Baseless Comparisons: UN Security Council Resolutions on Iraq and Israel (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS) JERUSALEM ISSUE BRIEF Vol. 2, No. 7 By Dore Gold 09/24/02)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief2-7.htm
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Since Iraq´s August 1990 invasion of Kuwait and the 1991 Gulf War
that followed, Arab diplomats at the United Nations have charged the
international community with a policy of "double standards" regarding
UN actions against Iraq for failing to comply with UN Security
Council resolutions. Thus, in the debate leading up to the adoption
of UN Security Council Resolution 1435, concerning Israel´s presence
in Ramallah, the representative of the Arab League charged on
September 23, that the UN was pressing Iraq while ignoring Israeli
violations of UN resolutions.1 Last May, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister
Tariq Aziz complained that sanctions were imposed on Iraq for non-
compliance but not on Israel.2
The effort by some Arab
diplomats to draw comparisons between UN
action on Israel and Iraq misses the fundamental differences between
the different kinds of resolutions in the UN organization. First of
all, there are UN General Assembly resolutions, non-binding
recommendations that reflect the political currents in the world
body. Then there are UN Security Council resolutions, which have
their own hierarchy.
Chapter VI and Chapter VII
Resolutions
Two chapters of the UN Charter clarify the powers of
the UN Security
Council and its resolutions. Resolutions adopted under Chapter VI of
the UN Charter - that deals with "Pacific Resolution of Disputes" -
are implemented through a process of negotiation, conciliation, or
arbitration between the parties to a dispute. UN Security Council
Resolution 242 from November 1967 is a Chapter VI resolution which,
when taken together with Resolution 338, leads to an Israeli
withdrawal from territories (not all the territories) that Israel
entered in the 1967 Six-Day War, by means of a negotiated settlement
between Israel and its Arab neighbors. The resolution is not self-
enforced by Israel alone; it requires a negotiating process.
The most severe resolutions of the UN Security Council are
those
specifically adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter - that deal
with "Threats to Peace, Breaches of the Peace and Acts of
Aggression." When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the UN Security
Council adopted all its resolutions against Iraq under Chapter VII of
the UN Charter. The implementation of those resolutions was not
contingent on Iraqi-Kuwaiti negotiations, for Iraq engaged in a clear-
cut act of aggression. Moreover, UN resolutions on Iraq are self-
enforcing, requiring Iraq alone to comply with their terms. However,
the UN recognized, under Article 42 of the UN Charter, the need for
special military measures to be taken if a Chapter VII resolution is
ignored by an aggressor.
It is noteworthy that in 1967, no UN
body adopted a resolution
branding Israel as the aggressor in the Six-Day War, despite Soviet
efforts, for it was commonly accepted that Israeli actions were the
result of a war of self-defense.
The debate over compliance
with UN resolutions, however, has called
attention to flagrant violations of Chapter VII resolutions on Iraq
by Syria, which is ironically a member of the UN Security Council.
Currently, all of Iraq´s oil trade is under UN sanctions. UN Security
Council Resolution 661 provided that no state was to trade in Iraqi
oil; subsequently, the UN created, for humanitarian reasons, the oil-
for-food program, which permitted Iraqi oil sales as long as the UN
could strictly control the expenditure of any resulting oil revenues
for food and medicine.
However, in the last two years, Syria
has agreed to illegally pump
Iraqi oil through its pipeline to the Mediterranean in violation of
UN Chapter VII sanctions on Iraq. Syria is earning approximately $1
billion per year from this illegal trade that circumvents the UN oil-
for-food program. Additionally by harboring known international
terrorist organizations, like Hamas, Hizballah, and the Islamic
Jihad, Syria is violating the specific terms of UN Security Council
Resolution 1373, adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter after
the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.
The
present effort to draw comparisons between Iraqi non-compliance
with Chapter VII UN Security Council resolutions and UN Security
Council resolutions on Israel under Chapter VI is baseless. This
campaign may have been launched to divert attention away from other
states like Syria, violating Chapter VII resolutions with respect to
Iraq or with respect to the current American-led campaign against
international terrorism. (www.jcpa.org. © Copyright. 09/24/02)
Notes
1. Julia Preston with James Bennet, "At U.N., U.S. Calls for End to
the Siege of Arafat," New York Times, September 24, 2002.
2. Ewen MacAskill, "Iraq Hits at UN for Hypocrisy on Israel,"
Guardian, May 2, 2002.
3. Meir Rosenne, "Legal Interpretations of UNSC 242," in UN Security
Council Resolution 242: The Building Black of Peacemaking
(Washington: Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 1993), pp. 29-
34.
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