NewsMarch 21, 2003
WASHINGTON -- In an unusual diplomatic move, the Bush administration called Thursday for the expulsion of Iraqi diplomats by all countries that recognize and deal with the government in Baghdad. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the diplomats represented a "corrupt and ruthless regime" and he cited Iraq's refusal to disarm...
By Barry Schweid, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- In an unusual diplomatic move, the Bush administration called Thursday for the expulsion of Iraqi diplomats by all countries that recognize and deal with the government in Baghdad.

State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the diplomats represented a "corrupt and ruthless regime" and he cited Iraq's refusal to disarm.

The three Iraqi diplomats based in the Algerian Embassy in Washington were told to leave.

Also Thursday, the State Department temporarily suspended or sharply reduced operations in about 30 countries. The decision was based on an assessment of the security situation in those countries by the senior American diplomats there.

Two weeks ago, the United States asked more than 60 countries to expel several hundred Iraqi diplomats the Central Intelligence Agency identified as suspected intelligence agents.

In the new request, made overnight, the United States also asked countries to try to prevent the destruction of Iraqi documents in Iraqi embassies and consulates and to freeze Iraq's bank accounts so the money could be used by a successor, postwar government.

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As for the diplomats themselves, Boucher said they might be able to find their way back to Iraq or could apply for asylum.

Once an interim new government takes over in Baghdad it will name diplomats who "truly represent the interests of the Iraqi people, rather than represent a corrupt and ruthless regime," Boucher said.

After the United States lodged its earlier allegation of espionage by Iraqi diplomats, two low-level attaches at the Iraqi mission to the United Nations were ordered expelled. Australia accused a diplomat of spying and expelled him.

In Thursday's request, the State Department set no deadline for the expulsions, and it was not clear whether other countries would agree to the request.

Boucher described the requested expulsions as temporary, saying a new government would be installed after the war and would choose new envoys.

Countries where U.S. diplomatic outposts were shuttered Thursday included Israel, Saudi Arabia, Argentina, Australia, Indonesia, South Africa, Pakistan, Syria and Norway. The U.S. Embassy in Paris reduced its services mostly to handling visas, as did the U.S. Embassy in Sao Paolo, Brazil.

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