(IPS): U.S. Bypasses Security Council on Impending Invasion of Syria

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 23:10:25 +0200

U.S. Bypasses Security Council on Impending Invasion of Syria


Analysis by <http://www.ipsnews.net/author/thalif-deen/> Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 12 2014 (IPS) - The U.N. Security Council (UNSC), the
only international body empowered to declare war and peace, continues to
remain a silent witness to the widespread devastation and killings
worldwide, including in Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and Ukraine.

A sharply divided UNSC has watched the slaughter of Palestinians by Israel,
the genocide and war crimes in Syria, the Russian military intervention in
Ukraine, the U.S. military attacks inside Iraq and now a virtual invasion of
Syria - if U.S. President Barack Obama goes ahead with his threat to launch
air strikes against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

The United States has refused to go before the UNSC for authorisation and
legitimacy - even if it means suffering a veto by Russia or China or both.

Still, ironically, Obama is scheduled to preside over a UNSC meeting when he
is in New York in late September since the United States holds the
presidency under geographical rotation among the 15 members in the Council.

A head of state or a head of government chairing a meeting of the Security
Council is a rare event, not a norm.

But it does happen when a UNSC member presides over the Council in the month
of September during the opening of a new General Assembly session, with over
150 world leaders in tow.

In his address to the nation early this week, Obama said, "I will chair a
meeting of the U.N. Security Council to further mobilise the international
community around this effort" ("to degrade and destroy ISIS", the rebel
Islamic militant group inside Iraq and Syria).

Still, the proposed strike inside Syria is not part of the Council's agenda
- and certainly not under the U.S. presidency.

Obama also said intelligence agencies have not detected any specific ISIS
plots against the United States.

ISIS is still a regional threat that could ultimately reach out to the
United States, he said, justifying the impending attacks.

Norman Solomon, executive director of the Washington-based Institute for
Public Accuracy and co-founder of RootsAction.org, told IPS, "As an
instrument for preventing or restraining war, the United Nations has
devolved into a plaintive institution, with its Security Council dominated
by superpowers - most of all by the United States in tandem with its
permanent-member allies."

He said it used to be that U.S. presidents at least went through the motions
of seeking Security Council approval for going to war, but this is scarcely
the case anymore.

"When it lacks the capacity to get what it wants by way of a non-vetoed
Security Council resolution for its war aims, the U.S. government simply
proceeds as though the United Nations has no significant existence," said
Solomon, author of 'War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning
Us to Death.'

Internationally, he said, this is the case because there are no geopolitical
leverage points or institutional U.N. frameworks sufficient to require the
United States to actually take the Security Council seriously as anything
much more than a platform for pontification.

A Russian official was quoted as saying the Obama administration would need
to get a UNSC resolution before it launches air attacks inside Syria -
which, of course, the Russians did not do either before they intervened in
Ukraine.

Perhaps all this points only in one direction: the UNSC has time and again
proved its unworthiness - and remains ineffective and politically impotent
having outlived its usefulness, particularly in crisis situations.

Humanitarian aid? Yes. Collective international action? No.

The veto-wielding permanent members of the UNSC - the United States,
Britain, France, China and Russia - are obviously not interested in
fairness, justice or political integrity but only interested in protecting
their own national interests.

In an editorial Friday, the New York Times struck a cautious note when it
said there will be no turning back once air strikes enter Syrian territory,
unleashing events that simply cannot be foreseen.

"Surely, that's a lesson America has learned from the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan."

Stephen Zunes, professor of politics and international studies at the
University of San Francisco where he serves as coordinator of the programme
in Middle Eastern Studies, told IPS, "Regardless of whether it is justified
or not, air strikes by the United States or other foreign powers in Iraq and
Syria are clearly acts of war requiring U.N. authorisation."

If the threat from ISIS and the limited nature of the military response is
what President Obama says it is, then the United States should have little
trouble in receiving support from the Security Council, said Zunes, who has
written extensively on the politics of the Security Council and serves as a
senior policy analyst for Foreign Policy in Focus at the Institute for
Policy Studies.

"The refusal to come to the United Nations, then, serves as yet another
example of the contempt Washington apparently has for the world body," he
said.

Peter Yeo, executive director of Better World Campaign, a non-governmental
organisation (NGO) dedicated to strengthening U.S.-U.N. relations, has
called on the U.S. Congress to engage the United Nations in addressing the
critical challenges in the Middle East, including Syria and Iraq.

"Let Congress know the U.S. cannot go it alone in confronting this
challenge, and that we should continue to utilise resources like the U.N.
Security Council and the U.N.'s humanitarian response agencies to combat
ongoing and future threats," he said.

More than ever, the U.S. needs the U.N. as a strategic partner to help
facilitate the complex security and humanitarian response needs in the
region, he said in a statement released Thursday.

Solomon told IPS that the domestic politics of the U.S. have been sculpted
in recent decades to relegate the U.N. to the role of afterthought or
oratorical amphitheatre unless it can be coupled to the U.S. war train of
the historic moment.

"Deformed as it is as a representation of only the governments of some
sectors of global power, the Security Council still has some potential for
valid exercise of discourse - even diplomacy - if not legitimate
decision-making per se."

But the Security Council ultimately represents the skewed agendas of its
permanent members, and those agendas only include peace to the extent that
permanent members are actually interested in peace and such interest, at
best intermittent, depends on undependable willingness to look beyond narrow
nationalistic and corporate interests, Solomon added.

"Of course, the U.S. government has continued to engage in acts of war in
several countries on an ongoing basis for more than a dozen years."

The military strikes now being planned by the White House will add Syria to
the list of countries attacked by a Washington-based government that speaks
loudly about international law at the same time that it violates
international law at will, he argued.

The U.S. government will decide whether to seek any authorisation or
resolution from the U.N. Security Council primarily on the basis of gauging
likely benefits of rhetorical grandstanding, Solomon predicted.

Edited by Kitty Stapp

The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen_at_aol.com

The U.N. Security Council discusses the situation in Syria on June 26, 2014.
Credit: UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz

The U.N. Security Council discusses the situation in Syria on June 26, 2014.
Credit: UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz

 





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Received on Fri Sep 12 2014 - 17:11:26 EDT

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