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Thanks Robert (and Felicity) for the "U.S. bombing of Iraq is illegal" article. > The United States and Britain > claim that a 1991 U.N. Security Council resolution authorizes them to bomb > at will. > > The only problem is that the resolution cited clearly does not set up the > zones or authorize any nation to unilaterally carry out such actions. In > short: The U.S. and U.K. are perpetrating acts of aggression that violate > international law. The resolution referred to here is 688; a link to this and some commentary on it can be found on CASI's website at www.casi.org.uk/info/scriraq.html. Not only does 688 not authorise nations to take unilateral action, but it does not allow enforcement action of any kind. Security Council resolutions that wish to allow enforcement action must make reference to Chapter VII of the UN Charter. 688 does not, intentionally: China and (I believe) Russia were worried about the precedent that would be created if the Security Council claimed the right to use force against sovereign states for domestic matters. The US and UK governments do not, though, claim that 688 gives them the right to "bomb at will". Their formula is somewhat more subtle: the no fly zones are actions taken "in support of" 688. Their actions are as well: their rules of engagement only allow force to be used in response to threats. Their rules do, however, allow the response to come at any time after the original threat, and to be directed against any element of the system that threatened them. Effectively, of course, this allows them to attack Iraq's air defenses "at will". Yet this also presents a real problem from the point of view of their ability to "support" 688, which called for the Iraqi government to cease its repression of Iraq's civilian population: I have yet to read of a human rights violation in Iraq that has involved the perpetrators targetting passing US or British planes with radar. Thus, the zones seem largely incapable of supporting 688, even in spirit. > I doubt that the Shi'a ... are > reassured to know the United States is now their protector. Nor are the > Kurds, who have been used as a political ping-pong ball by Washington for > decades, likely to be bolstered by the news. It is clear that the northern zone is not an iron-clad guarantee for Iraqi Kurds. The zone only coincides crudely with Iraqi Kurdistan, omitting its largest city, and including Mosul (in Iraq proper). Additionally, Washington's limited committment is very clear. US Ambassador for transition in Iraq Frank Riccardione's remark last year was particularly bald: Washington does not have a Kurdish policy; instead, it has policies towards all of those countries fortunate enough to have Kurdish populations. Further, life in Iraqi Kurdistan, even with this limited guarantee, seems quite unstable, if refugees and asylum seekers are any gauge. Finally, the Turkish "special packages" - bombing raids against villages in Iraqi Kurdistan suspected of containing PKK Kurds - are not prevented by the zone; indeed, the US and UK cannot fly when Turkey is raiding. For all these warts, Iraqi Kurds do seem to regard the northern no fly zone as a temporary symbol of some support for them. Given that they are one of the communities at greatest risk in this situation, and particularly now, I would not call for its outright abolition, but for its replacement by a mechanism better able to protect Kurdish rights, and with greater international legal support. Best, Colin Rowat work | Department of Economics | The University of Birmingham | Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK | c.rowat@bham.ac.uk personal | 07768 056 984 (UK mobile) | (917) 517 5840 (USA mobile) | (707) 221 3672 (US fax) | colinrowat@yahoo.com _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- This is a discussion list run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq For removal from list, email soc-casi-discuss-request@lists.cam.ac.uk Full details of CASI's various lists can be found on the CASI website: http://www.casi.org.uk