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The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members: Encyclopedia II - The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Analysis. According to Britain, a majority of the U.N. Security Council members supported its proposed 18th resolution which gave Iraq a deadline to comply with previous resolutions, until France announced that they would veto any new resolution that gave Iraq a deadline. However, for a resolution to pass a supermajority of 9 out of 15 votes are needed. Only four countries announced they would support a resolution backing the war. In the mid 1990s, France, Russia ...

See also:

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Analysis, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Colin Powell's presentation, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Report of Hans Blix on February 14, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Report of Hans Blix on March 7

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Analysis, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Colin Powell's presentation, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Report of Hans Blix on February 14, The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Report of Hans Blix on March 7, Iraq disarmament crisis, Worldwide government positions on war on Iraq, Popular opposition to war on Iraq, Protests against the Iraq war, American popular opinion of war on Iraq, American government position on war on Iraq

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war: Encyclopedia II - The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members



The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Positions of Security Council members

  • United States - The US maintained that Iraq was not cooperating with UN inspectors and had not met its obligations to 17 UN resolutions. The US felt that resolution 1441 called for the immediate, total disarmament of Iraq and continued to show frustration at the fact that months after the resolution was passed Iraq was still not disarming.
  • United Kingdom - Within the United Nations Security Council, the United Kingdom was the primary supporter of the U.S. plan to invade Iraq. Tony Blair, the British prime minister, publicly and vigorously supported American policy on Iraq, but was perceived by some to exert a moderating influence on the American president George W. Bush. British public opinion polls in late January showed that the public support for the war had fallen to about 30%, although by March it had risen above 50%. Britain supported the proposed UN resolution on Iraq.
  • France - On January 20, 2003, French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said, "We think that military intervention would be the worst possible solution," although France believed that Iraq may have had an ongoing chemical and nuclear weapons program. Villepin went on to say that he believed the presence of UN weapons inspectors had frozen Iraq's weapons programs. France also suggested that it would veto any resolution allowing military intervention offered by the U.S. or Britain, even if a majority of the U.N. Security Council members voted for it. Britain and the U.S. sharply criticized France for this position in March, 2003. De Villepin and Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov garnered unusual applause inside the chamber with their speeches against the war.
  • Germany - On January 22, German chancellor Gerhard Schröder at a meeting with French president Jacques Chirac said that he and Mr. Chirac would do all they could to avert war. At the time, Germany was presiding over the Security council.
  • Russia - On the same day, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said that "Russia deems that there is no evidence that would justify a war in Iraq." On January 28, however, Russia's opinion had begun to shift following a report the previous day by UN inspectors which stated that Iraq had cooperated on a practical level with monitors, but had not demonstrated a "genuine acceptance" of the need to disarm. Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated that he would support a US led war if things did not change and Iraq continued to show a reluctance to completely cooperate with inspection teams. However, Putin continued to stress that the US must not go alone in any such military endeavor, but instead must work through the UN Security Council. He also stressed the need for giving the UN inspectors more time.
  • China - The People's Republic of China supported continued weapons inspections. On January 23, the Washington Post reported that the Chinese position was "extremely close" to that of France.
  • Angola - Angola supported continued inspections, but had not taken a stand on disarmament by military action.
  • Bulgaria - Bulgaria suggested that it would support the use of military force to disarm Iraq, even without UN backing.
  • Cameroon - Cameroon encouraged the continued inspections, but had not taken a firm stand on whether or not the country would support a US led strike to invade Iraq.
  • Chile - Chile indicated that it would like inspections to continue, but had not taken a position on the use of military force to disarm Iraq.
  • Guinea - Guinea supported further inspections, but had not taken a position on the use of military force to disarm Iraq.
  • Mexico - Mexico supported further inspections, and indicated that it would support a US led military campaign if it was backed by the UN. The country hinted that it might consider supporting a military campaign without UN backing as well. President Vicente Fox heavily criticized the war when it started.
  • Pakistan - Pakistan supported continued inspections.
  • Syria - Syria seemed to feel that Iraq was cooperating and meeting its obligations under UN resolutions. Syria would have liked to see UN sanctions on Iraq lifted.
  • Spain - Spain supported the US's position on Iraq and supported the use of force to disarm Iraq, even without UN approval.

The UN Security Council and the Iraq war - Analysis

According to Britain, a majority of the U.N. Security Council members supported its proposed 18th resolution which gave Iraq a deadline to comply with previous resolutions, until France announced that they would veto any new resolution that gave Iraq a deadline. However, for a resolution to pass a supermajority of 9 out of 15 votes are needed. Only four countries announced they would support a resolution backing the war.

In the mid 1990s, France, Russia and other members of the U.N. Security Council asked for sanctions on Iraq to be lifted. The sanction were criticized for making the people suffer and being the cause of a humanitarian catastrophe [2].

Many people also felt that many of the governments that had aligned themselves with the US, despite strong opposition among their constituencies, did so because of their own economic ties to the United States. The United States used strong pressure and threats against other nations to attempt to coerce nations on the Security Council to support them. For example, Mexican diplomats complained that talks with American officials had been "hostile in tone", and had shown little concern for the Mexican government's need to accommodate the overwhelmingly antiwar sentiment of its people. One Mexican diplomat reported that the US told them that "any country that doesn't go along with us will be paying a very heavy price." [3]

The Institute for Policy Studies published a report [4] analyzing what it called the "arm-twisting offensive" by the United States government to get nations to support it. Although President Bush described nations supporting him as the "coalition of the willing", the report concluded that it was more accurately described as a "coalition of the coerced." According to the report, most nations supporting Bush "were recruited through coercion, bullying, and bribery." The techniques used to pressure nations to support the United States included a variety of incentives including:

  • Promises of aid and loan guarantees to nations who support the U.S.
  • Promises of military assistance to nations who support the U.S.
  • Threats to veto NATO membership applications for countries who don't do what the U.S. asks
  • Leveraging the size of the U.S. export market and the U.S. influence over financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
  • Deciding which countries receive trade benefits under such laws as the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) and the Free Trade Agreement (FTA), which, as one of its conditions for eligibility for such benefits, requires that a country does "not engage in activities that undermine United States national security interests".
  • Deciding what countries it should buy oil from in stocking its strategic reserves. The U.S. has exerted such pressure on several oil-exporting nations, such as Mexico.

At a press conference, the White House press corps broke out in laughter when Ari Fleischer denied that "the leaders of other nations are buyable".

In addition to the above tactics, the British newspaper The Observer published an investigative report revealing that the National Security Agency of the United States was conducting a secret surveillance operation directed at intercepting the telephone and email communications of several Security Council diplomats, both in their offices and in their homes. This campaign, the result of a directive by National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, was aimed primarily at the delegations from Angola, Cameroon, Chile, Mexico, Guinea and Pakistan. The investigative report cited an NSA memo which advised senior agency officials that it was "'mounting a surge' aimed at gleaning information not only on how delegations on the Security Council will vote on any second resolution on Iraq, but also 'policies', 'negotiating positions', 'alliances' and 'dependencies' - the 'whole gamut of information that could give US policymakers an edge in obtaining results favourable to US goals or to head off surprises'."

The authenticity of this memo has been called into question by many in the US and it is still unclear as to whether or not it is legitimate. [5] The story was carried by the European and Australian press, and served as a further embarrassment to the Bush Administration's efforts to rally support for his war. Wayne Madsen, who was a communications security analyst with the NSA in the 1980s, believes that the memo is authentic, and believes that this memo was aimed at other nations who are part of the ECHELON intelligence network, namely Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom. Additionally, a member or Britain's Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), Katharine Gun was charged under the official secrets Act in connection with the leaking of the memo. She stated her intention to plead not guilty on the grounds that her actions were justified to prevent an illegal war. The prosecution declined to present any evidence at her trial.

Clare Short, a UK cabinet minister who resigned in May 2003 over the war, stated in media interviews that British intelligence regularly spied on UN officials. She stated that she had read transcripts of Kofi Annans conversations.

Other related archives

1980s, 2002, 2003, 2003 Invasion of Iraq, 2003 Iraq war, 2004, African Growth and Opportunity Act, Al-Qaida, American, American government position on war on Iraq, American popular opinion of war on Iraq, Angola, Australia, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, China, Clare Short, Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Dominique de Villepin, Donald Rumsfeld, ECHELON, February 14, February 15, February 5, France, GCHQ, George W. Bush, Gerhard Schröder, Germany, Government Communications Headquarters, Guinea, Hans Blix, Igor Ivanov, Iraq, Iraq disarmament crisis, Jacques Chirac, January 20, January 22, January 23, January 28, Katharine Gun, Kofi Annan, March, March 2003, Mexico, National Security Agency, New Zealand, Niger, Operation Rockingham, Pakistan, People's Republic of China, Popular opposition to war on Iraq, Protests against the Iraq war, Resolution 1441, Russia, Security Council, September 16, September Dossier, Spain, Support and opposition for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Syria, Tony Blair, U.S. Secretary of Defense, U.S. Secretary of State, U.S. plan to invade Iraq, UN Security Council, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, Vicente Fox, Vladimir Putin, Washington Post, Worldwide government positions on war on Iraq, Yugoslavia, supermajority, weapons of mass destruction



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Positions of Security Council members", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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