Source: Global Research
Carla Stea
Carla Stea is a journalist holding press accreditation at the U.S. Department of State and the United Nations. Her articles have been published in the US, UK, Russia, Latin America, and have appeared in Latin American Perspectives, Covert Action Quarterly, War and Peace Digest, Rock Creek Free Press, Komsomolskaya Pravda, Rabochaya Tribuna, Sovetskaya Rossia, Novosti Press and Tapol, Report on Human Rights, Indonesia.
Carla Stea
United Nations Security Council decisions are
portrayed as “the will of the international community,” and Security
Council action in support of a national agenda confers moral authority
upon that agenda. For this reason it is crucial to understand the
tactics by which UN Security Council independence is frequently usurped,
and the methods of coercion, intimidation and bribery used to extort
approval from reluctant members of the Security Council, or from those
members adamantly opposed to a particular course of action.
Twenty-two years ago, as a result of the Untied
Nations Security Council adoption of Resolution 678, which authorized
the use of “all necessary means” to end the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
and “approved” the launch of the first United Nations supported Persian
Gulf War, former United States Attorney General, Ramsey Clark, who had
witnessed the devastating consequences of that war’s saturation bombing
of Baghdad, stated that “The United Nations, which was created “to
prevent the scourge of war,” has become an instrument of war.”
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Security
Council has been in danger of becoming a political battering ram used
for the purpose of “legitimizing” the neo-imperial adventures, and the
reassertion of Western dominance over former colonial territories in
Africa, Asia, and the Middle East . Since 1991, the United Nations
Security Council has often been referred to as “an arm of the Pentagon,”
or “an annex of the US State Department.”
In 1990, only two countries in the United Nations
Security Council opposed the passage of Resolution 678, and when Yemen
cast one of these votes, the U.S. Ambassador brazenly threatened him:
“That will be the most expensive vote you ever cast,” and the U.S.
immediately cut off 70 million dollars in aid to Yemen .
Several months prior to the vote, on September 25,
1990, Mr. Abu Hassan, Foreign Minister of Malaysia stated before the
Security Council:
“We cannot but feel perturbed over the headlong rush, moving from one resolution to another in a period of seven weeks. The question may be asked whether enough time is given for each resolution to take effect. Are we moving at this speed to make sanctions effective, or are we readying ourselves early for a situation where we will conclude that sanctions are not effective and that other measures must therefore be taken? Malaysia will not accept the latter course being applied. We do not accept that war is inevitable….Malaysia believes our sense of uneasiness is shared by many outside the Council and that the council should take stock of where it is going. Malaysia , as a principle, is averse to the involvement of the armed forces of major powers in any region…As a non-aligned member and coming from a region which has been a casualty of the battles and wars fought by armies of major powers, we fear the consequences of a long term presence of military forces of major powers.”
On September 25, 1990 the Colombian Foreign Minister stated:
“We wish, above all to appeal for peace and reflection…concerned as we are that any military confrontation would be a tragedy which we would regret for the rest of our lives.” The following day the Colombian Ambassador stated: “We hoped that a draft resolution along these lines could be submitted to the Council with our co-sponsorship in the next few days. The very next day we submitted a draft resolution, along with Cuba , Malaysia and Yemen , developing the remarks made by our Foreign Minister the day before. But the truth is that the very next day, too, all kinds of pressure began to be exercised to induce us to forget about our text…What is more, we were given to understand that our draft did not have the approval of the Secretary-General. That did not prove to be the case…Last week, in order to arrive at the final text of what is now Resolution 674, intensive consultations took place that left us hurt and frustrated and wondering about the way the Security Council operates. My delegation is not making any judgement about these procedures. We ask everyone here to do so, from the depths of his soul, keeping in mind the future of the United Nations and of the world, which is all that really matters.”
Despite consistent determined opposition to military
action expressed by Colombia and Malaysia during the months prior to
January 16, 1991, U.S. Secretary of State James Baker was determined to
force these two non-permanent members of the Security Council to support
the war, regardless of their convictions. Baker made a whirlwind tour
to accomplish this, and told the Columbian President that his Ambassador
was “going crazy with these peace initiatives, and must be stopped.”
This was accompanied by the usual threat of cut-off of aid. Baker
pursued the Malaysian Foreign Minister to his hotel in Tokyo , and
succeeded in forcing him to reverse his position, and vote in favor of
military action against Iraq . Again similar tactics were used, again
successfully.
During the weeks preceding January 15, 1991, the
President of Algeria had traveled throughout the Middle East speaking to
leaders in Syria , Egypt , Jordan , Oman , Iraq and Iran . He also
spoke twice with the advisor for King Fahd of Saudi Arabia . Highly
placed diplomatic sources accredited to the United Nations confirmed
that the agreements the Algerian President obtained from the leaders of
each country would have led to a peaceful resolution of the conflict in
compliance with UN requirements. The final meeting was to be held with
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia . At the last moment the King refused to meet
with the Algerian President, and denied him a visa to enter Saudi Arabia
, claiming that he “needed more time.” According to a highly placed
diplomatic source, “ Washington did not want this meeting.”
On January 17, 1991 President Bush stated his goal as
the liberation of Kuwait , not the conquest of Iraq , additionally
claiming that “we are determined to knock out Saddam Hussein’s nuclear
bomb potential. We will also destroy his chemical weapons facilities.”
With this, the U.S. placed itself in violation of a UN General Assembly
Resolution (A/C.1/45/L.38) “prohibiting attacks on nuclear facilities.”
Attempts to enforce the resolution were met by threats from the U.S. and
Egyptian authorities, advising that such efforts be dropped.
Article 22 of the Hague convention specifically
declares the use of “all necessary means” illegal. Resolution 678 also
violates the Hague convention’s articles 25 and 27, and violate Articles
1, 2a, 2b and article IIIc of the Convention Prohibiting Genocide.
United Nations investigator Marti Ahtisaari disclosed that coalition
bombing had caused “near-apocalyptic damage, destroying the economic
infrastructure necessary to support human life in Iraq,” and warning
“the Iraqi people may soon face a further imminent catastrophe, which
could include epidemic and famine, if massive life-supporting needs are
not met.” The July 15 report of the United Nations Humanitarian Mission
to Iraq , submitted by Sadruddin Aga Khan, states that: “The aftermath
of the Persian Gulf war of January and February 1991 presented a
compelling spectacle of suffering and devastation to the international
community. The tragic consequences of conflict, the untold loss of life
and destruction, were compounded by massive displacements of
ill-prepared populations, by ecological disasters of unprecedented
magnitude, by the collapse of the structures that sustain life in
today’s human societies…..It is evident that for large numbers of the
people of Iraq, every passing month brings closer the brink of calamity.
As usual, it is the poor, the children, the widowed and the elderly,
the most vulnerable amongst the population, who are the first to
suffer.”
The failure of the administration of George W. Bush
to obtain United Nations Security Council support for the “Shock and
Awe” bombing attack on Iraq in 2003 seriously undermined both the
credibility and the morale of the operation, and weakened Bush’s
popularity to the point where he became the object of ridicule, his
“mission accomplished” posturing mocked, and it was in part the
conspicuous and disastrous result of that war, and the exposure of the
lies used to justify the war, that became a major factor in the
successful presidential campaign of Barack Obama..
On October 4, 2011 United Nations Security Council
draft resolution S/2011/612, which sought Security Council approval for
punitive measures against Syria, was defeated by the vetoes cast by
Russia and China. Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa were
outraged that Resolution 1973, authorizing a no-fly zone in Libya for
the exclusive purpose of protecting civilians, morphed into promiscuous
attacks on Libya by NATO, and blatant NATO support of the Libyan
opposition, in gross violations of NATO’s mandate. Indeed, former
Chairman of the Arab League, Amre Moussa had called an emergency meeting
of the Arab League, and stated: “What is happening in Libya differs
from the aim of imposing a no-fly zone, and what we want is the
protection of civilians, and not the bombardment of more civilians.”
Resolution 1973 culminated, in violation of its
mandate, in “regime change” and the extrajudicial murder of Omar
Khaddafy, the Libyan president, resulting, ultimately in innumerable
violations of international law that could be traced to the blessing
given by the United Nations to Security Council Resolution 1973.
In explanation of the veto cast by Russia on October 4th, the Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation stated:
“The situation in Syria cannot be considered in the Council separately from the Libyan experience. The international community is alarmed by statements that compliance with the Security Council resolution on Libya in the NATO interpretation is a model for the future action of NATO in implementing the responsibility to protect….The demand for a quick cease-fire turned into a full-fledged civil war, the humanitarian, social, economic and military consequences of which transcend Libyan borders. The situation in connection with the no-fly zone has morphed into the bombing of oil refineries, television stations and other civilian sites. The arms embargo has morphed into a naval blockade in Western Libya, including a blockade of humanitarian goods….With respect to Syria …the continuation of this tragedy cannot be blamed only on the harsh actions of the authorities. Recent events convincingly show that the radical opposition no longer hides its extremist bent and is relying on terrorist tactics, hoping for foreign sponsors and acting outside of the law. Armed groups supported by smuggling and other illegal activities are providing supplies, taking over land, and killing and perpetrating atrocities against people who comply with the law-enforcement authorities.”
The Russian-Chinese veto which defeated draft
resolution 612 was not, however the end of the story. It was the
beginning of the stealthy and not so stealthy US/NATO campaign to force
the Security Council to support its agenda to subjugate and impose
regime change in Syria . Relentless pressure on Russia and China to
reverse their position ensued.
Soon thereafter, the United States, the United
Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and 17 other
states co-sponsored a resolution which was submitted to the UN General
Assembly Third Committee condemning the Syrian authorities for human
rights violations, a resolution at no point referring to gross human
rights violations committed by the Syrian opposition in what was swiftly
becoming a civil war. It was far easier and more expeditious to get a
resolution condemning the Syrian authorities adopted by the General
Assembly, where many smaller, weaker countries would be more accessible
to various forms of influence than would be the case in the Security
Council. Once adopted, the General Assembly Third Committee Resolution
could be used to pressure, and if necessary bludgeon or blackmail
members of the Security Council perceived as recalcitrant by the US/NATO
powers. The Resolution entitled “Situation of Human Rights in the
Syrian Arab Republic (A/66/462/Add.3) was adopted on December 19th by a
vote of 133 in favor, 54 opposed or abstaining. The extreme pressure on
Russia and China continued throughout December, when Russia held the
Presidency of the Security Council.
On December 8th, in a fortuitous coincidence, the
United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights, Mrs. Navi Pillay was
in New York , and the French Ambassador, Gerard Araud urged that she
“drop by” and brief the Security Council on Syria . There have been
serious questions raised about Mrs. Pillay exceeding the mandate of her
office, and allowing her office to be politicized. There have also been
doubts about her impartiality. There were questions raised about whether
her coincidental presence in New York warranted her visit to the
Security Council, and whether she was welcomed unanimously by all
Council members. Suddenly a large number of reporters swarmed toward the
Security Council after a “Procedural Vote” was announced. And then the
“procedural vote” did not occur. Evidently the French Ambassador had
threatened the procedural vote to embarrass Russia and China , and force
another audience for Mrs. Pillay at the Security Council.
To provide balance, the Chinese Ambassador urged that
the issue of Palestine also be considered, and the briefing focus on
urgent problems and serious human rights violations in the Middle East,
not exclusively Syria . There was such massive opposition by the US, the
UK, France and Germany to inclusion of Palestine in Mrs. Pillay’s
briefing that, although these Permanent Representatives insisted that
they had not opposed the inclusion of Palestine at the briefing, they
proceeded to state, incensed, that the inclusion of Palestine was a “red
herring,” and an attempt to distract attention from the problems in
Syria. The Russian Ambassador, President of the Security Council, when
asked whether he had encountered opposition to the inclusion of
Palestine in the briefing replied: “What opposed means may turn into
something of a linguistic discussion…I saw every trick in the book being
thrown at me, short of trying to strangle the President of the Security
Council.”
The Russian Ambassador made a statement to the press
regarding the absurdity of this imbroglio at the Security Council: “in
some science fiction there was this little poem. It is difficult to
translate poems from Russian into English, but it went something like
this: This morning a rocket was launched. It is flying sixteen times the
speed of light, so it will reach its destination at 6PM…yesterday.”
Following the closed briefing, Mrs. Pillay spoke
briefly to the press, alleging that as of December 12th, there were
5,000 people dead in Syria, including 300 children, thousands of people
in detention, torture had occurred, and she had recommended that the
Syrian authorities be referred to the International Criminal Court for
crimes against humanity. At no point did Mrs. Pillay identify the source
of her information, and she left before I had an opportunity to inquire
about the identity of her sources. Then the French, British, Portuguese
and American representatives spoke to the press reiterating that it was
“unconscionable that the Security Council did not take action” and
“unbearable that the Council is forced to remain silent” in view of Mrs.
Pillay’s horrifying disclosures.”
I was finally able to ask the British Permanent
Representative, Mark Lyall Grant what was the source of Mrs. Pillay’s
information, and I was told the source of the United Nations High
Commissioner of Human Rights’ horrific details was 233 defecting members
of the military. Leaving aside the various possible motivations
defecting members of the military might have for distorting information,
Mrs. Pillay’s failure to provide any information about possible violent
acts committed by the opposition, and her exclusive focus upon violence
committed by the government raises extremely serious questions about
her objectivity, and the propriety and legality of her giving the
imprimatur of her office to one side in what is essentially a civil war.
Mrs. Pillay maintains that she had no access to Syria . How then is she
able to interview a credible cross-section of witnesses to provide an
accurate report of violence by the Syrian government? The Council
President reminded the press that on August 3rd there were reports that
the Syrian navy fired at the opposition. Russian witnesses residing in
Syria repudiated these reports. No subsequent mention was made of this
discrepancy, nor did Mrs. Pillay at any time investigate the reports by
the Russian witnesses disputing allegations against the Syrian navy.
On December 18th The New York Times reported horrific
civilian deaths as a result of NATO strikes on Libya . On December 19th
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon initially denied these reports. That
afternoon, at a stake-out the Council President stated that NATO’s claim
of zero civilian casualties was cruel and cynical. NATO was evidently
reluctant or incapable of effectively investigating the results of the
7,700 bombs or missiles it dropped on Libya . The New York Times stated:
“an on-the-ground examination by The New York Times of airstrike sites across Libya – including interviews with survivors, doctors and witnesses, and the collection of munitions remnants, medical reports, death certificates and photographs – found credible accounts of dozens of civilians killed by NATO in many distinct attacks. The victims, including at least 29 women or children often had been asleep in homes when the ordnance hit….By NATO’s telling during the war, and in statements since sorties ended on October 31, the alliance-led operation was nearly flawless – a model air war that used high technology, meticulous planning and restraint to protect civilians from Colonel Qaddafi’s troops, which was the alliance’s mandate. ‘We have carried out this operation very carefully, without confirmed civilian casualties, the Secretary-General of NATO, Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in November.’ The Security Council President stated that the United Nations should help in investigating civilian casualties if NATO cannot do this on its own.”
While the Security Council President had stated on
December 9th that pressures on him by the US, UK, France and Germany
within the Security Council had ‘stopped short of strangling him,’ on
December 16th a media advisory was sent to the UN press corps by Fehmi
Khairullah of the “Syria First Coalition,” a US based organization, (the
source of whose funding is unclear)…..announcing Syrian Day of Rage,
stating: “Syrian Regime is killing his own people with support of the
Russian Federation to the Criminal Syrian Regime.” The media advisory
announced demonstrations “to protest the Russian Support of the Criminal
Syrian Regime,” held Friday, December 16, 2011 from 3PM till 5PM at the
Russian Mission to the United Nations, 136 East 67 Street, New York
10065, demonstrators to include “outraged Syrians Gathering to Condemn
the Continuous Russian Support to the Syrian Criminal Regime.”
Pressure on the President of the UN Security Council
within the Security Council itself, which, in his words ‘stopped just
short of strangulation,’ was augmented by demonstrations by ‘Syria First
Coalition’ outside the Russian Mission to the UN, including a letter
addressed to the Russian Ambassador, accusing: “Your veto in the United
Nations not only supports the murderous regime, but also blocks any
humanitarian aid to the desperate people of Syria, who are freezing
cold, starving, scared and out of medical supplies.” The letter’s
statistic of 5,078 Syrians killed does not mention that this includes
the 1,000 Syrian government official killed by the opposition, a figure
admitted even by Mrs. Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner of Human
Rights.
By December 22, at the Security Council stake-out,
the Council President was forced to defend his inclusion on the December
Security Council agenda of discussion of human rights violations of the
Palestinian people, and the crucial matter of Libyan civilians killed
by NATO strikes. Evidently the US/NATO group demanded that only the
matter of Syria be included on the Security Council agenda.
US Ambassador Susan Rice, outraged that the Security
Council had focused on the deaths of 70 Libyan civilians as a result of
the US/NATO bombing of Libya , declared: “Welcome to the bombast. I was
recently in Libya , and the Libyan people expressed overwhelming
gratitude for NATO’s help. “ Ambassador Rice evidently neglected to meet
Mustafa Naji al Morabit, among many other victims of NATO airstrikes.
According to the New York Times, “On August 4th a bomb roared down in
the early morning quiet and slammed into their concrete home causing its
front to buckle. Mr. Morabit’s wife Eptisam Ali al-Barbar died of a
crushed skull. Two of their sons, Mohammed, 6, and Moataz, 3 were killed
too. Three toes on the left foot of Fatima Umar Mansour, Mr. Morabit’s
mother, were severed, her lower left leg was snapped.”
“On August 8th, four days after destroying the Morabit home, NATO hit buildings occupied by civilians again, this time in Majer, according to survivors, doctors and independent investigators. The strikes were NATO’s bloodiest known accidents in the war. The attack began with a series of 500-pound laser-guided bombs, called GBU-12s, ordnance remnants suggest. The first house, owned by Ali Hamid Gafez, 61 was crowded with Mr. Gafez’s relatives, who had been dislocated by the war, he and his neighbors said. The bomb destroyed the second floor and much of the first. Five women and seven children were killed; several more people were wounded, including Mr. Gafez’s wife whose lower left leg had to be amputated, the doctor who performed the procedure said. Several minutes after the first strikes, as neighbors rushed to dig for victims, another bomb struck. The blast killed 18 civilians, both families said…The initial findings on the Majer strikes, part of the United Nations investigation into actions by all sides in Libya that harmed civilians, have raised questions about the legality of the attack under international humanitarian law, according to an official familiar with the investigation.”
On December 23 the Security Council President held a
press conference at which he described Ambassador Rice’s ‘unusually
explosive rhetoric,’ and fury at the Russian Ambassador’s discussion of
Libyan civilians slaughtered by NATO airstrikes. He stated that it was
necessary to address Ambassador Rice’s outburst which “drowned in
expletives.” He quoted Ambassador Rice’s December 22 accusations of
“bombast, bogus claims, a cheap stunt, duplicitous, redundant and
superfluous” all expletives used by Ambassador Rice in referring to the
Russian Ambassador’s discussion of Libyan civilian victims of NATO
bombardment. The Russian Ambassador then remarked: “You cannot beat a
Stanford education, can you?”
The Russian Ambassador stated that within the Security Council there had been no call for investigation into the Libyan civilian victims of NATO bombardment, and the issue had been entirely ignored. He also reminded the press that President Obama had stated he wanted dialogue with the United Nations and the Security Council. He added, in that case he suggests that the “Stanford Dictionary of Expletives be replaced by something more Victorian.”
The Russian Ambassador stated that within the Security Council there had been no call for investigation into the Libyan civilian victims of NATO bombardment, and the issue had been entirely ignored. He also reminded the press that President Obama had stated he wanted dialogue with the United Nations and the Security Council. He added, in that case he suggests that the “Stanford Dictionary of Expletives be replaced by something more Victorian.”
In response to a question about the breakdown of
working relationships between the Permanent Five Security Council
members in an atmosphere of acrimony at the Security Council, the
Russian Ambassador stated that he is worried that the Security Council
is not moving in a good direction,” that there are members who are
inflexible and demand that ‘things must be done in their own way and no
other way,’ no other views are entertained, ant they must have what they
demand immediately.’ This will “harm the ability of the Security
Council to work.” He stated that Security Council action to end violence
in Syria should under no circumstances be an ‘auxilliary of
regime-change policy,’ as Security Council Resolution 1973 on Libya had
proved to be. He said that regime change engineered and forced from
outside the country is “inevitably destructive, causing bloodshed, and
the Security Council and the United Nations should have nothing to do
with that.” He stated that at 11AM that morning the Russian Federation
had submitted its third draft resolution on Syria, and stated that “we
will not drop references to violence caused by the extreme opposition
and will not call for sanctions or an arms embargo, since in Libya the
arms embargo blocked weapons to the government, but the opposition
illegally received massive arms supplies from many sources.
The fate of the third draft resolution submitted by
Russia on December 23 is still undetermined. As of this writing, the
changes and deletions required by the US/NATO countries transform this
resolution into something unrecognizable, precisely the opposite to its
original intent. Its current form includes:
“Emphasizing the need to resolve the current crisis in Syria peacefully, and stressing that nothing in this resolution compels states to take measures or actions exceeding the scope of this resolution including the use of force or threat of force” (United Kingdom)
Deleted from the original Russian draft resolution: “Ruling out any military intervention from outside.”
“ Demands the Syrian government to meet its responsibility to protect its population, to immediately put an end to attacks against those exercising their rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association and to fully comply with its obligations under applicable international law.”
Deleted from the original Russian draft resolution: “ Demands that the armed opposition groups of Syrian opposition stop violence, human rights violations and terror attacks against civilians, state institutions, army and law enforcement personnel and members of their families.”
Deleted from the original Russian draft resolution: “Urges the Syrian opposition leaders to dissociate themselves from extremists, to accept the League of Arab States initiative and to engage without preconditions in substantial and in-depth dialogue with the Syrian authorities on ways of reforming the Syrian authorities.”
US required changes:Travel ban/asset freeze on 19 named Syrian officialsAsset freeze on government of Syria , including Central Bank Syria and Syrian Commercail bankBan on governmental trade transactions with Syria , except for strategic commodities affecting the Syrian peopleBan of flights to/from SyriaArms embargo (US/UK)Deleted from the original Russian draft resolution: “Decides that nothing in this resolution shall be interpreted as an authorization of any sort of military interference in Syria by anyone.”
Conspicuously ignored in all this is the 600 pound
gorilla in the living room. On March 17th Resolution 1973 on Libya was
adopted by the United Nations Security Council, and NATO bombardment of
Libya immediately followed. The very next day, March 18th,
anti-government demonstrations began in Syria . On April 18, 2010, the
front page of The Washington Post reported:
“U.S. Provides Secret Backing to Syrian Opposition. Leaked Cables Reveal Funding. “The State Department has secretly financed Syrian political opposition groups and related projects, including a satellite TV channel that beams anti-government programming into the country…Barada TV is closely affiliated with the Movement for Justice and Development, a London-based network of Syrian exiles. Classified US diplomatic cables show that the State Department has funneled as much as $6 million to the group to operate the satellite channel and finance other activities inside Syria…The leaders of Movement for Justice and Development are former members of the Muslim Brotherhood…. Several US diplomatic cables from the embassy in Damascus reveal that the Syrian exiles received money from a State Department program called the ‘Middle East Partnership Initiative.’ According to the cables, the State Department funneled money to the exile group via the Democracy Council, a Los Angeles based non-profit. According to its website, the council sponsors projects in the Middle East, Asia and Latin America to promote the ‘fundamental elements of stable societies.’ The council’s founder and president, James Prince is a former Congressional staff member and investment adviser for Price Waterhouse Cooper…Edgar Vasquez, a State Department spokesman said the Middle East Partnership Initiative has allocated 7.5 million for Syrian programs since 2005. A cable from the embassy in Damascus , however, pegged a much higher total – about $12 million between 2005 and 2010.”
U.S. funding and involvement in destabilizing
independent governments throughout the world follows a similar pattern
throughout its long history, from the destabilization and overthrow of
the democratically elected government of Mossadegh in Iran in 1953, to
the destabilization and overthrow of a long succession of democratically
elected presidents: Arbenz in Guatemala, Juuan Bosch in the Dominican
Republic, Goulart in Brazil, Sukarno in Indonesia, Allende in Chile,
(where Kissinger famously declared: ‘We cannot permit Chile to go
communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people.’) In all cases
these democratically elected governments independent of US corporate
control, were replaced by military dictatorships which institutionalized
torture, and placed their nations’ economies under control of US based
multi-national corporations, impoverishing their own citizens.
The current pattern emerging in the Middle East
portends ominous developments within a trajectory that is becoming
evident. UN Security Council authorization of “all necessary measures”
in Resolution 1973 against the Libyan government gave license for
impermissible imperial aggression and bloodshed: The New York Times
reported on August 21, 2011:
“Coordination between NATO and the rebels, and among the loosely organized rebel groups themselves had become more sophisticated and lethal in recent weeks, even though NATO’s mandate had been merely to protect civilians, not to take sides in the conflict…at the same time, Britain, France and other nations deployed special forces on the ground inside Libya to help train and arm the rebels.”
The overthrow of Mossadegh in Iran is described in
detail by Robert Dreyfus in “Devil’s Game: How the United States Helped
Unleash Fundamentalist Islam” (Page 109):
“Mossadegh pushed through the nationalization of Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC). It was a catastrophic blow to England …APOC was the pride and joy of Britain ’s imperial assets. Mossadegh instantly became a hated man in London . The story of the coup, run jointly by the CIA and M16 has been told many times. Almost never reported, however, is the fact that the two intelligence agencies worked closely with Iran ’s clergy, the ulema, to weaken and ultimately overthrow Mossadegh. A critical role was played by street mobs, bought and paid for by the CIA and mobilized by rabble rousers tied to the ulema, who demanded the ouster of Prime Minister Mossadegh and the return of the Shah. Ayatollah Kashani, the Chief representative of the Moslem Brotherhood in Iran , was a central figure in the campaign.”
If the UN Security Council adopts any resolution that
could morph into authorization permitting “all necessary measures” to
be used to justify military action to force regime change in Syria, this
would be disguised by a fig-leaf of concern for the ‘human rights of
the Syrian people, in a civil war provoked by US/NATO encouragement of a
pre-fabricated opposition. This would inevitably culminate, as in Libya
, in ‘coordination between NATO and the opposition,” and would
eliminate the last curb on US/NATO’s grandiose imperial designs. It
would unleash the pathological fantasies of global dominance long
cherished by the Russophobe Brzezinski, and other similarly inclined
policy makers, rupture their precarious grip on reality, and hurl the
US/NATO powers into the fatal mistakes of Napoleon and Hitler,
full-blown psychosis. A UN Security Council resolution that could be
interpreted to permit US/NATO military action against Syria would propel
these forces, already drunken with power, to next seek a resolution
authorizing military action against Iran .
Libya, Syria and Iran have much oil and as yet no
nuclear weapons. Any action against Iran , whether undertaken by US/NATO
or Israel , would spark a conflagration impossible to control,
potentially involving nuclear states, and the direction of which would
be impossible to determine or limit at the outset. And the endpoint of
this trajectory would inevitably be Russia , which controls huge
reserves of oil and gas coveted by the West. But unlike the insane
adventures of Napoleon and Hitler, prior to the atomic age, today Russia
possesses nuclear weapons, and surrounded by hostile NATO countries and
confronting the menace of NATO’s missile defense, Russia , now
existentially threatened, has abandoned the Soviet Union ’s doctrine of
“no first use of nuclear weapons.”
If Russia withstands escalating pressure, and
continues to prohibit any UN Security Council resolution authorizing
“all necessary means” against Syria, this may be the moment when, denied
United Nations Security Council support, and unable to claim they act
in accordance with “the will of the international community,” the
psychological force of US/NATO will be exhausted, as was Napoleon at the
Battle of Borodino in1812, and Hitler at Stalingrad in 1943. The road
to World War III will have been blocked, and the United Nations Security
Council would be redeemed from its current status as “an instrument of
war.”
Carla Stea is a journalist holding press accreditation at the U.S. Department of State and the United Nations. Her articles have been published in the US, UK, Russia, Latin America, and have appeared in Latin American Perspectives, Covert Action Quarterly, War and Peace Digest, Rock Creek Free Press, Komsomolskaya Pravda, Rabochaya Tribuna, Sovetskaya Rossia, Novosti Press and Tapol, Report on Human Rights, Indonesia.