HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

http://www.dawn.com/2002/10/03/int11.htm

Dawn (Pakistan)
October 3, 2002


UN credibility at stake over Iraq: Diplomats' warning 
By Thalif Deen 


-"This is a crucial test for the survival of the world
body," laments a long-time Asian diplomat. "The
American determination to go it alone challenges the
very foundation on which the world body was built," he
adds. 
-"If the Security Council caves into American pressure
to adopt a resolution that the United States can
construe to authorise military action, it will have
done what most members think improper, and will have
facilitated mass killings of Iraqis by the United
States." 
-"Will the world witness the first authorised or
unilateral use of force to topple a head of state?" 
-The United Nations...is increasingly seen as an
instrument of US foreign policy, "if not indeed a tool
in the hands of George Bush to help him divert public
attention in the United States away from severe
domestic problems to the issues of war and
patriotism". 




UNITED NATIONS: The credibility of the United Nations
is being seriously undermined by a US decision that
may eventually lead to a unilateral military attack on
Iraq, UN diplomats, US academics and Middle East
experts warn. 

"This is a crucial test for the survival of the world
body," laments a long-time Asian diplomat. "The
American determination to go it alone challenges the
very foundation on which the world body was built," he
adds. 

US President George W. Bush has threatened to go to
war - with or without authorisation by the Security
Council, the only international body empowered to
declare war or peace - unless Iraq lets UN weapons
inspectors back into the country and abides by a
number of resolutions the UN adopted after the 1990s
Gulf War. 

The United States has introduced a new resolution in
the Security Council that is widely believed to permit
an invasion if Iraqi President Saddam Hussein does not
meet US demands. It has yet to be made public. If Bush
does go to war unilaterally, say diplomats, the
Security Council will be reduced to a politically
impotent body. 

John Quigley, professor of international law at Ohio
State University, says the United Nations risks
becoming irrelevant no matter what it does. 

"If the Security Council caves into American pressure
to adopt a resolution that the United States can
construe to authorise military action, it will have
done what most members think improper, and will have
facilitated mass killings of Iraqis by the United
States," he told IPS. 

Quigley argues that the better course would be for the
United Nations to decline to adopt a US-drafted
resolution. "Only in that way can the organisation
maintain its integrity." 

Since the 191-member General Assembly - rather than
the Security Council - really represents the will of
the international community, Quigley says the Assembly
should invoke the "Uniting for Peace" resolution of
1950, which allows the UN's highest policy making body
to recommend action by member states against another
member state. 

But because the international community overwhelmingly
opposes military action against Iraq, the United
States is not likely to risk that vote at the General
Assembly, he says. 

As a result, the 15-member Security Council has been
under heavy US pressure for a resolution that will
virtually give that country a "blank cheque" for a
"regime change" in Iraq. 

So far, the United States is backed by only one other
veto- wielding permanent member - Britain. The
remaining three permanent members, France, China and
Russia, have expressed strong reservations over the
draft US-sponsored re resolution. 

France, a long-time American ally, said Monday that
"any action whose stated goal from the outset is
regime change would be against international law and
open the way to all sorts of abuses". 

Of the 10 non-permanent members in the 15-member
Security Council, the United States is expected to
receive support from Norway, Bulgaria, Singapore,
Colombia and Ireland. 

The other five non-permanent members - Mexico,
Mauritius, Cameroon, Guinea and Syria - are being
heavily lobbied by the United States, mostly in their
respective capitals. 

The United States needs nine positive votes to adopt a
resolution in the Security Council but it also has to
avoid any vetoes. 

The situation is "fraught with dangerous implications
extending far beyond the region," says former Indian
ambassador Chinmaya Gharekhan, an adviser to one-time
UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. 

"Will the world witness the first authorised or
unilateral use of force to topple a head of state?",
he asks. 

Naseer Aruri, chancellor professor emeritus of
political science at the University of Massachusetts,
said no one in the United States is considering the
forthcoming war as a form of UN action under chapter
seven of the body's charter, which authorises the use
of military force under the auspices of the Security
Council. 

"Instead, this is treated as an American war, or even
a George W. Bush war. This is a profound challenge to
the credibility of the UN system and to the office of
the secretary- general," he told IPS. 

The United Nations, he argued, is increasingly seen as
an instrument of US foreign policy, "if not indeed a
tool in the hands of George Bush to help him divert
public attention in the United States away from severe
domestic problems to the issues of war and
patriotism". 

Aruri also said the General Assembly should convene
under the 1950 "Uniting for Peace" resolution to
consider sending a multinational force to Iraq to
resolve the problem of disarmament for good. 

"Anything short of taking drastic action to preserve
the integrity of the United Nations will place the
post-World War II system in great jeopardy," he added.


Phyllis Bennis, Fellow of the Washington-based
Institute of Policy Studies, said the US effort to win
support in the Security Council is already leading to
the kind of over-the-top bribes and threats that
characterised the run-up to the passage of resolution
678 authorising war against Iraq in 1990. 

At that time, she said, every impoverished country on
the Security Council, including the former Zaire,
Ethiopia and Colombia, was offered free or extra-cheap
oil, courtesy of Saudi Arabia and the exiled Kuwaiti
royals, orchestrated by the United States. 

Ethiopia and Colombia were also offered new arms
packages, after years of being denied military aid,
because of war and human rights violations, she added.


The only two countries that voted against the 1990
resolution authorising a war against Iraq were Cuba
and Yemen. 

But minutes after Yemen said "No", the US ambassador
turned to the Yemeni diplomat in the Security Council
chamber, and said: "That will be the most expensive
vote you would ever cast." 

Three days later, said Bennis, the US cut its entire
70 million dollar aid budget to Yemen.-Dawn/IPS News
Service 





__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to