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Date Posted: 01:04:16 05/22/03 Thu
Author: Drew Greyfox
Subject: U.S. plans to keep control of Iraq oil
In reply to: Drew Greyfox 's message, "Cut and paste news" on 00:19:34 05/22/03 Thu

U.S. plans to keep control of Iraq oil

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - In hopes of getting strong U.N. support, the United States has made concessions in its quest to lift 13-year-old trade sanctions against Iraq, opening the door for the return of U.N. arms inspectors.


But the resolution, expected to be adopted by Friday, still gives the United States and Britain wide-ranging powers to run Iraq and control its oil industry until a permanent government is established, which could take years.


The text, the third version distributed on Monday, seeks to accommodate some of the criticism by France, Russia, China and other U.N. Security Council members, particularly what they see as an attempt to sideline the United Nations but obtain privileges the world body has under international law.


While few expect any country to veto the text, the United States wants a large majority in the 15-nation council.


Without U.N. action to lift the sanctions, imposed when Iraqi troops invaded Kuwait in 1990, Washington would be in a legal no man's land, with many firms unwilling to engage in trade with Iraq, and oil exports open to lawsuits.


Russia's U.N. Ambassador Sergei Lavrov said he "welcomed the mood of the co-sponsors to really try their best to respond to as many question as they can." But he said council members wanted "more clarity" at the lack of any time limit or renewal of the resolution.


In deference to Russia, which was favoured in contracts by the ousted government of President Saddam Hussein, the resolution phases out the existing U.N.-run oil and civilian supply network over six months instead of four months.


It does not guarantee that all contracts in the so-called oil-for-food pipeline will be honoured, such as the $4 billion owed Russian firms, but leaves time to sort them out.


'NEVER SAY NEVER'


On the political role of the United Nations, the draft calls for a high-level special representative with "independent responsibilities." The envoy would "work intensively" with the United States and Britain "to facilitate a process leading to an internationally recognised, representative government of Iraq" but his or her duties are still vague.


U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte said Washington could offer further changes but it was unlikely. "Never say never," he said. "But ... we have gone just about as far as we can in meeting the concerns expressed by other delegations."


The resolution, he said, foresaw no role for U.N. arms inspectors. But the new text mentions their mandate in U.N. resolutions since 1991, and opens the door for their return to verify Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction.


Most controversial is shielding Iraq's oil revenues and a special Development Fund set up to administer them until 2008 from any lawsuits, attachments or claims. This is usual for a fund administered by the United Nations but not one over which the world body has no power.


However, the new text says buyers of Iraqi oil are not necessarily immune from suits, such as cases of oil spills.


Money from the fund can be spent by the United States and Britain for the benefit of the Iraqi people. An international board, including the United Nations, will monitor the fund.


Troubling to international law experts is the rewriting of the 1949 Geneva Conventions on the duties of occupying powers, such as the United States and Britain. They are not supposed to create a new permanent government or commit Iraq to long-term contracts, such as oil exploration, under the Geneva treaties.


"The United States is asking the Security Council to authorise it to do a series of things that would otherwise violate international law under the guise of ending sanctions," said Morton Halperin, a former State Department official and director of the Open Society Institute in Washington.

"The purpose of this resolution is to relieve the United States of both its obligations and the limits of what it can do as an occupying power under international law by having the Security Council supersede the requirements of the Geneva Convention," he said in an interview.

[So let's review...the excuses for war were weapons of mass destruction, Saddams links to terrorism, and then liberating the Iraqi people. Not a single example of WMD have been found. No ties to terrorists have been found, and even worse looting of nuclear facilities may have put materials right into terrorist hands! And although Saddam is gone, the raqi people remain under martial law with even the plans for an interim government suspended indefinitely, to say nothing of a real democratic government. But through it all one thing has remained unchanged...Iraqi oil in Bush's hands. Of course we said a long time ago that this war was about one thing, oil. Bush is more predictable then my alarm clock!


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Replies:

  • Secrets galore (the effort and threats the pentagon is making to keep the real Private Lynch story secret) -- Drew Greyfox, 09:16:05 05/22/03 Thu
  • Good article. BTW - at the end there is a sentence stating that the author, Col. David Hackworth, was a sailor and a soldier. I know a little bit about this guy, and while it’s true that he was a sailor and a soldier, that’s hardly the whole story (more) -- Dano, 14:35:47 05/22/03 Thu

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