UN spy planes withdrawn after complaint by Baghdad

IRAQ: UN arms inspectors said yesterday they had withdrawn two U-2 reconnaissance aircraft over Iraq for safety reasons after…

IRAQ: UN arms inspectors said yesterday they had withdrawn two U-2 reconnaissance aircraft over Iraq for safety reasons after Baghdad had complained both were in the air simultaneously.

Mr Ewen Buchanan, spokesman for the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), said he did not know if the Iraqi air force had tried to intercept the planes.

But a US official said Iraq "informed us when the planes were in the air that only one was acceptable, and the second would be viewed as hostile."

He said the inspectors asked Washington to temporarily suspend the flights, flown on behalf of the United Nations, until US and UN officials could meet on the incident in New York.

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Iraq, the US official said, had been told about the two two aircraft 48 hours in advance but other sources said this had not been made clear and Iraq had expected one U-2 because of past practices.

"It may have been a misunderstanding because of the tense situation," said one UN source, adding that Iraq could not restrict the number of U-2 flights but was immediately wary when it saw more than one plane.

Should Iraq be found to have interfered with the flights, the chief UN inspector, Dr Hans Blix, would be obligated to report the incident to the UN Security Council immediately.

But Russia's UN ambassador, Mr Sergei Lavrov, whose country opposes military action against Iraq, said the incident was a misunderstanding and "blown out of proportion."

Mr Buchanan told reporters: "I can confirm that two U-2 reconnaissance aircraft operating on behalf of the UNMOVIC operated in Iraqi air space this morning.

"Although Iraq had been notified of a flight-time window, they expressed surprise and concern that two flights were operating simultaneously.

"In the interests of safety, UNMOVIC requested the aircraft to withdraw," he said, adding that further U-2 and Mirage flights were still planned.

A US defence official said earlier in Baghdad that Iraqi fighter jets had been scrambled, forcing US air controllers to call them back. Iraq denied scrambling jets.

UN sources said there was no agreement that only one U-2 aircraft could fly at one time, although that had been past practice.

The reconnaissance flights undertaken at UNMOVIC's request are usually flown by one French, Russian or US aircraft per mission, a UN source said.