RESOLUTION ON LEBANON MAY COME NEXT WEEK
Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert says the fighting between Israel
and Hezbollah militants will only stop once a multinational force is in place.
By NICK WADHAMS, Associated Press Writer August 2, 2006
UNITED NATIONS - Diplomats
acknowledged Wednesday that any U.N. Security Council resolution to stop fighting in Lebanon could
take until next week, as the United States and France struggled to bridge wide differences on what to do first: send in peacekeepers
to disarm Hezbollah or impose a cease-fire.
The United States and France claimed they were
making progress on a deal on a Security Council resolution, though the U.N. for the second time canceled a meeting of nations
that could send peacekeepers to south Lebanon,
reluctant to discuss such a force before a resolution was in place.
The decision came after
France, which has led efforts for a diplomatic
solution and could lead an international force, refused to participate in the U.S.-backed meeting for the same reason.
"It's clear that it remains
premature for such a meeting to be held because of the absence of an agreed political framework for ending the conflict,"
U.N. spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said. "If you don't have a mandate, how can you decide what kind of force you need?"
Officials gave conflicting
accounts about when exactly a deal could be reached, but they appeared eager to make it look like they were moving forward
toward a deal rather than stuck in deadlock as the conflict entered its fourth week Wednesday, with more than 600 dead on
both sides of the Israeli-Lebanese border.
U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday an agreement on how to end the fighting was possible within days,
not weeks.
Yet Ghana's U.N. Ambassador Nana Effah-Apenteng, president of
the Security Council for August, was more cautious. He indicated there would not be a Security Council meeting this week to
allow all sides time to resolve their differences.
Diplomats said the U.S. and France had neared a general agreement on the elements
required for a lasting solution. Those include halting the fighting, disarming Hezbollah, deploying peacekeepers, and creating
a buffer zone in south Lebanon free of
Hezbollah militants and Israeli troops.
Tony Snow, spokesman for
President Bush, said the U.S. and France were
working "on the same sheet of paper when it comes to what everybody said was an unbridgeable chasm with regard to Lebanon."
Yet the problem that has
bedeviled them for days remains: they can't agree which steps to take first.
France, which has proposed a draft resolution on the framework, wants fighting to stop immediately, to create a political
framework for peace, and then to send the troops. The U.S.,
on the other hand, wants all of those things done at the same time.
One proposed way out would
be to break up action into two Security Council resolutions — one to halt fighting and deploy an initial vanguard of
peacekeepers; and a second to impose a larger framework backed by a larger, longer-term foreign troop presence.
"I'm confident that by tomorrow
we'll be in a position to have discussions in the council on a text which actually takes us forward," Britain's U.N. Ambassador Emyr Jones-Parry said. "Prospects
now of adoption soon of a resolution have improved considerably."
Once an agreement is reached,
the rest of the council will have to be consulted.
Any resolution will also
have to gain the acceptance of Lebanon and Israel, which could prove difficult.
Israel has said it wants an armed force with a mandate to confront militants and seeks NATO involvement.
Lebanon, however, wants an expansion of the current U.N. peacekeeping force,
deployed in south Lebanon since 1978.
Earlier Wednesday, Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said his country would stop its offensive only after a robust international peacekeeping force
is in place in southern Lebanon —
something likely to take weeks at a minimum.
Effah-Apenteng told reporters
that the United States was the only member
in the 15-nation Security Council that opposed the French demand for an immediate halt to fighting.
Asked if any other council
member shared the U.S. view, he said:
"From my reading of the situation, no."
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud
al-Faisal on Wednesday pointed at the U.S. refusal to rein in Israel as the reason the fighting has continued.
"The American position is
that of stubbornness. We are confused by the U.S.
position. We want the U.S. to stand by Lebanon,"
he told a news conference in the Red Sea port city of Jiddah.