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Scud "Axis" An Alliance With Missiles But No Direction

Undated file picture shows Iraqi officers watching a bulldozer destroying an Al Hussein/Scud missile under the supervision of UNSCOM inspectors in charge of disarming Iraq, at an unspecified location in Iraq.

Seoul (AFP) Feb 5, 2002
The "evil" trio of North Korea, Iran and Iraq that President George W. Bush has vowed to bring to heel is united in the quest to find weapons powerful enough to counter US military might.

But outside this mighty task, the three states whose names regularly darken international disarmament conferences make up an unlikely, almost unholy alliance with no common strategy, diplomats and experts say.

Iraq and North Korea are barely talking to each other -- officially -- and while Iran has good relations with the Stalinist regime in Pyongyang, its ties with capitalist South Korea are better.

All three virulently condemned Bush's "axis of evil" speech last week in which he accused the Iran, Iraq and North Korea of spreading weapons of mass destruction and endangering world peace.

Bush said "all options are on the table" in making "the United States and our allies more secure."

"Bush, the dwarf," said Iraq's official Babel newspaper run by President Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday. A North Korean foreign ministry spokesman condemned what he called the "moral leprosy" of the Bush administration.

The Iranian government said Monday that it would be an "irreparable mistake" for the United States to launch an attack.

The "axis of evil" label also raised concerns among US allies, such as South Korea where Bush is to hold talks this month.


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