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Naji
Sabri Ahmad al-Hadithi
Iraqi
Foreign Minister Naji Sabri Ahmad al-Hadithi's primary role is leading
Iraq's diplomatic efforts to weaken support for a possible U.S. military
attack. He has continued to lobby permanent United Nations Security
Council members as part of Baghdad's efforts to shore up international
support, including visits to Russia and China. Sabri has also met with
a delegation from India and the 22-member Arab League.
He
has also spearheaded efforts to reach out to former enemies in an effort
to find new allies against the U.S. During a five-day meeting in January
2002 in Iran, once Iraq's central foe, he told Iranian President Mohammad
Khatami that U.S. behavior "is not just a threat to us, but a threat
to the Islamic world."
Sabri has
been part of the ongoing high-level talks with U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan and chief U.N. weapons inspector Dr. Hans Blix. And it was
Sabri, along with Arab League chief Amr Moussa, who delivered the letter
in September from the Iraqi government to Annan saying Saddam Hussein
would allow weapons inspectors back into Iraq.
Sabri was
appointed Foreign Minister last year. A member of a historically powerful
family, he holds a doctorate in English literature. During the Gulf
War, he was Deputy Information Minister and, at one time, ran Iraq's
press office in London. Before his appointment, he served as an ambassador
to Austria.
Sabri is
considered more of a technocrat than a political leader. Some view him
as an interim figure in the Hussein cabinet though he is said to be
close friends with Saddam's younger son, Qusay.
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By Raven Tyler, Online NewsHour |