Search  
Click Here!    
Good Morning America World News Tonight 20/20 Primetime Nightline WNN This Week
April 1, 2003
 
HOMEPAGE
NEWS SUMMARY
US
INTERNATIONAL
MONEYScope
WEATHER
LOCAL NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
ESPN SPORTS
SCI / TECH
POLITICS
HEALTH
TRAVEL
FEATURED SERVICES
RELATIONSHIPS
SHOPPING
DOWNLOADS
WIRELESS
INTERACT
VIDEO & AUDIO
BOARDS
CHAT
NEWS ALERTS
CONTACT ABC
ABCNEWS.com


(AP Photo)
Russian Leader: Iraqi Army Still Potent
Russian Defense Minister Says Iraqi Army Still Retains Its Potential Against U.S.-Led Troops

The Associated Press


Print This Page
Email This Page
See Most Sent
The Do's and Don'ts of Chemical Weapons
Portable 'Javelin' Give Soldiers Extra Edge
Tips on How You Can Save Money at Tax Time
MOSCOW April 1

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said that a U.S. victory in Iraq was "far from certain" as the Iraqi army still retains its potential, and warned that the campaign was prompting Russia to strengthen its own military, according to an interview published Tuesday.

Ivanov was quoted as telling the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda that the Russian military was closely following the war in Iraq, making conclusions related to the development of prospective weapons. He added that the Iraqis were still capable of mounting strong opposition.

If U.S. troops "launch carpet bombings, Iraq won't hold out for long, but they are yet to dare doing that because the political damage would be huge," Ivanov said. "But if they try to fight with minimal losses, accurately as they are doing it now, avoiding big clashes, the outcome is far from certain. Iraq has quite a serious army, and it hasn't yet started to fight."

Ivanov said that Moscow opposed the war not because of its economic interests in Iraq, but out of concern for global security.

"Saddam is neither friend, nor brother to us, and he will never pay off debts to us," Ivanov said, referring to Iraq's US$7-8 billion Soviet-era debt to Russia. "It's the question of precedent: today the United States doesn't like Iraq, tomorrow Syria, then Iran, North Korea and then what: everyone else?"

Ivanov said that the war made it necessary to strengthen the Russian military.

"We are drawing some military-political conclusions, because this conflict makes us remember the words of (Russian Czar) Alexander III who said that Russia has only two reliable allies the army and the navy," Ivanov said. "While the international security system is coming apart at the seams, they must provide a reliable defense."

Amid the growing strain in U.S.-Russian relations over Iraq, the U.S. administration last week accused Russian companies of shipping military equipment to Iraq. Moscow has angrily dismissed the allegations, and warned Washington against waging what it dubbed an "information war."

In other recent signs of friction, the lower house of the Russian parliament delayed the ratification of a nuclear arms reduction treaty that Bush and Putin signed last May, citing negative feelings over Iraq. And the Russian military scrambled its fighters to shadow the flights of U.S. spy planes over the ex-Soviet republic of Georgia bordering Russia to the south.

Ivanov told the Komsomolskaya Pravda that the U.S. U-2 spy planes have recently made four flights over Georgia, on three occasions coming as close as 12-16 miles to the Russian border.

Ivanov said Moscow was dissatisfied with the U.S. claim that the flights were necessary to monitor terrorist groups in Georgia because the planes were flying to high to spot the terrorists.

"We can't accept the explanation about combating terrorism and we have asked the American side to explain to us what was the purpose of such flights," Ivanov said.


photo credit and caption:
An American soldiers with the 173rd Airborne out of Vicenza, Italy, puts up concertino wire on the perimeter of an airstrip in Harir, Kurdish-held northern Iraq Tuesday April 1, 2003. More than 1,000 U.S. soldiers have currently fanned out over Kurish-held northern Iraq. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong)

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 
 
RealOne (Ad Served by Avenue A)
  RELATED STORIES
International Index
More Raw News
 
 INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES
Missing Soldier Rescued in Iraq
Why Better Firepower Flops in Urban Combat
War Reaction Around the World
Iraq War Raises Suspicion of New 'Crusade'
Saudi Leader Criticizes Bush, Saddam

 

 
Copyright © 2003 ABCNEWS Internet Ventures.
Click here for:  HELP   ADVERTISER INFO   CONTACT ABC   TOOLS   PR   TERMS OF USE   PRIVACY POLICY

Family of sites:      ABC.com        ABC Family        ESPN.com        Disney.com        FamilyFun.com        GO Mail        Movies.com