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Annan Says U.S. Will Violate Charter if It Acts Without Approval
www.nytimes.com/ ^ | 3-11-*3 | PATRICK E. TYLER and FELICITY BARRINGER

Posted on 03/10/2003 10:11:22 PM PST by FreeSpeechZone

Annan Says U.S. Will Violate Charter if It Acts Without Approval

NITED NATIONS, March 10 — Secretary General Kofi Annan warned today that if the United States fails to win approval from the Security Council for an attack on Iraq, Washington's decision to act alone or outside the Council would violate the United Nations charter"The members of the Security Council now face a great choice," Mr. Annan said in The Hague, where he was trying to broker a United Nations deal on Cyprus. "If they fail to agree on a common position and action is taken without the authority of the Security Council, the legitimacy and support for any such action will be seriously impaired."

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Mr. Annan's remarks drew a sharp response from Washington, where the Bush administration, like its allies overseas, was engaged in a strong lobbying effort to win the necessary nine votes to pass a resolution this week authorizing war.

The White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said in a strongly worded retort that "from a moral point of view," if the United Nations fails to support the Bush administration's war aims, it will have "failed to act once again," as it did in Kosovo in the face of persecution of the ethnic Albanians by Serbia and earlier in Rwanda in the face of widespread massacres by Hutus against Tutsis.

Some international legal experts also took issue with Mr. Annan's assertions, arguing that the United States and its coalition partners who ejected Iraqi forces from Kuwait in 1991 retained the legal authority to take additional action against Baghdad for its failures to live up to the United Nations resolutions that authorized that Persian Gulf war.

Others said that President Bush has nonetheless muddied the legal picture by returning to the Security Council now for a final resolution authorizing war. In this circumstance, they said, it is difficult for Mr. Bush and the international community to ignore a negative vote by the Security Council or a veto by one of its permanent members.

"I just disagree with the secretary general's legal view because there are fundamental Security Council resolutions that underlie this," said Ruth Wedgewood, professor of international law at Johns Hopkins University.

Richard N. Gardner, professor of international law at Columbia University, said that since Saddam Hussein has repeatedly violated the conditions of the 1991 cease-fire, "the United States and other countries revert to their rights to restore peace and security in the area" under the resolution authorizing that war, passed in 1990.

Mr. Annan, whose trip to The Hague also includes presiding over the investiture of the International Criminal Court, which has been opposed by Washington, insisted that "the United Nations — founded to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war — has a duty to search until the very end for the peaceful resolution of conflicts."

Responding to a question on the United Nations Charter, Mr. Annan said the charter is "very clear on circumstances under which force can be used.

"If the U.S. and others were to go outside the Council and take military action, it would not be in conformity with the charter," he said.

United Nations officials said Mr. Annan planned his remarks today to signal to Washington that it needed to consider a compromise that would draw more support on the 15-member Council.

Lawyers here scrambled to support Mr. Annan's remarks, pointing to Chapter 1 of the charter, which says that all members should refrain from the use of force in international relations. Those lawyers also argued that America's new doctrine to make pre-emptive strikes against perceived threats does not conform with Chapter 7, which recognizes the "right of individual or collective" self-defense.

Referring to Mr. Annan, William H. Luers, a former American diplomat who heads the United Nations Association, said, "His job is to defend the U.N. Charter" because it "best defines how nations should behave when it comes to the use of force."

Professor Wedgewood said that even if the United States loses the final vote and proceeds to war, "the failure of this particular resolution" does "not obviate the prior ones," especially since the prior resolutions gave Washington and its allies authority to disarm Iraq for the sake of the peace and security of the region.

The main point, she said, "is that we've been there before." She cited the case of Kosovo, when the Clinton administration bypassed the Security Council — where Russia was threatening to veto any military action — and used NATO as its instrument to lead the bombing of Yugoslavia.

Professor Gardner agreed that the authority existed in previous resolutions and said he was confident as an international lawyer that Mr. Bush has the authority he needs, "but we are now in a situation where there are certain ambiguities."

He continued, "I am very uneasy about going to war at this stage without authority from the Council" because the Council is divided on the question of whether all efforts by the United Nations weapons inspectors to disarm Iraq peacefully have been exhausted.

At the same time, Professor Gardner said that Mr. Bush had engendered a great deal of confusion by asserting American rights under a new national security doctrine of pre-emptive attack.

"Of course this sounds good," he said. "But it leaves us in a world where every country is self-judging what it does, and that leads to world anarchy. Hitler used national security when he invaded Czechoslovakia, and Russia did the same in its aggressions. I am not one of these purists on this subject, but the search for legitimacy has to be taken seriously."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: unitednations
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1 posted on 03/10/2003 10:11:22 PM PST by FreeSpeechZone
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Like we did in Yugoslavia? Why didn't he complain then? Maybe he did...for all we care. The president is responsible to Americans...and Americans alone.
2 posted on 03/10/2003 10:13:55 PM PST by spyone
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To: spyone
Kofi don't get it -- If the UN doesn't vote yes there is no more UN :)
3 posted on 03/10/2003 10:17:15 PM PST by america-rules
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Hey Kofi, If the U.N. doesn't enforce it's resolutions, the Charter is a useless gathering of spineless diplomats

Kofi.... Go read 1441

4 posted on 03/10/2003 10:17:25 PM PST by MJY1288 (It's Time To Roll)
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Well I'm not expert, but I believe we have the authority from all the past 17 resolutions

Also, it was mentioned on Fox that the US does have the right under the UN Charter to protect ourselves if we feel that we are in danager of an attack

I could be wrong, but I think they mentioned something about Article 51

Maybe someone around here will know more about this
5 posted on 03/10/2003 10:18:11 PM PST by Mo1 (RALLY FOR AMERICA - VALLEY FORGE,PA MARCH 16, 2003 1:00 PM)
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Gee, it is so wonderful having Cameroon, Angola, etc deciding when and how we'll defend ourselves!

I hope this drives the UN into a overdue grave.
6 posted on 03/10/2003 10:18:20 PM PST by Az Joe
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To: spyone
Annan doesn't have a clue. UN Resolution 1441 gives the Allies the authority to remove Saddam.
7 posted on 03/10/2003 10:20:24 PM PST by Post Toasties
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To: FreeSpeechZone
That's fine with us Kofi. We can always start a new club. Maybe a democracy only club. The rest of you filthy nations can have the UN without our dollars, our legitimacy, or morality.
8 posted on 03/10/2003 10:22:51 PM PST by ffusco ("Essiri sempri la santu fora la chiesa.")
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To: FreeSpeechZone; Allan; The Great Satan
Secretary General Kofi Annan warned today that if the United States fails to win approval from the Security Council for an attack on Iraq, Washington's decision to act alone or outside the Council would violate the United Nations charter.

Not if the U.S. is, by that time, no longer a signatory to the U.N. charter.

Is Annan going to help make this very easy for us?

9 posted on 03/10/2003 10:22:58 PM PST by Mitchell
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To: FreeSpeechZone; Admin Moderator
already posted
10 posted on 03/10/2003 10:23:50 PM PST by maui_hawaii
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To: FreeSpeechZone
KING Kofe, I guess this means all this talk has been for nothing, HE IS CALLING OFF THE WAR!!! OH HAIL THE KING, OH HELL TO THE KING, Sheesh.
11 posted on 03/10/2003 10:24:07 PM PST by gulfcoast6 (Not another loan to DITECH......Mom!)
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Slap a sanction on us, Coffee.

Personally, I think we should send Carrot Top before the Security Council to veto our own resolution, and then start bombing Baghdad into dust.

12 posted on 03/10/2003 10:25:17 PM PST by WarSlut (It's the dictator, stupid)
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To: spyone
I hope at the end of this futile exercise that the liberals will be indoctrinating our students with how the "bad" Republicans destroyed the U.N. And, not with how our foreign policy is only valid if we get the approval of China, Russia, France, Cameroon, et al.

Dear France, please veto!
13 posted on 03/10/2003 10:26:00 PM PST by KaiserofKrunch
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Now, let me see if I understand this. When we participate in military missions that are approved of by the socialists, we are not criticized, whether or not those missions have official UN sanction.

When we conduct military missions during the waging of a war against terrorism, against a state which harbors terrorism, the goal being to protect the security of our country, we are criticized roundly, and compared with Nazi Germany.

Oh, I see.

The United Nations is comprised of morally and politically corrupt rectum muscles.
14 posted on 03/10/2003 10:36:09 PM PST by FirstTomato ("In the end,We will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends" M L King)
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To: FreeSpeechZone
Referring to Mr. Annan, ... "His job is to defend the U.N. Charter"

. wait just a sec.... checking the U.S. Constitution, Pres. Bush's job description clearly states is to protect and defend from all enemies foreign and domestic.... a ..er... trump... checkmate ... zap... over and out! Sorry Coffee, we'll get back to ya later.. and... Maybe you should put some ice on that!!

15 posted on 03/10/2003 10:40:55 PM PST by carlo3b (Screw Hollywood, and the friggin UN!?)
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To: america-rules
I pray the UN holds firm and we (the US) have the fortitude to reject and eject them.
16 posted on 03/10/2003 10:47:35 PM PST by Texas_Jarhead
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To: carlo3b
wait just a sec.... checking the U.S. Constitution, Pres. Bush's job description clearly states is to protect and defend from all enemies foreign and domestic.... a ..er... trump... checkmate ... zap... over and out! Sorry Coffee, we'll get back to ya later.. and... Maybe you should put some ice on that!!

Carlo .. I'm not sure about this, but don't we under Artcle 51 have a right to self defense

17 posted on 03/10/2003 10:47:36 PM PST by Mo1 (RALLY FOR AMERICA - VALLEY FORGE,PA MARCH 16, 2003 1:00 PM)
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: enfield
we also have a cease fire that Saddam's generals signed and in which he's been in breach. the Kuwaitis are helping "fix" their fences and then we'll "fix" any problems left remaining in our cease fire agreement.
19 posted on 03/10/2003 10:51:04 PM PST by Steven W.
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To: Mo1
His press conference really revealed the whole motive driving President Bush to depose Saddam and disarm Iraq: He swore an oath to defend the Constitution. He says Saddam has to be deposed and Iraq disarmed in order to secure the health and safety and lives of Americans, as well as Iraqis and their neighbors, and that's good enough for me, too.
20 posted on 03/10/2003 10:53:08 PM PST by Cultural Jihad
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