but it was unclear who that was. At the lunch were the leaders of the Group of 8 industrial nations — France, Germany, Japan, United States, Russia, Great Britain, Italy, and Canada – as well as those of China, India, and Brazil, among others. At another moment, Mr. Bush was clearly itching to return to the White House, saying to someone, “Good job, gotta keep this thing moving — I gotta’ leave at 2:15 — you’ll want me out of town so to free up your security forces.’’ . “Gotta go home. Got something to do tonight,” Mr. Bush said, then, apparently turning to Mr. Hu, adding, “How about you? When are you going home?”
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