This Austrian diplomat said on Wednesday in his interview with the Mostar-based Dnevni List that the order, supported by the Peace Implementation Council, was neither anti-Croat nor pro-Bosniak.
He said that it was the Constitutional Court that must remove dilemmas whether the recently established government in the Croat-Bosniak entity (Federation) was formed in accordance with law or not.
He also refuted claims that Constitutional Court judges were under his pressure.
"I do not know at all those judges," he said.
Inzko said that the Croatian Democratic Union parties should have accepted a compromise and given two positions, designated for Croats, to parties in a coalition led by the Social Democratic Party (SDP) with an HDZ representative chairing the Council of Ministers (the country's government).
The diplomat added that he partly shared the concern of Catholic bishops in Bosnia who assessed that the political will of the Croat electorate was ignored during the formation of the government in the Bosnian federation.
He said he was also afraid of possible worsening of relations with the Church.