UNITED NATIONS
- As the Bush administration drums up support to arm-twist Iraq
into
complying with UN Security Council resolutions, some critics are
turning the
tables on Washington, accusing it of "double standards" for not being
as
tough on its ally, Israel.
Israel has flouted 29 Council resolutions, say critics. Iraq has
ignored 16. Israel's supporters call this an apples-and-oranges
comparison.
But even UN advocates say the two cases put the flaws of the
international
system into sharp relief.
"In the case of both Iraq and Israel, the Security Council has
passed
resolutions that are generally in line with the aspirations of the
international community," says James Paul, executive director of the
Global
Policy Forum, a UN watchdog. "But how do you get them into compliance?
That's the conundrum of the international system: You don't have a very
good
enforcement process. If a great power wants to do something in its
national
interest, it will. In a world of strong and weak nation-states, the
weaker
nations have this 'weak sovereignty' - they're not able to defend
their
sovereignty from the powerful actors in the system."
The actions of the 15-member Security Council this week have
reignited the double-standard debate.
One week after Washington riveted UN attention onto Iraq, Israel
was
hauled into the spotlight early Tuesday morning: prodded by Syria, the
Security Council overwhelmingly passed a resolution that demanded
Israel end
its siege of Yasser Arafat's headquarters and withdraw from Ramallah.
The US
abstained, and Israel soon after indicated it would spurn the
resolution.
Arab diplomats are venting their frustration.
"Why do we target one country, and at the same time, why is
there no
outcry about Israel not implementing its resolutions. Why?" asks Yahya
Mahmassani, the permanent UN observer for the League of Arab States.
"Why
should Israel be above the law? Because some members of the Security
Council
- or one member, maybe - is all the time protecting Israel. If the
UN is to
be fair, there should not be double standards."
The UN and its Security Council are sensitive to the charge of
hypocrisy. Israel historically has been far and way the most popular
target
of UN resolutions. Iraq, since the Gulf War, runs a close second. And
since
the Gulf War, Arab officials have routinely complained that more heat
is
applied to Iraq than Israel, mostly because of the US role. Israel's
supporters counter that the UN has painted the Jewish state as the
world's
great pariah.
But Iraq vs. Israel is not the only example of an apparent
disparity
in who is pressured, and by whom. Take Russia and China, both
permanent,
veto-bearing members of the Council. Had they been smaller, weaker
countries, their actions in Chechnya and Tibet, respectively, would
likely
have faced harsh Council rebuke, say UN observers. Meanwhile, still on
the
books are Security Council resolutions - which are carry the weight
of
international law - that demand Turkey's withdrawal from Cyprus,
which it
invaded in 1974, and for Morocco to withdraw troops from Western
Sahara,
occupied in 1975.
The bottom line: Size and connections matter. In these cases,
Turkey
is a NATO member with powerful friends; US and French oil interests
keep an
eye on the oil-rich coast off Western Sahara.
Yet, in terms of their ability to stir the passions of the UN's
large, influential bloc of Arab and Muslim member-states - nothing
tops Iraq
and Israel. So, borrowing from President Bush's Sept. 12 speech at the
UN in
which he exhorted the world body to "enforce its own resolutions,"
pro-Palestinian advocates insisted Monday that the same be done
vis-E0-vis
Israel.
But Israeli and American officials say the two can't be
equated.
"There is no comparison," says a State Department official, who
requested anonymity. "Israel is a functioning democracy, committed to
land-for-peace negotiations - although it's not going very well at
the
moment - and wants to live in peace with its neighbors. Iraq, on the
other
hand, is a brutal dictatorship, has attacked its neighbors, used
weapons of
mass destruction against its own people, and threatens to use them
against
its neighbors. I could go on and on."
Some observers also point to technical differences.
Iraq, which invaded Kuwait in 1990, surrendered to terms of
Chapter
VII of the UN Charter: "Action with Respect to Threats to the Peace,
Breaches of the Peace, and Acts of Aggression." That chapter justified
Iraq
as the aggressor and legitimized the sanctions that continue today. The
accompanying Security Council Resolution 687 - the cornerstone of all
subsequent Iraq-related resolutions - mandated, among other things,
that UN
weapons inspectors fully disarm Iraq.
AS for Israel, the 1967 Six Day War, in which it captured the
West
Bank and Gaza, was largely seen as a "defensive war" - its neighbors,
Egypt,
Jordan and Syria, had massed troops on the border and were prepared to
attack. Security Council Resolution 242 - from which all resolutions
since
are derived - was passed under Chapter VI of the UN Charter: "Pacific
Settlement of Disputes." It called for an Israeli withdrawal, but also
acknowledged the right of all parties "to live in peace within secure
and
recognized boundaries free from threats or acts of force." That has
meant a
negotiated settlement, say Western diplomats.
The count of resolutions ignored by Israel and Iraq are based on
resolutions 242 and 687, respectively. Dozens and dozens more
anti-Israel
resolutions have emanated from the 190-member UN General Assembly,
whose
declarations do not carry the weight of international law and thus are
merely symbolic.
Israel's advocates, though, suggest it is the victim of UN bias
because it's an easy target: the Arab-Muslim bloc boasts 50-plus
members,
with many more allies drawn by their energy and trade interests, and
third-world solidarity. Only Washington consistently stands by
Israel.
To critics of Israel, the distinction between Chapter VI and
Chapter
VII sounds like hair-splitting. But to the Jewish state, this
distinguishes
the "urgency" of different situations, says Dore Gold, Israel's
ambassador
to the UN from 1997-99 and now a top adviser to Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon.
"Comparing the illegal production of biological and chemical
weapons
with Israeli bulldozers in Ramallah? There's just no comparison in
terms of
magnitude," Gold says of Security Council discussions over the past
week.
Also, Gold says, most anti-Israel resolutions contain obligations for
the
Palestinians as well. The original draft of Tuesday's resolution,
submitted
by the Syrians, made no mention of the Sept. 19 suicide bombing in Tel
Aviv
that killed five Israelis, and reportedly prompted Israel to lash out
at
Arafat and his compound.
Striving for evenhandedness in a resolution, Gold says, "creates
a
line of argument that if one side is not implementing its side of the
bargain, the other side should not be expected to unilaterally
implement the
resolution."
Mr. Mahmassani, the Arab League representative, brushes aside
Gold's
points.
"You mean the Security Council has categories of resolutions: a,
b, c
and d? That's really absurd," Mahmassani says.
"Council resolutions must be implemented without question,"
Mahmassani says, "otherwise, what good is the Council and its
resolutions?
Israel is not abiding by its resolutions, and nobody forces them to.
Period."
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in a press conference Monday,
conceded that the question of double standards has "dogged" the world
body.
A UN official elaborates: "There's always the issue of perception. We
don't
want to create the idea that resolutions are not all inherently of
equal
importance, or that they don't have to be complied with in the same
way.
Ultimately, enforcement is in the hands of the Security
Council."
All of which points to some of the inherent weakness of the
international system - and the need for dramatic reform within the
UN, says
Mr. Paul of the Global Policy Forum in New York City.
"The UN is the best thing that's happened at the international
level,
in the area of international law. But it's a very weak and imperfect
system,
and we need it stronger. We need to have restrictions on the
superpower, and
erosion of sovereign power, whereby a sovereign nation-state can do
whatever
it wants internally."
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