The Associated Press’ indefatigable Edith M. Lederer is reporting that “The chief investigator probing the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri on Wednesday backed the creation of an international tribunal to prosecute the alleged perpetrators. Belgian prosecutor Serge Brammertz told reporters after briefing the Security Council on his latest report that a tribunal would be ‘the next logical ste'” because the commission he heads is a fact-finding body — not a judicial institution that can issue indictments and conduct prosecutions. Without a tribunal, he said, ‘it would be complicated or difficult to justify the existence of the commission’. The establishment of a tribunal is being held up because the speaker of Lebanon’s parliament, Nabih Berri, refuses to convene a session on the current crisis between the pro-government, anti-Syrian camp that wants a tribunal and the pro-Syrian, Hezbollah-led opposition that has demanded modifications to the proposal for the court. The confrontation has stirred political and sectarian tensions that have threatened to tear Lebanon apart. The opposition demands the government give it a veto-wielding share of the Cabinet, but anti-Syrian Prime Minister Fuad Saniora has refused this, and is supported by the majority in parliament. In his statement to the council, Brammertz reiterated that investigators have narrowed the possible motive for killing the wealthy tycoon to his political activities. The chief investigator raised the possibility in a report to the council last week that the decision to kill Hariri was made before he embarked on a ‘rapprochement” with Syrian and Lebanese political figures. The first U.N. chief investigator, Germany’s Detlev Mehlis, said the killing’s complexity suggested the Syrian and Lebanese intelligence services played a role in Hariri’s assassination. Four Lebanese generals, top pro-Syrian security chiefs, have been under arrest for 16 months, accused of involvement in Hariri’s murder. Syria has denied any role in the assassination.
The commission already has thousands of documents, forensic evidence, analyses and hundreds of interviews to be handed over to a prosecutor, Brammertz said. ‘It will be up to a tribunal later on to decide … who has to be considered as responsible for this crime’, he said. Brammertz said the investigation into the killing of Hariri and 22 others in Beirut on Feb. 14, 2005 was making progress but will not be completed when the current mandate expires in June.
The Lebanese government sent a letter to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon asking for a one-year extension for the Independent International Investigation Commission that Brammertz heads. France’s U.N. Ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said he planned to introduce a Security Council resolution authorizing a one-year extension later this week. Brammertz, who said he did not know whether he would be staying on after June, stressed that the commission will never mention any names of people allegedly involved in the plot publicly ‘because this will immediately have an impact on the right of defense’.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070322/ap_on_re_mi_ea/un_lebanon_
hariri_probe;_ylt=AlOqym3ulGjEWKsd3svdTOQLewgF
Month: March 2007
There is already a legal basis for a Palestinian State
The just-installed Palestinian national unity government’s main goal is to establish an independent Palestinian state in the territories occupied in 1967, according to its political platform adopted by the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) on Saturday.
After the announcement of the results of the January 2006 Parliamentary elections in which Hamas won a majority of seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council, Palestinian (National) Authority Mahmoud Abbas said: “Together, God willing, we will proceed to realize the dream for which dozens of thousands of martyrs sacrificed their lives — a free and independent Palestinian state”.
The legal basis for the emergence of the new state of Palestine is already in place,
according to International Law Professor Marcelo G. Kohen, who teaches international law at the Graduate Institute of International Studies (Hautes Etudes Internationales, or HEI), in Geneva. “From a legal point of view, there is nothing now stopping the Palestinian people from unilaterally establishing their state, which could be built on what remains of the embryonic state apparatus that has been created since 1993”, Professor Kohen has written.
However, “It is quite complicated to say who, or which Palestinian institution, could make this declaration”, Professor Kohen said in an interview in his Geneva office. In principle, he indicated that the step should be taken by the most representative organ, which he suggested could be the Palestinian Legislative Council, which is based in the occupied Palestinian territory.
The PLO’s Palestinian National Council, which would have to approve the move at some point, may have to meet outside — although it did hold a session in Gaza in 1998, for the benefit of then-U.S. President Bill Clinton, to reaffirm once again its revision of the PLO Charter concerning Israel’s right to exist.
Hamas and Fatah are both represented in the PLC, along with other smaller parties, while Hamas’ integration into the PLO is still in the works. The PNC, on the other hand, includes representation from the Palestinian diaspora outside the occupied Palestinian territory, while the PLC members are all locally-based (though a good number of the present members of parliament are in Israeli prisons).
Until recently, Hamas placed greater emphasis on the return of refugees than on the creation of a Palestinian State. The new unity government platform incorporates both positions
A Palestinian State was actually proclaimed in November 1988 by the Palestine National Council, the representative parliament of the Palestine Liberation Organization — forty years and six months after the Declaration of Independence of Israel on 15 May 1948.
The two states were authorized by the UN General Assembly’s decision to partition the British Mandate of Palestine into two states –“one Jewish and one Arab, with Jerusalem having a special interim international status under UN administration” in Resolution 181 of 29 November 1947. Following the end of World War II, Britain informed the UN that it wished to terminate the Mandate it had been granted by the League of Nations at the end of World War I, and it asked the UN General Assembly to find a solution.
These two decisions — the Palestine Mandate and UN Resolution 181 — were taken by international organizations, and they provide the legal basis for the establishment of both States, Professor Kohen indicated. The League of Nations gave the first international recognition of the Jewish people, and also authorized the facilitation of Jewish immigration into Palestine. The League of Nations accepted without objection Britain’s 1923 decision to sever Transjordan from Palestine, the place to which Jewish immigration was directed.
There is as much legal basis for a Palestinian State as there is for the State of Israel, or for Jordan.
Professor Kohen said that “Nothing prevented the establishment of a Palestinian State in 1948, but none was created — or at least there was no legal barrier”.
Professor Kohen has written, in a chapter of the book Israel et L’Autre, that: “The point is that these decisions of international organizations, resolutions and key agreements were adopted and concluded in a legal manner, and, whether one likes it or not, they are obligatory for the parties. Only these resolutions and key agreements — and, of course, the applicable rules of general international law — show how far the claims of the parties can go. The successive rejection of these resolutions and agreements are the basis for a conflict that has cost thousands of lives and caused suffering to hundreds of thousands of people”.
The creation of a Palestinian State has been punitively withheld, for political reasons, and made subject to conditions that have not been required anywhere else in the world — it was made subject to Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, in which the two parties are not on an equal footing; then to Palestinian suppression of violence against Israel, which the Palestinian (National) Authority says has been impossible for several reasons, most of which are due to its ineffectiveness, which in turn is not unreasonably attributed in large part to the repressive Israeli occupation. Neither Hamas nor Fatah are willing to act against their own peoples’ right to resist occupation (by any means) — a position that was restated in the new “national unity” government’s platform adopted on Saturday.
On at least four occasions, Palestinians have prepared to declare a Palestinian State in Palestine: in 1948, in 1988, in 1999 and in 2000. In 1948, Arab countries dissuaded the Palestinians from acting so boldly, or contrary to their disparate interests. After that, strenouous objections have come from Israel and the U.S. No step was taken at the time by the international community to assist the emergence of a Palestinian State.
After 1988, the Palestinians hesitated, and didn’t take the next steps — they feared being weak and vulnerable; they feared a lack of recognition (particularly by the U.S.); they feared reprisals from Israel and from Arab neighbors; they feared that the other important issues, such as Jerusalem, the refugees, the settlements, would become marginal ; they feared not having true sovereignty ; they feared being held accountable for acts of resistance that they say they cannot control; they feared factional strife; and, more recently, in reaction to incendiary remarks made by some Israeli politicians, they fear that the creation of a Palestinian State would be the perfect excuse for “population transfer”.
An interesting PLO idea in 1988 to ask for a Seat of Palestine on the floor of the UN General Assembly, even if just symbolic, was scrapped at the time for fear of adverse reaction. But the UN General Assembly did recognize the PNC decision, and authorized the transition of the PLO representative office into an Observer Mission of Palestine.
In their 1988 Declaration of Independence, Palestinians formally accepted the partition of Palestine decided in UN GA Resolution 181. In doing so, Palestinians recognized Israel’s right to exist, as the Jewish State provided for in Resolution 181.
But the Palestinian Declaration of Independence went even further. Palestinians said in 1988 that their intention was to establish their state only on lands occupied in June 1967. By this decision, the Palestine National Council gave Israel uncontested title to the additional territory it brought under its control in fighting that erupted on 15 May 1948, following Israel’s Declaration of Independence, up to the Green Line which was demarcated in UN-negotiated Armistice agreements concluded between Israel and neighboring Arab States who briefly entered Palestine to fight Israel in 1948.
By 1999, the Palestinians were blocked by their own commitment to the Oslo Process, a secret track of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, facilitated by Norway, aimed at cutting through the delays that had stalled the Madrid Peace Conference, that was announced to general surprise in September 1993 with an exchange of mutual recognition between Israel and its (former) nemesis, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). There was no real movement in the Oslo Process after May 1995. Yet Israel, fully backed by the United States, warned the Palestinians that everything must be negotiated, and they should not take any unilateral steps.
However, according to Professor Kohen, “To pretend (claim) that the status of the territory should be decided by negotiations supposes that Israel possesses the title to this territory” — from Israel et l’Autre.
In contemporary international law, it is not only States, but also peoples who have the right to self-determination are the titleholders of territorial sovereignty, Professor Kohen wrote. What characterizes sovereignty on a territory is the right to dispose of it. Incontestably, the only title-holder of the right to dispose of the territory occupied by Israel in 1967, including East Jerusalem, is the Palestinian people. This right is not affected by the fact that the people in question cannot freely exercise its sovereignty while Palestine is not, effectively, an independent state, he says.
Many analysts have noted that in 1948, Israel went ahead with its Declaration of Independence without any clear mention of precise borders.
“While the establishment of the State of Israel was legitimate”, Professor Kohen has written, “its colonization of the territories seized in the 1967 war is not — not legally, nor politically”. He says that “Zionism cannot justify the settlements, because its claims were satisfied by the creation of the State of Israel in 1948, and it’s only to this territory [the State of Israel] that Jews have the right to make aliyeh”.
Professor Kohen, who has been taken to task by all sides, believes that although Zionism is not comparable to colonialism, Israel’s policy toward the West Bank and the Gaza Strip for nearly 40 years could be called colonialist, “because it is an expansionist policy. Israel has become a state which seeks to conquer territories that are not part of its sovereignty and which seeks to prevent another people from exercising its rights of self-determination”.
The Oslo Process between Israel and the PLO, legitmate representative of the Palestinian people, is evident proof of the capacity/capability to determine the fate of this territory, Professor Kohen said. In the context of Oslo, Israel itself accepted to negotiate the final status of the territory — and eventually even exchange territory — in the context of a permanent settlement of the conflict with the representatives of the Palestinian people
Professor Kohen, who has argued several cases of territorial dispute before the International Court of Justice in the Hague — and who also served as an adviser to the Malaysian delegation during the ICJ’s consideration of its Advisory Opinion on The Wall — said last year in his class on The State in International Law that “If the Palestinians declare a Palestinian State, there will be a state”. Professor Kohen spoke these words with special emphasis on the last four words.
After the bitter disappointment of the Oslo Accords — which the current Palestinian (National) Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was instrumental in negotiating — Abbas doesn’t want any more temporary anything.
The platform adopted by the new Palestinian Government on Saturday reflects this: “The government ‘rejects the establishment of a state in provisional borders’.”
The question, for some, is whether the Palestinians really want their own State, or not. “No one can force the Palestinians to have a State”, observed Professor Andrew Clapham, head of the International Law Department at Geneva’s HEI. Professor Clapham was formerly a representative of Amnesty International at United Nations Headquarters in New York, and was on leave from his teaching duties in Geneva to work as a legal adviser to the UN Mission in Iraq when its headquarters were destroyed in a car bombing in August 2003.
The roundly-vilified Oslo Accords have, nonetheless, provided a number of useful assets, starting with recognition. The Oslo Accords clearly specify, in several agreements, that the West Bank and Gaza are one indivisible territorial unit — a decision cited by the International Court of Justice in its 2004 Advisory Opinion on The Wall. An economic agreement signed in Paris in 1994 is the basis for transfer of customs revenues from the Israeli government to the Palestinian (National) Authority, and nobody wants to renegotiate that economic agreement now. The Palestinian (National) Authority and the Palestinian Legislative Council, and their elections, are all authorized under the Oslo Accords. The Oslo Accords had allocated a 20-mile fishing and economic zone off Gaza to the Palestinian Authority — though restrictions in place since the second Intifada have severely reduced the area where Palestinian fishermen are allowed to operate, and a number have been killed or wounded while trying to fish. Many sovereign powers were not delegated to the Palestinian (National) Authority, but the Palestinians nevertheless do have the right to conclude agreements in the economic domain, such as the 1999 contract with BG to develop gas fields under the Mediterranean sea off Gaza (the most productive of which is apparently just 20 miles offshore, within the Palestinian-allocated maritime space). The Oslo Accords also allowed the return to the occupied Palestinian territory of the PLO leadership and many of its fighters.
Israel’s own ambivalance about the creation of a Palestinian State is a not-negligible problem. For years the possible creation of a Palestinian State was viewed as a mortal threat to the State of Israel. But more recently, the creation of a Palestinian State — or, as Azmi Bishara has written, “a Palestinian state-like entity” — is becoming “an Israeli demand”.
The creation of a Palestinian State has been discovered, in Israel, as a possible solution to the “demographic” problem seen as threatening the Jewish identity of the State of Israel. There is hardly any dissent at any level in Israel: in order to retain Israel’s character as a democratic and Jewish state, the Palestinian Arab population of Israel must be a minority which should not exceed 20-25% of the total Israeli population.
The Roadmap, adopted after the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, says the aim is a two-state solution. The Oslo Accords never even mentioned the possibility of a State, thus leaving it until sometime after final status negotiations, which are still nowhere in sight. The Roadmap moved the creation of a Palestinian State forward, to the end of the second of the Roadmap’s three phases, although phase one is not yet completed. The Roadmap’s powerful patrons (the Quartet — the U.S., European Union, Russia, and the UN) have encouraged the UN Security Council to go on record as effectively endorsing a Palestinian State in UNSC resolution 1397 of 2002, and UNSC resolution 1515 of 2003.
But, the Palestinians do not need to wait for their State to be gift-wrapped and delivered.
Whatever the reactions elsewhere, the effect [of moving to implement the declaration of a state] would still be galvanizing for all the Palestinian people, and it is a promise the new “national unity” government can fulfill.
The latest from the Quartet – a holding pattern
The U.S. State Department has just released the latest statement of the “MIddle East Quartet”: “The Quartet Principals — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, High Representative for European Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, and European Commissioner for External Relations Benita Ferrero-Waldner — discussed by telephone the situation in the Middle East, and in particular the establishment of a Palestinian National Unity Government. The Quartet reiterated its respect for Palestinian democracy and the
agreement reached in Mecca on 8 February 2007, which laid the foundation for
Palestinian reconciliation. The Quartet expressed hope that the establishment of a
new government on 17 March 2007 would help end intra-Palestinian violence and ensure calm. The Quartet reaffirmed its previous statements with regard to the need for a Palestinian government committed to nonviolence, recognition of Israel and acceptance of previous agreements and obligations, including the Roadmap, and encouraged progress in this direction. The Quartet agreed that the commitment of the new government in this regard will be measured not only on the basis of its composition and platform, but also its actions. The Quartet expressed its expectation that the unity government will act responsibly, demonstrate clear and credible commitment to the Quartet principles, and support the efforts of President Abbas to pursue a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, thereby achieving the peace, security, and freedom the Israeli and Palestinian people desire and deserve. The Quartet reiterated the continuing need to coordinate and mobilize international assistance in support of the Palestinian people, and endorsed the continuation of the Temporary International Mechanism (TIM) for a three-month period while it evaluates the situation and the international community works to develop a more sustainable international mechanism for support to the Palestinians. The Quartet expressed its strong support for Secretary Rice’s efforts to further facilitate discussions with President Abbas and Prime Minister Olmert with the aim of defining more clearly the political horizon for the establishment of a Palestinian state and an end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Quartet agreed to meet in the region soon to review developments and discuss the way ahead.”
2007/215 – Released on March 21, 2007
The Associeted Press reports that U.S. “Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are expected in Ramallah over the weekend, but they will likely meet only with Abbas, not members of the new Cabinet. Germany now holds the rotating EU presidency. Rice said Wednesday she would send Congress a revised security assistance package for the Palestinians to make sure none of the money ends up with forces loyal to Hamas. She did not provide specifics, but a senior U.S. official said the cut would amount to about $36 million, leaving $50 million of the original package. Israel reiterated its call for a boycott of the entire government. ‘Israel’s perspective is that this is one government, with one prime minister and one platform’, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev. ‘We don’t believe that politicians with moderate credentials who are in the government should serve as fig leafs to make a Hamas-led government legitimate’. The renewal of contacts won’t necessarily translate into a lifting of the sanctions imposed a year ago, when Hamas swept to power in parliamentary elections. Since then, the international community has stopped most development projects and frozen aid to the Palestinian Authority, while Israel has withheld more than $500 million in tax transfers. As a result, the Hamas government had trouble paying the salaries of 175,000 civil servants, whose incomes provide for one quarter of the Palestinians. The government also struggled to provide basic services, such as health care, welfare payments and education. Despite the boycott, international donors ended up sending more than $1.2 billion in aid to the Palestinians in 2006, up from about $1 billion the year before, according to estimates by aid officials Wednesday. Mario Mariani, a senior European aid official, said total European assistance came to about $930 million in 2006, an increase of more than 30 percent from the year before. Much of it was emergency aid to ease a humanitarian crisis largely triggered by the sanctions. The aid was delivered less effectively because — in an attempt to bypass the Hamas government — it went to multiple recipients, including Abbas’ office and Palestinians’ personal bank accounts, rather than to the Treasury. ‘More money was spent in a less coordinated manner’, said Pierre Bessuges, deputy director of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in the Palestinian territories. The disjointed way of delivering money helped to dismantle Fayyad’s single Treasury bank account, which had been praised by donor countries as the biggest achievement in Palestinian fiscal reform. ‘The donor community, particularly the Europeans, first invested billions in the institutional development of the Palestinian Authority, and over the past year, invested in a policy that basically dismantled the past achievements’, said Mouin Rabbani, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, an independent think tank”.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070321/ap_on_re_
mi_ea/palestinians_sanctions;_ylt=AlW.LBn86dIDFiOdbPrdRHgLewgF
U.S. visas granted to Iranian President Ahmadinejad and entourage for address to UN Security Council
The U.S. State Department Spokesman Sean McCormick took a journalist’s question about visas for Iranian President Ahmadinejad and his entourage, at the daily press briefing in Washington on Monday 19 March:
Question: “Are Iranian diplomats and party subject to the same
fingerprinting and security screening procedures as other travelers?”
Answer: “All visa applicants are subject to robust security screening procedures. However, applicants for diplomat visas (A and G) are not subject to biometric finger scanning procedures at U.S. Consulates and Embassies. The Iranian President and his party did not provide biometric finger scans to obtain their visas. Their visas are single entry and valid for 3 months specific to the UN visit. Any travel outside a 25-mile-radius of New York must have the prior approval of the Office of Foreign Missions of the U.S. Department of State.”
2007/208 — Released on March 19, 2007
U.S. Acting Ambassador to the UN, Alejandro Wolff, said to journalists yesterday that: I don’t know what his motivations are for coming — whether it’s theater or whether it’s serious. As I’ve said before, I find it odd that an individual who has such a dismissive attitude towards the council itself is so eager to come and address it. So I leave any of those other questions about what this means to others.”
It’s good that the visas will be valid for 3 months, as Security Council negotiations on the proposed draft text may take some time, now that South Africa — one of the Council’s ten non-permanent members, and this month’s Council president — has proposed amendments. The non-permanent members have shown some irritation at being left out of the consultations until the last phase.
Still, U.S. Ambassador Wolff told journalsts at the UN today that he’s not yet aware of President Ahmadinejad’s travel plans, but he assumes “they will be in time for
adoption of the resolution, so we’ll need to know when that happens as well”. Asked by a journalist when that is expected, Ambassador World replied: “Well, we’re eager to have it happen this week…I think it’s doable. We’re having a number of consultations
on this, including today and tomorrow. We’ll hear all the delegations. We’ll have a good, thorough discussion, and the expectation is we should be able to move on this fairly quickly…we will proceed with a timetable and a timeline for a resolution that’s defined by the council itself, and I’m sure there will be ample time for the president of Iran to attend the session if that’s what he wants to do”.
The Associated Press’ enterprising Edith Lederer had the text of the amendments first, last night: “South Africa called Monday for a 90-day ‘time out’ on sanctions against Iran and said a resolution drafted by six world powers should drop an embargo on arms exports and financial sanctions targeting Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and an Iranian bank. The proposals by South Africa, which holds the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council this month, were obtained by The Associated Press ahead of an informal council meeting Tuesday and the first formal discussion Wednesday on the draft resolution. The five veto-wielding permanent council nations — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — and Germany agreed on modest new sanctions Thursday to step up pressure on Iran to suspend uranium enrichment, which can be used to produce nuclear energy or nuclear weapons. South Africa and the nine other non-permanent council members were not part of the negotiations and only received the draft Thursday to consider and propose changes. The extensive amendments to the draft proposed by South Africa could delay a vote on the resolution, although with support from the five permanent members the resolution is almost certain to be adopted. France’s UN Ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said the South African amendments weren’t consistent with the approach of the six powers. ‘It weakened a lot of the resolution, and we think that pressure should be put on Iran’, he said. Iran’s President Mahmound Ahmadinejad wants to address the Security Council on the day of the vote and U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Monday he will be allowed to travel to New York. The date of the visit has not been finalized. In its amendments to the draft, South Africa backed a proposal made by U.N. nuclear chief Mohamed ElBaradei in January for a 90-day ‘simultaneous time out’ as a way to defuse tensions. Under ElBaradei’s suggestion, Iran would suspend its enrichment activities and the Security Council would hold off implementing sanctions so both sides could ‘go to the negotiating table’.
The South African document said ‘the 90 day period of grace provided to Iran would allow for a de-escalation of tensions and create an opportunity for Iran and the other parties involved to resume negotiations towards a long-term peaceful solution’. In December, the Security Council voted unanimously to impose limited sanctions against Iran for its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment. It ordered all countries to stop supplying Iran with materials and technology that could contribute to its nuclear and missile programs and to freeze assets of 10 key Iranian companies and 12 individuals related to those programs. Iran responded by expanding its enrichment program — and Ahmadinejad has remained defiant. The proposed new sanctions in the draft resolution would ban Iranian arms exports and freeze the assets of 28 additional individuals and organizations involved in the country’s nuclear and missile programs –about a third linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, an elite military corps. The package also calls for voluntary restrictions on travel by the individuals subject to sanctions, on arms sales to Iran, and on new financial assistance or loans to the Iranian government. The South African document said ‘the resolution should focus only on Iran’s nuclear program’ and proposed amendments dropping the ban on Iranian arms exports and voluntary calls on all countries ‘to exercise vigilance and restraint’ in supplying arms to Tehran. A call on all countries and institutions ‘not to enter into new commitments for grants, financial assistance and concessional loans’ to the Iranian government would also be dropped. For the same reasons, the South Africans proposed amendments that would eliminate all seven members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and three organizations affiliated with the elite military corps from the list of those subject to an asset freeze and travel ‘vigilance’. South Africa’s UN Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo, who refused to comment on the specifics of the proposal except to say that it was following ElBaradei’s suggestion, said the country wants to stress the importance of political negotiations. ‘South Africa is not a window dressing in this council’, he said when asked about the extensive amendments. ‘We have started engaging with’ the permanent members, he said.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/19/AR2007031901357_2.html
On Tuesday, AFP chimed in: “South Africa pushed on Monday for a 90-day freeze of Iran’s uranium enrichment in exchange for a simultaneous suspension of UN sanctions that the Security Council is looking to toughen. The 90-day, simultaneous suspension was contained in a series of South African amendments, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, to a draft resolution agreed by six major powers last week and toughening UN sanctions slapped on Iran in December for its nuclear defiance. ‘The 90-day period of grace provided to Iran would allow for a de-escalation of tensions and create an opportunity for Iran and the other parties involved to resume negotiations toward a long-term solution’, the South African text said. ‘Sanctions should never be adopted in haste when other tracks for the peaceful resolution of a situation should be addressed’, the text said. The idea of a simultaneous 90-day suspension of Iran’s uranium enrichment and of UN sanctions against Iran was first proposed earlier this year by Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency. Diplomats in Vienna, meanwhile, told AFP that Iran had denied UN inspectors access to its underground uranium enrichment plant on Monday. Blocking definitively IAEA access to Natanz could be a violation of Iran’s obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, with as-yet unknown impact on the UN sanctions talks … [T]he South African amendments would gut much of the text, by deleting the weapons ban and many financial sanctions, according to Western diplomats. They would also drop several names of companies and persons subjected to assets freezes or travel restrictions, including Bank Sepah, key officers of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps and its entities. ‘I don’t think that these amendments are consistent with the approach the Security Council is following’, said French Ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere. South Africa, which dismantled its nuclear weapons program during its 1990s transition to democracy, has consistently defended Iran’s right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. The South African envoy said the co-sponsors of the draft resolution requested informal talks for Tuesday ‘on other related matters, not to negotiate’ the text. ‘The negotiations (on the draft among the council’s 15 members) will start on Wednesday’, he added. The sanctions package was agreed last week by envoys of the council’s five permanent members — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States — plus Germany. The United States announced Monday it had granted visas to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and 38 aides and bodyguards so he can address the Security Council when it votes on the new sanctions resolution.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Iran made an additional request on Monday for visas for 33 air crew and those were also expected to be granted. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice discussed preparations for the new UN sanctions vote with her counterparts from the European Union and Germany. The West fears Iran aims to produce nuclear weapons with the enriched uranium, but Tehran insists the fuel is for peaceful energy purposes only. Iran warned against tougher sanctions on Monday. ‘Adopting new resolutions by the Security Council … will face Iran’s proportionate response’, Abbas Araghchi, deputy foreign minister in legal and international affairs, said in a meeting with foreign ambassadors. The United States says it wants a diplomatic solution to the nuclear standoff, but it has never ruled out a military option.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070320/wl_afp/irannuclear
politicsunsafrica;_ylt=Arg4e9xiewXLo7Kzn43QxthvaA8F
Then, Reuters reported Tuesday that, with the new South African amendments to the draft, “While the draft could probably be adopted by the Security Council without South Africa’s backing, the major powers had wanted passage to be unanimous, and include an important developing nation such as South Africa. In a paper of ‘required amendments’ sent to the 15 council members on Sunday and obtained by reporters on Monday, South Africa also called for all sanctions to be suspended for 90 days so another round of political negotiations could be held with Tehran. Consequently, council diplomats, who had hoped for a vote on the draft resolution this week, said they did not expect one until next week…Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo, this month’s council president, told reporters the draft ‘was not written by God’. He said South Africa’s main objective was to limit sanctions to nuclear materials and technology and not expand them, as the draft does, into other areas. The new proposed resolution is a follow-up to one adopted by the Security Council on December 23 that imposed trade sanctions on sensitive nuclear materials and technology and froze assets of key Iranian individuals, groups and businesses. Its key measures are an embargo on any conventional as well as unconventional arms Iran is allowed to export and a list of people and companies whose assets abroad would be frozen. The South African paper eliminates most of the list, including the state-owned Bank Sepah, Revolutionary Guard commanders and the companies they control. And it asks for a 90-day ‘timeout’ to allow ‘for political negotiations to find a long-term solution’. The paper says this is based on a proposal by Mohamed ElBaradei, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency. But ElBaradei’s version of a ‘timeout’ was that the sanctions should be suspended at the same time as Iran halted its enrichment work, and he gave no time frame. The new draft, like the December resolution, calls for the U.N. sanctions to be suspended only after Iran stops uranium enrichment work so negotiations can resume. After intensive negotiations, Germany and the permanent council members with veto rights — the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China — agreed on a text last week. Adoption requires a minimum of nine votes and no veto. The sponsors probably have that but their aim was to show a united front toward Iran. In addition to the five powers, the 10 elected council members, who serve for two-year terms, are: Congo Republic, Ghana, Peru, Qatar, Slovakia, Belgium, Indonesia, Italy, Panama and South Africa…British Ambassador Emyr Jones Parry, said, ‘I don’t, myself, see the South African amendments themselves as being helpful to the sort of approach I’ve adopted, but that’s for discussion’.” http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-iran-nuclear-un.html
Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki is in South Africa today, and will certainly be discussing the SC resolution with his hosts.
U.S. State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack told journalists today that “[W]e don’t claim to have cornered the market on knowledge or insight to these resolutions and of course, we welcome the input of others. We do, however, think it’s important to maintain the integrity of the resolution as it’s currently drafted. We think it is a good, strong resolution appropriate to the moment in which we find ourselves. We’ve said before that it is an incremental increase in the pressure on Iran, but we think it is important to pass this resolution in a timely manner. We’re going to do everything we can to try to bring all the members of the Security Council on board with this resolution and make them comfortable with it. And part of that is talking through with them the logic underpinning the language that we have in there and the ideas that are in there and why we think it is appropriate that all of the entities currently cited in the resolution and its annexes should remain there, based on Iranian past behavior and our desire to get them to change their behavior. Everybody has to remember the point of this exercise is to use diplomatic leverage to get the Iranians to change their behavior. The negotiating pathway is still open. You’ve heard that from us repeatedly, heard it yesterday from Secretary Rice. So we hope when President Ahmadinejad comes to the Security Council that he chooses that moment to tell the Iranian people, to tell the world that Iran is ready to come back into the fold, to come back into those nations who are ready to negotiate with them.”
Asked about whether or not there might be problems with the Iranian President arriving in time for an eventual UN Security Council meeting, McCormack replied: “we at this point certainly don’t foresee any problem with President Ahmadi-Nejad and his immediate contingent being able to travel here on time. We’re going to do everything we can to make sure we fulfill our host country obligations that will allow him to make his presentation at the Security Council. And we would just hope that that presentation includes a statement about Iran’s willingness to negotiate with the rest of the world as opposed to continue to defy it”.
Four years after U.S. invasion of Iraq, one look back
An interesting read can be found at the Nation magazine’s 2 April 2007 issue, in an article entitled “Made in USA“, which at least starts off as a rather scathing review of two of what the author, Perry Anderson, calls “fawning” biographies of Kofi Annan:
“The facts of Annan’s career are clear enough, and in practice neither writer casts much of a veil over them. The academically ungifted son of a manager for Unilever in colonial Ghana, he was spotted as likely material by a scout for the Ford Foundation and dispatched to Minnesota to study economics at a local college. There, Traub explains, he learned something of more lasting value: ‘Annan himself had become persuaded of the merits of capitalism, and of the American way generally’. Perhaps with this in mind, the Carnegie Foundation got him to the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, where he failed to take any degree, leaving instead for a low-level job in the World Health Organization. For the next twenty years, he gradually moved up the bureaucratic ladder in the UN system, with a stint at MIT to acquire management lore, finally landing a post in the services department of the Secretariat in New York in the early ’80s. From there, shortly before the Clinton Administration came to office, he edged his way toward the number-two position in the department for ‘special political affairs’, with subordinate responsibility for the Middle East and Africa. When Washington pressed for UN troops to be sent into Somalia, his superior opposed the mission. Annan took the American line. His chief was duly ousted, and Annan was put in charge of all peacekeeping operations, as they were now called, in February 1993.
A year later, in January 1994, he received an urgent cable from Roméo Dallaire, the Canadian lieutenant general in charge of the UN force in Rwanda, warning him of impending slaughter of the Tutsi population in the country and explaining he planned to intervene by raiding Hutu arms caches. Not only did Annan refuse to allow any measures to be taken to stop the unleashing of genocide; he insured that the fax informing him of what was in store did not reach the Security Council. Approximately 800,000 Tutsis died in the ensuing massacre. Measured by consequences, the culpability of Kurt Waldheim, exposed for concealing his service as a Nazi intelligence officer in the Balkans, was puny by comparison. Annan remained quite unmoved until it became too impolitic to deny any remorse. The extent of his contrition is summed up by all he would say to Traub, after a long pause, about his part in the fate of Rwanda: ‘In retrospect, and this is also the culture of the house, we should have used the media more aggressively, and exposed the situation for them to see. Of course, at that time this organization was media-shy’. Read: Don’t blame me, I’m the one who became media-friendly. As banalizations go, Arendt might have had some words for it.
Far from being an impediment, however, Annan’s performance regarding Rwanda was in a way a condition of his further ascent. The Clinton Administration, gearing up for intervention in the Balkans, was determined not to allow any distractions over killings in Africa to deflect public attention from Bosnia–where the scale of death, though high, was neither proportionately nor absolutely near that in Rwanda. But strategic interest, not to speak of skin color, made the region altogether another matter. As a Pentagon memorandum about Rwanda put it at the time: ‘Be Careful. Legal [department] at State [department] was worried about this yesterday–Genocide finding could commit USG [the US government] to actually ‘do something’.’ Clinton and Albright, naturally, did nothing. When, on the other hand, they pressed the button for action in Bosnia in the summer of 1995, Annan sprang to life and, at Albright’s request–without consulting Boutros-Ghali as Secretary General–he authorized NATO to start heavy bombing of Serb positions. This was the alacrity that made him. Boutros-Ghali, although a former foreign minister of Mubarak’s regime in Egypt, one of America’s most loyal client states, had riled Washington with an increasing lack of deference, dragging his feet over Bosnia and talking too much about Africa. By the time his mandate came up for renewal the following year, the Clinton Administration was determined to oust him and parachute Annan into his place. The most valuable sections of Traub’s book, as of Meisler’s, describe how this was done.
Within a few months of Annan’s green light in Bosnia, a team of top officials in Washington, headed by Albright, was working on a secret plan, Operation Orient Express, for a coup at the UN. As America’s designated candidate, Annan was, of course, party to the scheme. In the Security Council itself, Boutros-Ghali was supported by every member state, with the exception of the United States, which vetoed him. Seven ballots later and following tireless pressure by Albright, every state except France had realized, as Traub remarks, that ‘there was no percentage in blocking the will of such a powerful figure’. Decisive was Washington’s ability to call Russia to heel, bypassing its foreign minister for direct instructions to Yeltsin, on whom it could rely for submission. Once the Russian vote had been pocketed, France caved in, and Annan was home and dry.
Satisfaction in Washington was unconcealed. For Albright’s assistant James Rubin, the UN now had a Secretary General able ‘to understand the importance of cooperation with the world’s first power’. More pointedly still, another of the architects of Orient Express, National Security Council officer Robert Orr, explained: ‘Very few secretaries-general had worked with the U.S. military. Here we were in an era where the U.S. military was going to be a big part of the equation. You needed a secretary-general who understands that the U.S. military is not the enemy’. Or more tersely: ‘Kofi could do it’. Annan duly did it. When NATO launched its aerial attack on Yugoslavia in the spring of 1999 over Kosovo, in patent violation of the UN Charter, the Secretary General, far from condemning the action of the United States and its allies, informed the world that it was legitimate. For services like these–he ‘courted the wrath of the developing world by rejecting anticolonialism in favor of moral principles cherished in the West’–he was much feted and, not surprisingly, awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
The invasion of Iraq, however, would pose a severer test. Annan had presided over the sanctions regime without a qualm and not demurred at Operation Desert Fox, the four-day bombing campaign Clinton oversaw in 1998. When the Bush Administration began its push for war with Resolution 1441, which declared Iraq in material breach of all past resolutions on its disarmament, Annan swung into action to pressure all members of the Security Council to vote for it, personally phoning Syria’s President Bashar Assad to insure that there would not be a single abstention. Unanimity was secured, but a hitch arose at the next stage. The French told the White House that while they could not accept a second Security Council resolution explicitly authorizing an attack on Iraq, which would implicate them, they had no objection to a US invasion based on an American interpretation of 1441–the course that Cheney was urging within the Administration. But Blair, who wanted to join in the attack, insisted that a second resolution was necessary to protect him from criticisms at home, and got Powell’s support for a futile attempt to circumvent a French veto in the Security Council. Such mutual hypocrisies put Annan in an awkward spot. Blessing the Balkan War was one thing: In 1999, the West was united in the attack on Yugoslavia. But now the West, to all appearances, was divided. What should he do? If only the French had come round, we learn, all might have been well. ‘He would have accepted, and perhaps even embraced’, Traub tells us, ‘a resolution authorizing war so long as the council was firmly united behind it’. But unity was not forthcoming, and an embrace remained out of reach. Operation Iraqi Freedom rolled ahead. In March 2003, ‘shock and awe’ hit Baghdad.
Annan, aware that his inspectors had failed to come up with any evidence of WMDs in Iraq, the pretext for war, and that his own position would be weakened by an attack that opened up a line of division between the United States and leading Western allies, indicated his unhappiness at this unfortunate turn of events, but he refrained from condemning the invasion–which, having endorsed an identical bypassing of the Security Council over Kosovo, he was anyway scarcely in a position to do. Once Iraq was conquered, however, he hastened to the assistance of the occupation, for which Bush and Blair wanted backdated cover from the UN. In May, at Annan’s urging, the Security Council ratified the Anglo-American seizure of Iraq, voting unanimously for Resolution 1483, which endorsed Bremer’s Coalition Provisional Authority, and pledged that the UN would play a ‘vital role’, as requested by the White House and Downing Street, in helping it out. Rice and Powell had already chosen the functionary in the Secretariat they wanted for the job, Sergio Vieira de Mello, its human rights commissioner. Vieira de Mello was reluctant to go, but an audience was arranged with Bush, and Annan dispatched him. On arrival in Baghdad, Vieira de Mello’s task was to help Bremer arrange a puppet advisory body to give the Anglo-American armies a local facade. ‘Over the course of six weeks, he persuaded reluctant leadership figures to identify themselves with the American regime’ and got Bremer ‘to change the name of the body to the more dignified Governing Council (even though it remained powerless)’. Traub goes on: ‘This was just what Annan had had in mind when he argued for a serious role for the UN’.
Inevitably, the bid to create a network of collaborators for the occupation made Vieira de Mello a target for retribution by the Iraqi insurgents. In August, in politically the single most effective strike of the war, he and his staff were obliterated by a truck bomb. Annan, who had sent them to their death, did not flinch. [Sorry, but this is not true — Annan was personally devastated by the deaths] To the incredulity even of intimates and the fury of subordinates, so determined was he to do his duty by Bush and Blair that he refused to withdraw the UN mission from Baghdad. It took another bombing, a month later, for him to change his mind and pull UN personnel out of the country. But his commitment to providing cover for the occupation had not altered. Within a few months Lakhdar Brahimi–Algeria’s foreign minister at the height of the voided elections and military repression of 1991-92–was dispatched to Iraq as Annan’s special representative, in the hope that he could repeat his performance of stitching together a client regime for the United States in Afghanistan. Brahimi got out alive, but his mission was no more successful than Vieira de Mello’s, ending in the humiliation of having to announce that the CIA’s Iyad Allawi, picked by the United States, would lead the new Iraqi democracy. Allawi lasted less than a year in his position.
Back in the West, cornered by a reporter from the BBC, Annan was in the end forced to admit, under repeated questioning, that the invasion of Iraq was illegal–‘if you wish,’ he grudgingly added. [His admission to Owen Bennett-Jones may have been grudging, which is should have been, given how leading the interviewer’s questions were, but Annan’s position regretting that the Iraq war was not approved by the UN Security Council, and suggesting some doubts about its legitimacy on that ground, was long-standing.]
How little he wished it could be seen from a poignant lapsus in the same interview. Asked if he was ‘bothered that the United States is becoming an unrestrainable, unilateral superpower’, Annan replied: ‘I think in the end everybody is concluding that it is best to work together with our allies’. Our allies. Identification with the United States could not be more innocently complete.
Annan ended his tenure lowered by scandal, when it was revealed that his son Kojo had received a rake-off of some $450,000 for helping to fix up the Swiss-based company Cotecna with an inspection contract under the Oil for Food program attached to the sanctions regime against Iraq. Annan, denying any knowledge of the contract, hired Clinton’s defense counsel in the Jones-Lewinsky affair to ward off charges of corruption. The Volcker Commission, set up by Annan to investigate profiteering from the Oil for Food program, was obliged to look into the matter. Despite the incontestable fact that Annan had met with Cotecna executives, one of whom testified they had indeed discussed the UN contract with him and that documents had been rapidly shredded by one of Annan’s confidants, Volcker–whose sense of establishment solidarity was not matched by an ear for literary meaning–concluded that the evidence that Annan knew of the contract his son had so coincidentally set up was ‘not reasonably sufficient’: a formula in which the redundancy of the adverb destroys the denial of the adjective. For what would ‘unreasonably’ sufficient be? Even sympathetic reporters like Traub and Meisler can hardly conceal their view of this verdict. Still, anyone who thinks Clinton told the truth about Paula Jones is entitled to believe Annan did so about Cotecna. It would, in any case, be unfair to judge a political record by such episodes. Annan was not personally greedy, and the venality at issue was trivial by comparison with the moral enormity of the sanctions themselves.
What is one to make of the career as a whole? Annan was never a strong figure, or an independent agent. As a UN bureaucrat, he obviously had his share of vanity and ambition, but it was probably no more, and in some cases less, than that of others. There is no reason to suppose his Americanism was purely calculating, a mere means of self-advancement. It belonged to his formation. He achieved high office as a creature of the Clinton Administration, with ties that swaddled him to the end. Although personally fond of Bush and Blair, he never had a comparable rapport with the Republican Administration, which lacked the same confidence in him. When he came under attack over the Oil for Food scandal, the Democratic coterie that had elevated him rallied round. The campaign was led by Richard Holbrooke, imposing the changes in Annan’s entourage that were deemed necessary to save him. In fact, what is really striking about Annan’s tenure as Secretary General is less his personal characteristics than the nature of his inner circle. From the start, it was overwhelmingly Anglo-American, with a sprinkling of figures from the Anglophone zones of the First and Third World–Canada, Pakistan, India, Gambia–trained, like Annan himself, in the United States. A token Frenchman. Not a Russian, a Chinese, a Japanese, even a German or Italian, in sight. The provenance of figures like Robert Orr, head of ‘strategic planning’, lifted straight from the National Security Council in Washington, Louise Fréchette, Deputy Secretary General, dispatched from the Defense Ministry in Ottawa, or, lower down the scale, theorists of humanitarian intervention from Harvard and Princeton like John Ruggie and Michael Doyle, speaks for itself.
But since the real work of the UN is the manufacture not of actions but of legitimations, the two key figures were the set’s ventriloquists, who wrote the speeches and articles furbishing the Secretary General with his rhetorical image–much needed, since Annan’s own powers of expression were wooden in the extreme. This pair, Edward Mortimer and Nader Mousavizadeh, came from the Financial Times and The New Republic, respectively. Not surprisingly, Annan’s various pronouncements, applauded for their eloquence by like-minded colleagues across the West, were little more than lofty versions of editorials in these publications, whose political profile needs little specification. Mortimer, from a high clerical background in England, was a founder of the International Committee for a Free Iraq along with Ahmad Chalabi. Relations between them remained sufficiently close, Meisler tells us, for Chalabi to tip him off in advance of the Oil for Food affair. Mousavizadeh, editor of The Black Book of Bosnia, though technically a Dane, ‘was essentially America’–so says Traub–‘and, like Ruggie, could not view international law as the summum bonum’. Later, Mousavizadeh was elected a Global Leader of Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in Davos, where Ruggie once conducted Annan as ‘the first Secretary-General to speak to the annual conclave of capital’. Mousavizadeh now adorns Goldman Sachs, presumably pending higher things.
Few episodes are more revealing of the part played by this Anglo-American duo than the way in which the world came to learn that NATO’s blitz on Yugoslavia in 1999 was legitimate. Annan, unsure how to react, had to be manned up by his mentors to issue the absolving words. Rejecting a first draft submitted to Annan that expressed regret at the outbreak of war, Mortimer and Mousavizadeh handed him their own document, lauding the attack, to sign. According to Traub, ‘Mortimer says that when he delivered the new version, Annan gazed at it fixedly and finally said, ‘This is the most difficult statement I have had to make as secretary-general.’ And then he agreed to issue the statement’.
In his second mandate, floundering in the Oil for Food crisis, Annan was summoned by Richard Holbrooke to his residence on the Upper West Side for a secret meeting, attended by Orr, Ruggie and Mousavizadeh, and three other Democratic insiders. There Annan was enjoined to fire unwanted colleagues and accept a more competent minder in the shape of Mark Malloch Brown, a former journalist for The Economist–whose main claim to fame was to have been campaign manager for Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, a Bolivian ruler so hated by the population for his neoliberal zeal and subservience to Washington that he had recently had to flee the Presidential Palace by helicopter, and make for Miami. Without a murmur, Annan accepted him as the power in front of the throne. Holbrooke was pained that news of the arrangement had leaked out. ‘The intention was to keep it confidential. No one wanted to give the impression of a group of outsiders, all of them Americans, dictating what to do to a secretary general’. Impressions, apparently, are everything.”
This article concludes with the observation that, after the end of the Cold War, American domination of the UN is unchallenged: “By early 1991 the Gulf War could be launched with Soviet assent and Arab participation, under cover of a deliberately vague Security Council resolution, passed with just one abstention. Victory in the cold war, knocking the USSR out of the ring, and the concomitant eclipse of nationalism by neoliberalism in the Third World, henceforward gave the United States more thoroughgoing real power over the UN than it had enjoyed even at the height of its postwar ascendancy, since it could now rely on the compliance, tacit or express, of Russia and China with its imperatives. Annan’s Secretariat was one product of this change. The multiplication of UN peacekeeping missions in the ’90s, offloading policing tasks of lesser strategic importance for the American imperium was another. Paramountcy does not mean omnipotence. The United States cannot count on always securing UN legitimation of its actions ex ante. But where this is wanting, retrospective validation is readily available, as the occupation of Iraq has shown. What is categorically excluded is active opposition of the UN to any significant US initiative. A Security Council resolution, let alone a Secretary General, condemning an American action is unthinkable. Ban Ki-moon, whose appointment required Chinese assent, may keep a lower profile than Annan, but his role is unlikely to be very different.”
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070402/anderson
Israel says overflights will continue over Lebanon, despite UN saying they should stop
The Israeli English-language newspaper, Jerusalem Post, is reporting today, in an article entitled “UN chief raps IAF Lebanon overflights“, that: “[A] high-ranking IAF officer told The Jerusalem Post that Israel planned to continue flying over Lebanon until the Lebanese fully implemented 1701, which included the return of abducted reservists Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser, and put an end to the arms smuggling to Hizbullah across the Syrian border”.
The article, written by Yaakov Katz with contributions from Herb Keinon and AP, states: “Citing continued violations of the Blue Line international border between Israel and Lebanon, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon slammed Israel in a report he submitted to the Security Council last week on the implementation of Resolution 1701 that ended the Lebanon war last summer. Contradicting claims by high-ranking IAF officers that Israel had dramatically reduced the number of flights over Lebanon, Ban claimed the opposite saying that UNIFIL had reported an increase in overflights in February and March. On some days, the report claimed, Israel violated Lebanese airspace more than 10 times with flights by fighter jets, intelligence-gathering planes and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. … Ban noted reports by UNIFIL of increased tensions between the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) and IDF along the Blue Line, citing a number of cases in which soldiers from both militaries pointed their weapons at one another. Ban also took Israel to task on its repeated refusal to transfer data related to the use of cluster bombs by the IDF during the Lebanon war. The report revealed the extent of the use of cluster bombs, claiming that Israel had dropped them on 854 targets covering more than 34 million square meters. According to the report, each strike location contains hundreds of individual bomblets or sub-munitions and as of February 22, the bomblets have caused 22 civilian deaths and 159 injuries. ‘I call on the government of Israel, once again, to review its policy of overflights through Lebanese airspace, which are a continuing violation of Resolution 1701 (2006), and most urgently to provide the UN with all information on cluster munitions fired during the 2006 conflict’, Ban wrote in the report. In response, a senior government official said that Israel’s use of cluster bombs was in ‘complete compliance with international law’ and came in the face of ‘overwhelming attacks’ against Israeli civilian targets. Regarding Israeli claims that Syria was smuggling weapons into Lebanon, Ban suggested that Security Council members weigh supporting an ‘independent assessment mission to consider the monitoring of the border’. He said the authentication of detailed information from Israel about alleged breaches of the arms embargo across the Lebanese-Syrian border would require independent military assessment. In the report, Ban warned that without progress on ‘core issues’ including the abducted soldiers and Lebanese prisoners as well as the disputed Sheba Farms and Israeli overflights, ‘progress on 1701 could be severely tested in the months to come’. Ban said he was nonetheless pleased that the overall commitment of the governments of Israel and Lebanon to the resolution “remains strong’.” [!] http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1173879106703&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
UN Security Council Resolution 1701 was adopted on 11 March 2006. The most recent report of the UN SG on its implementation was due to be released on 16 March.
UN-Truth has previously reported on the good works of the UNIFIL battallions — including the Spanish lessons being given by Spanish peacekeepers. The San Francisco Chronicle adds, in a report published today, that an Indian battallion is giving very popular yoga classes. It also says: “UNIFIL has monitored Lebanon’s southern border with Israel since 1978, but in the aftermath of last summer’s war, its numbers swelled to 12,000 armed soldiers deployed across south Lebanon, south of the Litani River, in line with U.N. Resolution 1701. A further 10,000 Lebanese troops have been deployed to the area, tasked with preventing any militia groups, first among them the radical Shiite group Hezbollah, from carrying weapons south of the Litani River. U.N. peacekeepers now make up to 400 patrols a day, said McDowall, accessing ‘all areas’ of south Lebanon, a land that was formerly tightly controlled by Hezbollah. ‘We continue to turn up rockets and weapons’, he said. ‘The Lebanese army are performing well and their activities are closely coordinated with us. But it is still a very delicate situation in the south’. Though UNIFIL officials say no armed Hezbollah fighters have been seen moving weapons inside the U.N. force’s area of operation since September, there is growing evidence to suggest the militants have simply moved the majority of their rockets and ammunition north of the Litani River, out of reach of UNIFIL and the Lebanese army. A reporter for the Times of London recently found evidence of Hezbollah fighters building a new line of armed defense just north of the Litani, while a Hezbollah member of parliament said his group had no plans to disarm. ‘I can assure you the resistance is still here’, Hezbollah lawmaker Nawar Sahili said. ‘We are now leaving the south of the Litani for UNIFIL and the Lebanese army. But if Israel attacks Lebanon again, I do not think UNIFIL will defend the country, and the Lebanese army is too weak, so it will be our duty to defend Lebanon again’. Though communities in the south generally have been welcoming of UNIFIL’s presence, a number of incidents in south Lebanon over the past few weeks have begun to strain relations between the peacekeepers and the local populace. A team of French medics was temporarily expelled from Maroun al-Ras, a Hezbollah stronghold, after villagers complained the troops were protecting Israel, not them. Hezbollah has warned UNIFIL against ‘spying’, an accusation that has further heightened tensions.
Meanwhile, 15 young men were briefly arrested in Marjayoun, a town 2 1/2 miles from the border with Israel, after throwing stones at Spanish troops, who locals said had angered the community by raiding a house in search of weapons. The accusation could not be independently verified. Ahmed Hassan, a council leader of Khiyam, one of the towns in south Lebanon worst hit by last summer’s Israeli bombardment, described relations with the Spanish troops as ‘dry’. ‘We are with UNIFIL and we thank them for their work here’, said Hassan. ‘But UNIFIL (troops) are just observers, and if the Israelis decide to bomb us again, the UN will be the first to be hit again’, he said, referring to the July 25 Israeli strike on a U.N. observation post just outside Khiyam, which killed three U.N. observers.” http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/18/MNGHNONA971.DTL
Robert Fisk gave an on-the-spot description of UNIFIL’s situation in an article published in the Independent on Monday 19 March: “The spring rain beat down like ball-bearings on the flat roof of General Claudio Graziano’s office. Much of southern Lebanon looked like a sea of mud this week but all was optimism and light for the Italian commander of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, now 11,000 strong and still expecting South Korea to add to his remarkable 29-nation international army. He didn’t recall how the French battalion almost shot down an Israeli jet last year – it was before his time – and he dismissed last month’s border shoot-out between Israeli and Lebanese troops. No specific threats had been directed at Unifil, the UN’s man in southern Lebanon insisted – though I noticed he paused for several seconds before replying to my question – and his own force was now augmented by around 9,000 Lebanese troops patrolling on the Lebanese-Israeli frontier. There was some vague talk of ‘terrorist threats … associated with al-Qa’ida’ – UN generals rarely use the word ‘terrorism’, but then again Graziano is also a Nato general — yet nothing hard. Yes, Lebanese army intelligence was keeping him up to date. So it must have come as a shock to the good general when the Lebanese Interior Minister Hassan Sabeh last week announced that a Lebanese Internal Security Force unit had arrested four Syrian members of a Palestinian ‘terrorist group’ linked to al-Qa’ida and working for the Syrian intelligence services who were said to be responsible for leaving bombs in two Lebanese minibuses on 13 February, killing three civilians and wounding another 20.
Now it has to be said that there’s a lot of scepticism about this story. Not because Syria has, inevitably, denied any connection to Lebanese bombings but because in a country that has never in 30 years solved a political murder, it’s pretty remarkable that the local Lebanese constabulary can solve this one – and very conveniently so since Mr Sabeh’s pro-American government continues to accuse Syria of all things bestial in the state of Lebanon. According to the Lebanese government – one of those anonymous sources so beloved of the press – the arrested men were also planning attacks on Unifil and had maps of the UN’s military patrol routes in the south of the country. And a drive along the frontier with Israel shows that the UN is taking no chances. Miles of razor wire and 20ft concrete walls protect many of its units.
The Italians, like their French counterparts, have created little ‘green zones’ – we Westerners seem to be doing that all over the Middle East – where carabinieri police officers want photo identity cards for even the humblest of reporters. These are combat units complete with their own armour and tanks although no-one could explain to me this week in what circumstances the tanks could possibly be used and I rather suspect they don’t know. Surely they won’t fire at the Israelis and – unless they want to go to war with the Hizbollah – I cannot imagine French Leclerc tanks are going to be shooting at the Middle East’s most disciplined guerrilla fighters. But Unifil, like it or not, is on only one side of the border, the Lebanese side, and despite their improving relations with the local Shia population — the UN boys are going in for cash handouts to improve water supplies and roads, ‘quick impact projects’ as they are called in the awful UN-speak of southern Lebanon – there are few Lebanese who do not see them as a buffer force to protect Israel. Last year’s UN Resolution 1701 doesn’t say this, but it does call for ‘the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon’. This was a clause, of course, which met with the enthusiastic approval of the United States. For ‘armed groups’, read Hizbollah. The reality is that Washington is now much more deeply involved in Lebanon’s affairs than most people, even the Lebanese, realise. Indeed there is a danger that – confronted by its disastrous ‘democratic’ experiment in Iraq – the US government is now turning to Lebanon to prove its ability to spread democracy in the Middle East. Needless to say, the Americans and the British have been generous in supplying the Lebanese army with new equipment, jeeps and Humvees and anti-riot gear (to be used against who, I wonder?)” http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article2371575.ece
The Israeli Cabinet on Sunday 18 March ‘discussed the provision of rent payment assistance to veterans of the former South Lebanon Army and decided – in continuation of its 12.3.06 decision (
Robert Fisk recently wrote about these South Lebanon Army types in an article in the Independent entitled “Torture in Lebanon via a Toronto stage”, published on 10 March:
“…there really was a girl who posed as a schoolteacher to murder a militia leader. Her name was Soad Bshara and she was a Christian leftist, not a Shia – I’ve even met the man who gave her the gun to kill the militia leader – and she did indeed attempt to assassinate him. But General Antoine Lahd did not die. He showed me his wounds – two bullet holes – not long after his return to Lebanon from hospital in Israel. He was one of Israel’s ruthless proxy warlords in Lebanon and he was in charge of the same brutal Israeli-controlled prison in which Bshara was subsequently locked up. She was not raped, but she was beaten and endured years of custody until the French government organised her release; she lives today in Paris while Lahd, after the collapse of his cruel ‘South Lebanon Army’ in 2000, now lives in Tel Aviv where he runs – wait for it – a nightclub. However, there certainly were well-trained torturers in Lahd’s jail – its real name was Khiam prison and it was turned by the Hizbollah into a museum until being largely destroyed in last summer’s war. The sadists of Khiam used to electrocute the penises of their prisoners and throw water over their bodies before plunging electrodes into their chests and kept them in pitch-black, solitary confinement for months. For many years, the Israelis even banned the Red Cross from visiting their foul prison. All the torturers fled across the border into Israel when the Israeli army retreated under fire from Lebanon almost seven years ago. … The Israelis, of course, didn’t mention their role in Khiam’s horrors – which is why, several years ago, two members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police turned up at my home to ask if I could identify any torturers who might have been given asylum in Canada. I told them that their names were now written on the gates of Khiam prison.” http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article2344778.ece
Meanwhile, the UN SC Council President, Dumisani S. Kumalo of South Africa told journalists on 2 March that Serge Brammertz, head of the Commission investigating the death of former Lebanese Prime Minister, Rafik Hariri, would brief the UN Security Council on 21 March.
A post on the Angry Arab blogspot yesterday denounced the “waste” involved in the UN inquiry: “Of course, I have no interest and no curiosity regarding the identify of Rafiq Hariri’s assassins. I just don’t care personally especially when the Hariri family has taken Lebanon to the brink of civil war all in the name of ‘finding the truth’. I have posted my thinking on this previously. I get upset whenever I read yet another UN report about the investigation. You read it and realize that millions are being spent–no, wasted–on this matter. I am more interested in finding out the identity of those who collaborated with the Israeli war on Lebanon–in Lebanon and beyond. I wish the money of the Hariri’s assassination is spent on some other more useful purpose. And the Syrian regime and its allies in Lebanon continue to praise the professionalism of the new investigator, Braamertz. How foolish they are. Just because the UN, the US really, sent a more quiet and less clumsy and crude investigator, does not mean that this is a ‘professional’ or ‘independent’ investigation. All that comes out of the UN after the end of the Cold War is tainted by US intervention and manipulation. Yes, I said ALL. Paragraph 63 of the new report all but names the Syrian regime as the party that killed Hariri. Syrian officials have not noticed yet. They are busy putting people in jail.”
http://angryarab.blogspot.com/
And, two fascinating news agency reports were published on Saturday in the English-language Tehran Times:
(1) Reuters reports from the UN that “A UN inquiry into the murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri will take air samples from five Middle East nations after it found the suspected suicide bomber grew up in a polluted city. Belgian prosecutor Serge Brammertz, the head of the investigation, said in his seventh report to the UN Security Council on Thursday that he was unlikely to meet a current June deadline and would need more time. Brammertz has previously reported that the suspected suicide bomber — who killed Hariri and 22 others on February 14, 2005 — had not spent his youth in Lebanon, but had likely spent two or three months there before his death.
‘The commission can now add that the man had significant exposure to lead pollution in an urban environment up to the age of about 12, and that such exposure was low during the last 10 years of his life, possibly indicating that he lived in a more rural environment during this period’, the report said after tests on remains of the bomber. It said that to continue this line of inquiry 112 samples had been collected from 28 locations in Lebanon and Syria. ‘Over the coming weeks, it will collect samples in three other countries in the region and further countries are identified for another series of sampling missions’, it said. Syria, whose officials had been implicated by Brammertz’s predecessor in the Hariri assassination, was cooperating with the commission, the report said. Syria denies involvement in the Hariri slaying, which took place after the former prime minister accused Damascus of meddling in Lebanese politics. Street protests in Lebanon after the killing prompted Syria to withdraw forces that had been in the country for 22 years…The Security Council has also asked Brammertz to look at 16 other politically motivated cases, including the November 21 assassination of Lebanese Industry Minister Pierre Gemayel.”
http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=3/17/2007&Cat=2&Num=004
(2) Agence France Presse says: “UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will pay an official visit to Lebanon on March 30, a government source told AFP on Friday. ‘During his visit, Mr. Ban will be received by (Prime Minister Fuad) Siniora’, the source said.
It will be the first trip to Lebanon by the new UN chief, who took over from Kofi Annan on January 1. Ban is due to visit Egypt on March 23, probably followed by Riyadh where he has been invited by Arab League chief Amr Mussa to attend an Arab summit on March 28 and 29. Lebanon’s four-month-long political crisis will be one of the major topics discussed at the Riyadh summit.” http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=3/17/2007&Cat=2&Num=002
So, what will SG BAN be doing between his visit to Egypt on 23 March, and his visit to Riyadh on 28 and 29 March? Any bets? (Israel-occupied Palestinian territory?)
Excerpts from Palestinian “national unity government” program
The Palestinian Legislative Council met on Saturday to approve the platform of the newly-formed “national unity” government.
“Excerpts from the Palestinian gov’t program” —
“Excerpts from the program of the Hamas-Fatah coalition government, provided by incoming Palestinian Information Minister Mustafa Barghouti. The platform was finalized Friday and some of the language differs from a draft published on Hamas and Fatah Web sites earlier in the week:
• The government’s ‘main goal is to establish an independent Palestinian state in the territories occupied in 1967’.
• The government ‘seeks to consolidate a strong foundation of peace, security and prosperity for the whole region, for all generations, present and future’.
• The government ‘respects all agreements reached by the PLO and respects international legitimacy’.
• The government ‘affirms that resistance in all its forms, especially popular non-violent resistance against occupation, is the right of the Palestinian people, guaranteed by international law, and reserves the right of the people to defend itself against aggression. At the same time, the government will work through national consensus to consolidate and expand a cease-fire (with Israel) to become comprehensive, reciprocal and simultaneous’.
• The government ‘will work for the immediate and speedy solution of the problem of the Israeli soldier (Cpl. Gilad Shalit, captured by Hamas-allied militants in June), on the basis of an exchange of prisoners’.
• The government ‘affirms … that conducting negotiations (with Israel) is the authority of the PLO and the head of the Palestinian Authority, on the basis of sticking to national objectives, and with the understanding that every agreement will be presented to a new Palestine National Council (a parliament-in-exile) or to a public referendum’.
• The government ‘rejects the establishment of a state in provisional borders’.
In other parts of the program, the government pledges to reform and depoliticize the security forces, restore law and order and fight corruption, Barghouti said.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070317/ap_on_re_mi_ea/
palestinians_government_program;_ylt=Aqv0FS8Nf4uG2
OttPwCs1ZtvaA8F
Israel’s government already “rejected” the program on Thursday 15 March, and has said it will refuse to deal with the new government.
Los Angeles Times staff writer Ken Ellingwood wrote an article published yesterday, and entitled: “Israel rejects new Palestinian government — The proposed coalition between Hamas and Fatah shows no sign of recognizing the Jewish state, it says”, that: “… ‘Unfortunately, the new government refuses to accept the three international benchmarks. It refuses to accept Israel’s right to exist, it refuses to renounce terrorism and violence, and it refuses to accept the signed agreements in the Middle East peace process’, said Mark Regev, a spokesman for Israel’s Foreign Ministry. ‘Accordingly, Israel will not deal with this new government’. Regev said the West should maintain its aid boycott unless the Palestinian government meets those conditions. The West laid out the criteria last year after Hamas defeated Fatah in parliamentary elections…A draft of the platform posted on a Hamas website said the government would ‘respect’ agreements between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel, wording that falls short of the international conditions. Israel also objects to wording defending the Palestinians’ right to resistance, which it considers an endorsement of violence, and to other provisions it says undercut prospects for peace…U.S. officials have said they will wait until the new Cabinet is named before deciding whether to end the yearlong bid to isolate the Hamas-led government. But Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made it clear during a visit here last month that the new government would have to meet the Western demands to win U.S. acceptance. On Thursday, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the Bush administration would withhold judgment until the final composition of the government and its political programs were clear. Palestinian leaders say they have received more sympathetic signals from European officials, and the decision to form the Hamas-Fatah coalition appears aimed in large part at finding fissures in what has been a solid Western front against renewing aid. The conditions for resuming assistance were laid down last year by the so-called quartet of Middle East peace mediators: the United States, European Union, Russia and United Nations. ‘You can already see the cracks in the front of the Quartet’, said Anat Kurz, a senior research associate at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.”
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-palestinians16mar16,1,5157054.story
By the end of the day Saturday, the new “national unity” government had been sworn in.
The Associated Press reported from Gaza that: “Palestinian lawmakers voted overwhelmingly — 83 to 3 — to approve the government, then leapt to their feet in a standing ovation after the result was announced. Forty-one of the legislature’s 132 members, most of them members of Hamas, are held in Israeli jails and were unable to vote. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah swore in the new 25-member Cabinet shortly after the parliament vote … [The new government] appeared to implicitly recognize Israel by calling for a Palestinian state on lands the Israelis captured in 1967 … Mixed messages emerged on Saturday from the political platform that was announced, and from the speeches leaders of the governing factions made to parliament. But, in sum, they reflected a softening of Hamas’ stance toward Israel. Presenting the government’s program to parliament, Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas said the governing alliance would work ‘first and foremost to establish an independent Palestinian state’, with disputed Jerusalem as its capital, on lands Israel occupied in the 1967 Mideast War. He said the Palestinians maintained the right to resist occupation, but would also seek to widen a truce with Israel, now limited to the Gaza Strip. Abbas … a moderate, focused on conciliatory language, asserting that the Palestinian people ‘reject violence in all its forms’ and seek a comprehensive “peace of freedom and equality” that would be based on negotiations … [The new government] pledged to ‘respect’ previous peace deals between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization. It also called for peace talks to be conducted by Abbas, and for any future deal to be submitted to a national referendum, suggesting that Hamas would not have veto power. Egypt, a leading regional mediator, urged the international community to stop isolating the Palestinian government. Its foreign minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, called the new coalition a ‘precious opportunity to resume the peace process’. Israel saw things differently. Government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said Israel would deal with Abbas, but not with the new government unless it recognizes the Jewish state. ‘With all the desire we all have to assist the Palestinian people, this new government does not stand for any of the international principles that the international community itself defined’, Eisin said. In several quarters, the reaction was more positive. Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere announced that his country would re-establish political and economic relations with the new Palestinian government, saying the coalition was ‘taking important steps towards complying with international demands’. The U.N.’s Mideast envoy, Alvaro de Soto, and the British Foreign Office both called the alliance a ‘step in the right direction’ and said they would watch to see how the new government would implement its political program. Even before the coalition was approved, Russia praised it for taking international demands ‘into account’ … The U.S., traditionally a major donor, remained cool to the coalition plan. ‘It remains our view that any Palestinian government must renounce violence, recognize Israel and respect previous agreements and obligations between the parties’, said Nancy Beck, a State Department spokeswoman. ‘These are foundation principles upon which any Palestinian state must be based. A Palestinian state will not be born from terror’.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070317/ap_on_re_mi_ea/
palestinians_government
Is the U.S. just being a “wise guy” in North Korea negotiations?
No doubt we will all hear, now, about how North Korea (and its like in the “Axis of Evil”) simply cannot be trusted, if they put off dismantling of thie nuclear reactor as they’ve agreed in the “Six Perty Talks”.
Of course, realists will just point out that North Korea’s big mistake was in thinking it could use this as a bargaining chip in any negotiations, in the first place — and that everybody knows they should just do this on its own, to supress proliferation, without any quid pro quo.
But, what is the U.S. thinking? That it will show North Korea … ?
The Associated Press is reporting today that “N. Korea insists U.S. unfreeze $25M“: “North Korea will not stop its nuclear activity unless $25 million of its funds held in a Macau bank are fully released, the regime’s top nuclear envoy said Saturday. Banco Delta Asia had been blacklisted by Washington since September 2005 for its complicity in North Korean money laundering. The U.S. had promised to resolve the issue as part of the implementation of a landmark nuclear disarmament deal with North Korea. Earlier this week, the U.S. Treasury Department ended its investigation into the small Macau lender and said that ties would be cut with the bank and the U.S. financial system. The move might lead regulators to unfreeze a portion of the money. Issuing the communist state’s first official response to the U.S. decision, Kim Kye Gwan said Saturday in Beijing that his country has not heard anything officially about the lifting of financial sanctions. ‘We will not stop our nuclear activity until our funds frozen in the BDA are fully released’, he said. ‘We will not stop the Yongbyon nuclear facility until the United States fully releases our funds frozen in the BDA’. But U.S. and U.N. officials said they were optimistic about moving forward with the disarmament deal, and a pro-North Korean newspaper in Japan with links to Pyongyang praised the Treasury Department’s decision. Christopher Hill, the chief American nuclear negotiator, said earlier Saturday that he planned to brief Kim on the bank issue in working groups. ‘I don’t think BDA will be an obstacle’, he said before meeting Kim. ‘I think we’ll work that out’. The Treasury Department is expected to provide guidance to help overseas regulators identify accounts at higher risk of involvement of illicit activities. This risk assessment could be used by Macau to release some North Korean money. A senior U.S. Treasury Department official arrived in Macau on Saturday to discuss the results of the investigation with Macanese officials. It will be up to the government of Macau — a semiautonomous Chinese territory — whether to release any of the funds. The risk assessment carried out by the U.S. department could be used by Macau authorities to release between $9 million and $12 million of the frozen funds, The Associated Press has reported. Under a Feb. 13 agreement, the North agreed to shut down Yongbyon, its main nuclear reactor and processing facility, and allow U.N. inspectors for verification by April 14. In return, North Korea would receive energy and economic assistance and a start toward normalizing relations with the U.S. and Japan. The head of the U.N. nuclear agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, said Friday he was optimistic after a visit to North Korea that his inspectors would be able to return to the country by the middle of next month.
‘We still hope we’ll do it by April 13’, the deadline under a 60-day timetable the North agreed to last month, said ElBaradei, chief of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency. ‘The earlier they invite us, the sooner we can go back’, to examine Pyongyang’s nuclear program and place reactors and other facilities under the IAEA seal, he told reporters in Vienna…The North boycotted nuclear talks for more than a year over the bank issue, but agreed to move toward disarmament after the U.S. promised to resolve it. Hill said the U.S. plans to raise the issue of North Korea’s alleged uranium enrichment program when the six-nation talks resume Monday.
U.S. allegations that North Korea has a uranium enrichment program brought on the nuclear crisis in 2002 that led the country to kick out U.N. inspectors and ultimately contributed to North Korea testing its first nuclear bomb last year. North Korea has never publicly acknowledged that it has such a program. Washington will also discuss benchmarks for progress in Pyongyang’s de-nuclearization efforts, Hill said. North Korea would be rewarded for meeting those benchmarks with deliveries of heavy fuel oil agreed to under the Feb. 13 agreement, he said…”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070317/ap_on_re_as/
koreas_nuclear_bank;_ylt=Avr4kMnxeepv_hVJUUdAC6BbbBAF
Journalism to die for …
The Guardian newspaper is running today ‘Fascism is in fashion’, excerpts from the last book written by murdered journalist Anna Politkovskaya:
January 6 2004
“Those at the top and bottom of our society might as well be living on different planets. I set off to see the most underprivileged of all: Psycho-Neurological Orphanage No. 25 on the outskirts of Moscow. The surroundings here are warm and clean. The patient carers are kind, very tired, overworked women. Everything here is good, except that the children don’t cry. They are silent or they howl. There is no laughter.
When he is not grinding his teeth, 15-month-old Danila is silent, peering attentively at the strangers. He does not look at you as you would expect of a 15-month-old baby; he peers straight into your eyes, like an FSB interrogator. He has catastrophically limited experience of human tenderness.
The wave of charitable giving in Russia stopped in 2002 when the Putin administration revoked tax privileges for charities. Until 2002, children in our orphanages were showered with gifts and new year presents. Now the rich no longer give them presents. Pensioners bring them their old, tattered shawls.
Meanwhile, our nouveau riche are skiing this Christmas in Courchevel. More than 2,000 Russians, each earning over half a million roubles [£10,000] a month, congregate for the “Saison russe”. The menu offers eight kinds of oysters, the wine list includes bottles at £1,500, and in the retinue of every nouveau riche you can be sure of finding the government officials, our true oligarchs, who deliver these vast incomes to the favoured 2,000. The talk is of success, of the firebird of happiness caught by its tail feathers, of being trusted by the state authorities. The “charity” of officialdom, otherwise known as corruption, is the quickest route to Courchevel.…
February 6
8.32am: there has been an explosion in the Moscow metro. The train was heading into the city centre during the rush hour when a bomb exploded beside the first door of the second carriage. Thirty people died at the scene, and another nine died later from their burns. There are 140 injured. There are dozens of tiny, unidentifiable fragments of bodies. More than 700 people emerged from the tunnel, having evacuated themselves without any assistance. In the streets there is chaos and fear, the wailing sirens of the emergency services, millions of people terrorised.
At 10.44 the Volcano-5 Contingency Plan for capturing the culprits was implemented, more than two hours after the explosion. Who do they think they are going to catch? If there were any accomplices they will have fled long ago. At 12.12 the police started searching for a man aged 30-35, “of Caucasian appearance” [n.b. — “Caucasian†as in from the Caucuses, as in Chechen etc.]. Very helpful.
February 7
Ivan Rybkin has disappeared. A bit of excitement in the election at last. His wife is going crazy. On February 2, Rybkin harshly criticised Putin and his wife believes that did for him.
February 9
No details have yet been established of the type of bomb used in the metro. Putin keeps repeating, as he did after Nord-Ost [the attack by Chechen militants on a Moscow theatre in 2002, which ended with 130 hostages killed when special forces gassed and stormed the building], that nobody inside Russia was responsible. Everything was planned abroad. A day of mourning has been declared but the television stations barely observe it. Loud pop music and cheerful TV advertisements make you feel ashamed…
February 10
Rybkin has been found. A very strange episode. At midday he announced he was in Kiev. He said he had just been on holiday there with friends and that, after all, a human being has a right to a private life! Kseniya Ponomaryova promptly resigned as leader of his election team. His wife is refusing to talk to him. In late evening he flew into Moscow from Kiev, looking half-dead and not at all like someone who has been having a good time on holiday. He was wearing women’s sunglasses and was escorted by an enormous bodyguard. “Who was detaining you?” he was asked, but gave no reply. He also refused to talk to the investigators from the Procurator’s Office who had been searching for him. It was later announced he might withdraw his candidacy.
In St Petersburg, skinheads have stabbed to death nine-year-old Khursheda Sultanova in the courtyard of the flats where her family lived. Her father, 35-year-old Yusuf Sultanov, a Tadjik, has been working in St Petersburg for many years. That evening he was bringing the children back from the Yusupov Park ice slope when some aggressive youths started following them.
In a dark connecting courtyard leading to their home the youths attacked them. Khursheda suffered 11 stab wounds and died immediately. Yusuf’s 11-year-old nephew, Alabir, escaped in the darkness by hiding under a parked car. Alabir says the skinheads kept stabbing Khursheda until they were certain she was dead. They were shouting, “Russia for the Russians!” The Sultanovs are not illegal immigrants. They are officially registered as citizens of St Petersburg, but fascists are not interested in ID cards. When Russia’s leaders indulge in soundbites about cracking down on immigrants and guest labourers, they incur the responsibility for tragedies such as this.
Fifteen people were detained shortly afterwards, but released. Many turned out to be the offspring of people employed by the law-enforcement agencies of St Petersburg. Today, 20,000 St Petersburg youths belong to unofficial fascist or racist organisations. The St Petersburg skinheads are among the most active in the country and are constantly attacking Azerbaijanis, Chinese and Africans. Nobody is ever punished, because the law-enforcement agencies are themselves infected with racism. You have only to switch off your audio recorder for the militia to start telling you they understand the skinheads, and as for those blacks … etc, etc. Fascism is in fashion.
February 11
The Candidate Rybkin soap opera continues. Before this, Rybkin had the reputation of being a meticulous person, not a heavy drinker and even slightly dull. “Two days in Kiev” are very much out of character. Rybkin reports that after he disappeared he spent a certain amount of time in Moscow Province at Woodland Retreat, the guest-house of the Presidential Administration. He was taken from there and found himself in Kiev. He says further that those controlling him compelled him to call Moscow from Kiev and talk lightheartedly about having a right to a private life.
February 12
Alexander Litvinenko in London and Oleg Kalugin in Washington, former FSB/KGB officers who have been granted political asylum in the west, have suggested that a psychotropic substance called SP117 may have been used on Rybkin. [Litvinenko died in London last November after being poisoned.] This compound was used in the FSB’s counter-intelligence sections and in units combating terrorism, but only in exceptional cases on “important targets”. SP117 is a truth drug that prevents an individual from having full possession of his mind. He will tell everything he knows. These statements will not save Rybkin…
February 13
Ivan Rybkin has announced that he will not be returning from London. A defecting presidential candidate is a first in our history. Nobody now has any doubt that the regime drugged him.
February 15
The Sultanovs, the family of the little girl Khursheda who was murdered by skinheads in St Petersburg, have abandoned Russia and gone to live in Tajikistan. They took a small coffin containing the child’s remains.â€
Extracted from A Russian Diary, copyright © Anna Politkovskaya 2007
http://www.guardian.co.uk/russia/article/0,,2036221,00.html
Iran’s President’s visa request to attend UN Security Council meeting is being processed
U.S. State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack said Friday that the State Department is “going to do everything that we can in accordance with our host country responsibilities to expedite the issuing of any such visas [to an Iranian delegation led by President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad] … We would hope that President Ahmadinejad, when he comes before the Security Council, would take that opportunity and that moment to say that Iran has accepted the hand which has been extended in the form of the … offer to negotiate with Iran.”
McCormack noted that a visa has already been granted to President Ahmedinejad once, to address the UN General Assembly (where he spoke of seeing “a light” as he addressed the diplomats from UN member states, leading to worries about the Iranian President’s possible “messianic” vision).
In an interview in Geneva earlier this week [see post on 13 March], Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said that “There are on-and-off dialogs, but we are looking for an official round of discussions … Usually we consult with different countries, but there hasn’t been any specific proposalâ€. Mottaki said. There are no specific proposals now, though there are consultations, he indicated.”
McCormick said Friday that: “My understanding is that the Iranians have requested visas for President Ahmadinejad as well as the traveling delegation through our
Embassy in Bern, Switzerland. That’s the standard practice. The last time when we issued the President and his traveling delegation visas, it was done through the Embassy in Switzerland. We are going to make every effort to expedite the processing of these visa applications due to the strictures of law and regulations. I can’t at this point predict for you whether or not a visa will be issued, but let me just in the writing of your stories about the — this particular issue, I would point out that we did issue the visas previously when there was a quest for President Ahmadinejad to travel to the UN. We take our host obligations seriously when you have delegations who wish to travel to the UN for UN business. It’s — under the way the Security Council works it is the right of a state that is the subject of a UN Security Council resolution to request right of rebuttal. So that has been requested by the Iranians. And I guess President Ahmadinejad has decided that he wants to make that case himself. We would really hope that the Iranians choose this moment to select a pathway of dialogue rather than confrontation…[T]his could be potentially a big moment for the Iranians.”
On Thursday, State Department Spokesman McCormack also spoke of negotiations: “There’s an attractive offer that is on the table. They [Iran’s Government] haven’t taken us up on it yet. One can only say that the pathway that President Ahmadinejad is pursuing on behalf of the Iranian people is misguided and unfortunate. But it’s important that the Iranian people know that they have a way out and that way out is via the negotiating table and having this regime take up the P-5+1 on its offer of negotiation.â€
McCormack told journalists that the new draft resolution is “not just a piece of paper. It says ‘Force of International Laws, Chapter 7 Resolution’. It’s serious business and it has had an effect on the ability of the Iranian Government to participate and use the international financial system for ends that we as well as the other members of the international system have said are, at the very least, suspicious and at worse were wrong.â€
On Friday, the UN Spokesperson told journalists at the UN’s daily Noon Briefing that “the Secretary-General’s view [is] that every Member State has the right to come to the UN to defend its position on a matter that is before an organ of the UN. She referred questions on the granting of visa to the U.S. authorities.”
One complication that could emerge is a growing Israeli movement, spearheaded by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to indict the Iranian President for “incitement to genocide†for his remarks predicting Israel’s eventual disappearance, and questioning some of the generally-accepted accounts of the Holocaust. The Genocide Convention has a “universal jurisdiction†provision that might conceivably be used to make Ahmedinejad subject to legal inquiry – although his position as head of government would certainly be invoked to provide immunity. The strategy has already been employed in Europe against former the Chilean ruler General Augusto Pinochet, and against former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, and another Israeli military official, but with greater news or nuisance value than legal effect.
The Iranian opposition group, Mujahedeen-e Khalq, which has been based in Iraq for over two decades, proudly claims to be the source of information about the existence of Iran’s nuclear program. The Mujahedeen released the details after the U.S. occupied Iraq, following its overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s government in 2003.
There is hardly anything that the Iranian Government finds worse, or more irritating, than the Mujahedeen-e Khalq.
Iran, a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), is bound by the IAEA’s Comprehensive Safeguards. Iranian officals argued that they were not obliged to reveal the existence of their nuclear program until it was ready to go on-line. In any case, after the 2003 disclosure, and to calm concerns, Iran agreed to sign an IAEA Additional Protocol, allowing increased inspections, in December 2003. Iran then implemented this Additional Protocol, though it did not officially enter into force. And Iran agreed to suspend, temporarily, its nuclear programme. Then, after three years of what Iran regarded as delays in negotiations with three European Union countries, Iran resumed its nuclear work. When the IAEA Board of Governors subsequently decided to refer Iran’s case to the UN Security Council, the Iranian Parliament, or Majlis, passed a law barring ratification of the Additional Protocol. (To be fair, at least 100 other countries have also not implemented an Additional Protocol agreement either.)
Preliminary sanctions were imposed by the UN Security Council on 23 December, just hours before Christmas eve. Iran was given a 60-day deadline to re-suspend its nuclear activities, but it did not. The IAEA has also said that Iran must enable the agency to fully reconstruct the history of Iran’s nuclear program, and this position is backed by the UN Security Council.
Iran has still not satisfactorily all the questions raised, the IAEA has reported. There is confusion about the authenticity and reliability of some of the information provided by the Mujahedeen disclosures, but all UN Security Council members are now asking Iran to comply with the demands of the international community to re-build confidence in its intentions.
Meanwhile, the Chinese news agency Xinhua is reporting from Tehran that: “Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday voiced his determination to address a UN Security Council meeting to defend his country’s disputed nuclear program. ‘In case the U.S. administration issues my entry visa, I will definitely attend the UN Security Council meeting to defend Iran’s nuclear rights’, he told the Iranian Fars News Agency after a visit to Iran’s central province of Yazd. ‘I do not view any probable consensus among the member states of the group 5+1 as a deterrent to this trip and I do stress the need for my presence at the UN Security Council meeting’,” Ahmadinejad said.”
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-03/17/content_5858355.htm
On Saturday, the Tehran Times published this report from the New York-based News Max news service: “U.S. officials tell NewsMax that they have received notice from the Iranian government that Tehran intends to send a high-level delegation to attend a UN Security Council meeting, which is expected to impose new sanctions on the Islamic Republic over its uranium enrichment program. An official notice was received on Thursday, said one U.S. diplomat. The UN wants Iran’s nuclear activities stopped, but Iran has refused. The council meeting, not yet formally scheduled, is expected to convene next week. Among those the Iranians say will attend are: President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani and Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki. Larijani has become a central player in Iran’s nuclear standoff with the West. The delegation is expected to include almost 100 personnel, including a special Iranian plane that is said to contain a special working office for the visiting delegation. More than 25 security “personnel” are included in the Iranian manifest, says the State Department. All told, as many as a third of the Iranian delegation wishes to remain in the aircraft at John F. Kennedy International Airport. U.S. diplomats had no explanation for the ‘unusual’ Iranian request. Washington was somewhat surprised by the size of the Iranian contingent, explained one U.S. diplomat.”
http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=3/17/2007&Cat=2&Num=005