UNITED NATIONS -- Saddam Hussein's government agreed to a tough U.N. resolution on weapons inspections Wednesday, declaring it wants to save the Iraqi people from war. But the harsh tone of Iraq's acceptance letter raised questions about how it would treat the arms inspectors.
Although Iraq agreed to stringent new terms, President Bush warned he had "zero tolerance" for any Iraqi attempts to hide weapons of mass destruction and said a coalition of nations is ready to force Saddam to disarm.
In a nine-page letter arriving two days ahead of a deadline, Iraq said it wants to prove to the world that it has no weapons of mass destruction. But the letter was laced with anti-American and anti-Israeli statements as well as stern warnings for U.N. weapons inspectors, whose advance team is to arrive in Baghdad on Monday.
In contrast, Iraq's U.N. ambassador, Mohammed Al-Douri, said his government had chosen "the path of peace" and its acceptance had "no conditions, no reservations."
Still, the strident tone of Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri's letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, which included warnings about how Baghdad expects inspectors to behave, raised concern about Iraq's plans to cooperate with the resolution.
After meeting with Bush in Washington, Annan said he would wait to see whether the letter's language "is an indication that they are going to play games. ... I think the issue is not their acceptance, but performance on the ground."
Dec. 23 start
Under the resolution, the inspectors have until Dec. 23 to begin their duties. Following the advance team, a small group of inspectors are scheduled to start work on Nov. 25, said Ewen Buchanan, spokesman for U.N. chief inspector Hans Blix.
The resolution calls for inspectors to report to the council 60 days after they are officially on the job. But if Iraq fails to cooperate, the resolution orders inspectors to immediately notify the council, which will discuss a response.
By Dec. 8, Iraq must declare all its chemical, biological and nuclear programs, according to the terms of the resolution.
Al-Douri said his government has nothing to fear from inspections because "Iraq is clean."
In the letter, Sabri accused Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair of fabricating evidence that Iraq possessed or was on its way to producing nuclear weapons -- and had already stockpiled biological and chemical weapons.
"The lies and manipulations of the American administration and British government will be exposed," Sabri said.
He also warned that Iraq plans to closely monitor the inspectors while they are in the country. In 1998, Baghdad accused inspectors of spying for the United States and Israel.
Under Security Council resolutions adopted after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, U.N. inspectors must certify that Iraq's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs have been eliminated along with the long-range missiles to deliver them. Only then can sanctions against Iraq be lifted.
Iraq's acceptance culminates a two-month campaign that began with Bush's Sept. 12 speech to the U.N. General Assembly challenging world leaders to deal with Iraq's failure to comply with the international demands to disarm.
On Tuesday, Iraq's parliament rejected the resolution, but it has no power and Annan and others said they would wait for the official government response.
Bush declined to discuss the letter, though he thanked the U.N. Security Council for unanimously adopting the U.S.-backed resolution last Friday.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the test of Iraq's compliance would come in Baghdad's actions.
"We've heard this before from Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi regime," he said. "The U.N. resolution is binding on Iraq, and the Iraqi regime. Saddam Hussein had no choice but to accept the resolution."
Officials in Russia, which has long-standing economic and political ties to Iraq, welcomed Saddam's decision to accept the return of inspectors.
"We were confident that Iraq would make this decision, which opens the way for a political resolution of the situation," Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said. "Now it is important that the international inspectors quickly return to Iraq."
In Baghdad, state-run television announced Saddam's acceptance of the Security Council resolution two hours after Iraq's U.N. Ambassador Mohammed Al-Douri told the rest of the world.
Iraqi TV showed images of Saddam, in a dark suit and tie, presiding over a meeting of his Revolutionary Command Council, made up of senior military officers. The picture was frozen on the screen while an announcer read the message recounting at length a history of Iraq's dispute with the United Nations.
China's deputy U.N. ambassador Zhang Yishan, the current Security Council president, notified the 14 other members of Iraq's acceptance.
"Members of the Security Council welcomed the correct decision by the Iraqi government," he said.
The advance team that will arrive in Iraq on Monday will be led by Blix, who is in charge of biological and chemical inspections, and Mohamed ElBaradei of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which is in charge of nuclear inspections.
Blix said he would not comment until he had read the letter.
The resolution allows inspectors to go anywhere at any time to search for weapons of mass destruction. It also warns that Iraq faces "serious consequences" if it doesn't comply.
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