THERE has been no dearth of feeling around the horseshoe table of the Security Council in recent days.
The
American ambassador, Samantha Power, choked up as she spoke of infants
who perished in the Malaysia Airlines crash in Ukraine. The Dutch
foreign minister, Frans Timmermans, could barely contain his anger as he
recalled seeing pictures of “thugs” snatching wedding bands off the
fingers of the victims. The Palestinian envoy, Riyad Mansour, grew quiet
in the middle of a long recitation of names and ages — all
belonging to
children killed in the latest Israeli offensive in Gaza.
The
conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, not to mention the war in Syria, have
presented diplomats with emotional testimonies of civilian suffering,
even alleged crimes against humanity. Yet the 15-member Council has been
unable to end these conflicts.
The problem is not that the major world powers don’t care. It is that they care too much.
Russia
and the United States have a great deal at stake in each conflict, and
the rules of diplomacy enable them, as well as the other three permanent
members — Britain, China and France — to veto
any Security Council action. Since the end of the Cold War, the United
States has vetoed 14 draft resolutions, most of them involving the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict; Russia has vetoed 11 concerning its
allies, like the government of Syria.
“When
you have a crisis where a major power has a national interest involved
they will try to block interference by the Security Council,” said
Gérard Araud, the French ambassador to the United Nations, who finished
his term here on Friday. “The U.N.,” he said, ends up being “in charge
of crises that are of no interest to anybody.”
Or,
occasionally, mainly of interest to France, such as the conflict in the
Central African Republic, where France corralled the world powers to
authorize a United Nations peacekeeping mission.
Not
so in the case of Gaza. As the death toll in the fighting climbed past
800, no swift movement was expected on a draft resolution circulated to
Council members last week on behalf of Arab countries calling for the
protection of civilians. Late last week, Council members said they were
waiting for Secretary of State John Kerry’s cease-fire efforts to bear
fruit before taking action. In the case of Ukraine, the Council seems
equally incapable of devising a political solution to the crisis, which
has become what Richard Gowan, an analyst at the Center on International
Cooperation at New York University, calls a proxy war between Russia
and the West. And with Syria, Russian support for President Bashar
al-Assad’s government has led to four successive vetoes of resolutions
on the conflict.
The
right of veto has long enabled the permanent members to reject anything
that threatens their strategic interests, despite the organization’s
lofty principles, notably its mandate to protect civilians when their
own state authorities cannot.
France
and Britain both support the idea of limiting veto power in cases of
mass atrocities. The proposal, first floated several years ago by
several small countries, has been ignored by China, Russia and the
United States.
Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story
The Council’s most vociferous critics wasted no time last week reminding the permanent members of their responsibility.
“The
commendable emphasis placed by the Security Council on the protection
of civilians in other items of its agenda cannot be sidestepped when it
comes to the responsibility to protect Palestinians, who bear the brunt
of the violence,” said Brazil’s deputy permanent representative,
Guilherme de Aguiar Patriota, in an open debate in the Council on
Tuesday.
The Council has in recent months proved to be more effective in cooling tempers than stopping warfare, Mr. Gowan pointed out.
After
the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, and accusations of Russian
support for the separatist rebels whom the West considers responsible,
the Council managed to pass a modest resolution to send international
investigators to the crash site. Likewise, the Council passed a measure
that authorized humanitarian aid delivery to rebel-held areas in Syria;
the first convoys began moving Thursday.
Mr. Gowan called such gestures “a pressure valve” that postponed a broader political solution to the conflicts.
“Sometimes
you go to the Council to show how angry you are,” Mr. Gowan said.
“Sometimes you go to the Council because it buys time to get a deal.”
The
Ukraine resolution to send investigators did not contain any threat of
enforcement, though — nor, crucially, any path to peace. On Wednesday,
two days after the measure passed, two Ukrainian jets were shot down.
The Ukrainian government quickly accused Russia.
source: New York Times

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