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Opinion, May 24, 2003, Al-Jazeerah.info |
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Going With the Punches, Arab
News History is written by the victors, and so are postwar settlements. UN
Security Council Resolution 1483 gives international endorsement to the
US occupation of Iraq for at least the next 12 months, hands the control
of Iraq’s oil income and production to Washington and finally
legitimizes the Bush assault upon Saddam. No wonder the Syrian
government could not bring itself to have its UN ambassador present at
the vote. At a stroke Washington would seem to have it all. The provision in
the resolution for UN involvement in the formation of an Iraqi
government is meaningless. The most senior members of the world’s
international parliament — Russia, France, China and Germany — have
rolled over and given in. They have abandoned their principled stand for
further UN weapons inspections, along with their opposition to a US-led
attack. Now their focus would seem to have changed sharply to having
their country’s contractors pick up as much lucrative Iraqi
reconstruction work as possible. The UN has no credible role in the immediate future of Iraq. In truth
it has probably never seemed less relevant. Yet observers who are
already writing off the organization should stay their pens. History
will very likely show that the UN’s humiliation of 2003 may actually
have paved the way for its triumph not many years hence. Once Saddam was
ousted and the US had assumed its messy but undeniable control of Iraq,
further Security Council opposition to US belligerence became both
dangerous and pointless. Washington ignored its counsels before the war,
when there was a high degree of risk. It is hardly going to start
listening now that it has won. Had Bush’s UN opponents continued to
reflect the worldwide revulsion at US aggression, they could have caused
Washington to dump the UN altogether, maybe even threaten to sling the
organization out of its comfortable New York headquarters. Anyone who
thinks such a move unthinkable should realize by now that this is a
White House that is coming to specialize in the unthinkable. By going with the punches, accepting a nonpivotal role overseeing the
reconstruction of Iraq and the future of the Iraqi people and by
ceasing, for now anyway, awkward questions about the location of
Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction, the UN is allowing itself to
live to fight another day. It still does not seem to have dawned on Washington that its troubles
in Iraq have only just started. For the Bush White House, winning a
push-button war was even easier than eating a pretzel. However, coping
with the challenges of reorganizing such a diverse and complex society
as that of Iraq is of a very different order of magnitude. Once the
Iraqis recover their poise and basic creature comforts and come to
understand the nature of their occupiers, their attitude is going to
change. The Americans are likely to make no better job of reordering
this society to their satisfaction than the British, their current
junior partners, 70 years ago. Yet when things go wrong, as they will, Iraq will hopefully not
plunge into disaster under American rule. Standing in the wings within
the country, bruised but still working, will be the United Nations, and
Washington will be overwhelmingly grateful to be able to abandon its
mandate back into UN hands. |
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