U.S. more willing to work with other nations -Annan
By Clarence Fernandez
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - The United States is now more willing to work with other nations to achieve its global aims than when it led an invasion of Iraq in 2003, former U.N. chief Kofi Annan, who opposed the move, said on Friday.
Relations between the United States and the United Nations deteriorated after the U.N. Security Council refused to endorse the invasion and Annan agreed with the council.
Annan has described the failure to prevent the Iraq war as the worst moment of his 10 years as U.N. leader. The invasion led to a series of clashes with the administration of George W. Bush over the appropriate role of the United Nations.
During a visit to Malaysia on Friday, Annan said it was important for the United States to work together with other member states of the United Nations to make the body as strong as possible.
"Let me say that the U.N. needs the U.S. and the U.S. needs the U.N.," Annan told reporters in the Malaysian capital, where he delivered a talk on development issues. "There is no doubt about that, and I think that has become patently clear."
He added, "I sense a shift in Washington where even this administration is becoming more multilateral than it was two years ago, more multilateral than it was in 2003, before the war, and I suspect the next administration will continue this trend."
On Thursday, Bush put off changing course in Iraq for at least two months but the U.S. House of Representatives signalled its frustration by calling for combat troops -- now numbering about 158,500 -- to leave by April.
An interim White House report released just before Bush spoke gave the Iraqi government a mixed review in meeting political and security goals -- providing more ammunition for war opponents demanding that Bush start ending U.S. military involvement. Continued...




