Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2003-03-12-Speech-3-069"
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"en.20030312.1.3-069"2
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".
At his press conference the day before yesterday, the President of the French Republic rightly emphasised the fact that the deployment of UK and US forces on the borders of Iraq was the real cause of the resumption of the inspections and the obtaining of the first tangible results. It is no paradox to maintain that this deployment has enabled us, so far, to make a little progress, peacefully, towards our common objective, that is to say the disarmament of Iraq.
In today’s debate, however, we have clearly felt, among certain speakers, the beginnings of a slide towards a sort of anti-American exaltation. The chairman of the Communist Group, for example, was pleased to see the coming together of what he called the largest peace camp seen since the end of the cold war. This argument reminded us of the old dialectic which we used to hear too much of precisely during the cold war. Thanks to that argument, the objective of disarming Saddam Hussein, and even sometimes of condemning him, has gradually disappeared behind anti-American jubilation.
For my part, I should like to avoid such distractions, and return to the main question which we are beginning to forget: namely, how to disarm Saddam Hussein without waiting ten years to do it."@en1
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