THE UNITED NATIONS
U.N. History
Foundation
The signing of the „Charta of the United Nations“ was finished at the 26th of June in 1945 in San Francisco/ USA After the ratification from China, France, Great Britain, USSR, and USA as well as the majority of the other signing - nations, the Charta came into force.
Primary Objectives
Preservation and consolidation of peace and international safety. Establishment of peaceful relations between the nations on the basis of equality and self-determination of the nations. Co-operation by resolving humanitarian-, cultural-, social-, and economy problems.
Secondary Objectives
The signing - nations should find peaceful solutions for international quarrels, so that there is no threat to world peace, international security and justice.
PROBLEMS OF THE U.N.
The Gulf War
After Iraqi troops kept Kuwait City occupied, U.S. president George Bush gave Saddam Hussein a deadline after a frustrating week of Soviet efforts to broker a deal that would be acceptable to both Iraq and allies.
The day before, Feb. 15, a Baghdad announcement indicated Iraq's "readiness to deal with" the basic U.N. resolution demanding withdrawal from Kuwait. But Iraq's farfetched conditions, one demanded reparations for allied bombing, let have Bush denounce the proposal as a "cruel hoax".
The U.
N. didn't continue to find a peaceful solution, but Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev proclaimed himself encouraged enough to invite Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz to Moscow for new talks. In Moscow, Gorbachev handed Aziz a Soviet proposal that was quickly communicated to the allies fighting Iraq. Basically, Iraq would withdraw, supposedly unconditionally, from Kuwait. In return, Moscow would have undertaken to preserve Saddam from any punitive actions (a war-crimes trial, for instance), guarantee Iraq's territorial integrity, try to get economic sanctions against Iraq lifted and work for an overall Middle East peace conference. This proposal didn't set a timetable for withdrawal from Kuwait, so the allies had the fear that Saddam may leave Kuwait in weeks or months.
But in private, allied officials were blunt in contending that Saddam must lose his face if not his skin. His armies must not only be beaten but beaten so thoroughly and unmistakably that there will be no way to disguise the loss. One more time this showed that the allies didn't care much about a peaceful solution. Wanted they to demonstrate their strength regardless?
Partly the allies didn't want to lose their face, but if they would have lifted the economical embargo and performed Saddams conditions, their doing would have been called a poor show. Annulment of all U.N.
resolutions after withdrawal would have relieved Iraq of any pressure to pay reparations for having ravished Kuwait. Whether such reparations could ever be collected from an Iraq economy knocked practically flat by bombing is uncertain. On the other side there had to be more at stake than let Saddam bleed for his doing. I think that this war wasn't just a demonstration of might, but also a financial challenge all around Persian Gulf oil. I won't think about the possibility, that a poor country was occupied by an other poor country. The motivation of quick help would be very low, because allies would think "no money, no help".
Bosnia
In June 1995, after two years of a virtual standoff, the protagonists have started a major shooting war against the international community to let them withdraw its troops. As the large Muslim army launched its most aggressive offensive ever, U.N. soldiers stood by while Muslim government and Serb forces emptied the heavy-weapons collection points around Sarajevo. The "peacekeepers" then waited nervously for the Bosnian Croats to join the fight. Meeting in Halifax the G-7 leaders of the major industrial democracies seemed less interested in Bosnia then in developing an early-warning system for economic calamities like Mexico.
Sure, it's important to help non-, or low industrialized countries, but what is more important than saving lives in this terrible war? I think the answer is money. In comparison to Kuwait Bosnia has now large oil-fields. Another reason could be, that the U.N. is at low budget.
That hard facts showed, that U.
N. forces were not able or not allowed to take vigorous action there. As lightly armed troops, U.N..soldiers operated under highly restricted rules of engagement and paid a terrible price.
The U.N. peacekeeping force in Bosnia suffered more than 100 fatalities, including 56 French and 18 British soldiers. This was a further reason more to send more resistently troops to Bosnia. As peace enforcers serving under NATO command, the French, British, American and other members of the 60,000-men strong international implementation force have carried heavy weapons and they were authorized to shoot not only if they came under fire, but even if they were just threatened.
The U.
Anmerkungen: |
| impressum | datenschutz
© Copyright Artikelpedia.com