SherEPunjab
Diamond Member
Originally posted by: etech
Originally posted by: SlowSS
Originally posted by: SherEPunjab
Once again guys, there is NO legal justification for a war with Iraq at this stage.
Iraq is currently in violation of part of one section of UN Security Council Resolution 687 (and a series of subsequent resolutions reiterating that segment) requiring full cooperation with United Nations inspectors ensuring that Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, delivery systems, and facilities for manufacturing such weapons are destroyed. The conflict regarding access for UN inspectors and possible Iraqi procurement of weapons of mass destruction has always been an issue involving the Iraqi government and the United Nations, not an impasse between Iraq and the United States. Although UN Security Council Resolution 687 was the most detailed in the world body's history, no military enforcement mechanisms were specified. Nor did the Security Council specify any military enforcement mechanisms in subsequent resolutions. As is normally the case when it is determined that governments violate all or part of UN resolutions, any decision about the enforcement of its resolutions is a matter for the UN Security Council as a whole ? not for any one member of the council.
The most explicit warning to Iraq regarding its noncompliance came in UN Security Council Resolution 1154. Although this resolution warned Iraq of the "severest consequences" if it continued its refusal to comply, the Security Council declared that it alone had the authority to "ensure implementation of this resolution and peace and security in the area."
According to articles 41 and 42 of the United Nations Charter, no member state has the right to enforce any resolution militarily unless the UN Security Council determines that there has been a material breach of its resolution, decides that all nonmilitary means of enforcement have been exhausted, and then specifically authorizes the use of military force. This is what the Security Council did in November 1990 with Resolution 678 in response to Iraq's ongoing occupation of Kuwait in violation of a series of resolutions passed that August. The UN has not done so for any subsequent violations involving Iraq or any other government.
If the United States can unilaterally claim the right to invade Iraq due to that country's violation of UN Security Council resolutions, other Security Council members could logically also claim the right to invade other member states that are in violation of UN Security Council resolutions. For example, Russia could claim the right to invade Israel, France could claim the right to invade Turkey, and Great Britain could claim the right to invade Morocco, simply because those targeted governments are also violating UN Security Council resolutions. The U.S. insistence on the right to attack unilaterally could seriously undermine the principle of collective security and the authority of the United Nations and in doing so would open the door to international anarchy.
International law is quite clear about when military force is allowed. In addition to the aforementioned case of UN Security Council authorization, the only other time that any member state is allowed to use armed force is described in Article 51, which states that it is permissible for "individual or collective self-defense" against "armed attack ... until the Security Council has taken the measures necessary to maintain international peace and security." If Iraq's neighbors were attacked or feared an imminent attack from Iraq, any of these countries could call on the United States to help, pending a Security Council decision authorizing the use of force. But they have not appealed to the Security Council, because they have not felt threatened by Iraq.
Based on evidence that the Bush administration has made public, there does not appear to be anything close to sufficient legal grounds for the United States to convince the Security Council to approve the use of military force against Iraq in U.S. self-defense. This may explain why the Bush administration has thus far refused to go before the United Nations on this matter. Unless the United States gets such authorization, any such attack on Iraq would be illegal and would be viewed by most members of the international community as an act of aggression. In contrast to the Persian Gulf War of 1990-91, it is likely that the world community would view the United States ? not Iraq ? as the international outlaw.
Wonderful, you are very efficient with copy and paste functions.
How about giving a credit to writer of the article. Link
As for Saddam's, he is incapable of cooperating and he will play
cat and mouse game as long as he is allowed to do so by UN.
UN will ask for more time for inspectors to perform their task,
and Saddam will have more time to conceal Weapons of Mass Destruction
and continual development of Nuke and WoMD.
I actually thought that SherEPunjab wrote that. Oh well.
The author made a few factual errors.
U.N. Resolution 1441
Recalling that its resolution 678 (1990) authorized Member States to use all necessary means to uphold and implement its resolution 660 (1990) of 2 August
1990 and all relevant resolutions subsequent to resolution 660 (1990) and to restore international peace and security in the area,
&
Recalling that in its resolution 687 (1991) the Council declared that a ceasefire would be based on acceptance by Iraq of the provisions of that resolution, including the obligations on Iraq contained therein,...
Of course the US wimped out again and wagged it's finger again and just threatens Iraq with "serious consequences" if it doens't comply. If you want to know how to raise a juvinile deliquent just threaten them with 'serious consequences' time after time and never follow through when the misbehave. It's a guaranteed way to raise a kid that no one will want to have living in their neighborhood.
The author also failed to mention that 600 Kuwati citizers are still missing and Iraq under a UN resolution is supposed to release all knowledge it has on them. Iraq is also to return the treasures it stole from Kuwati museums.
"Post-Gulf War U.N. resolutions require Iraq to make amends to Kuwait, including accounting for some 600 Kuwaitis still missing as a result of the occupation, and for large amounts of looted materials. Iraqi reparations payments are being made under U.N. auspices."
Iraq is still in breach of the resolution on those items and the fate of those missing Kuwatis.
actually, i never claimed that i wrote it. but then again the question never arose either, so it didn't really matter. In any case, if the article is so well written why change it? I was thinking of giving credit but if the conservatives on here saw what site it was from, they would have blasted it as a lefty liberal site and not listened to what it had to say. the article expresses what i cannot, i'm not that good with words. and i actually got it from a different site.