/ 21 March 2004

Iraq: Blair and Bush seek new UN backing

The United Nations is to be given a lead role in post-occupation Iraq under British and American plans to shore up crumbling international support for the continuing military presence in the country.

UK officials told The Observer there will be a sustained push for a fresh UN resolution ‘mandating’ the continued military presence in Iraq after the handover to the transitional government in June.

The move comes a week after the new Spanish Prime Minister, José Luís Rodriguez Zapatero, threatened to withdraw troops from the coalition force unless it was given a greater degree of international legitimacy. British officials said Republican claims from America that Spain had ‘appeased’ terrorists were unhelpful and wrong.

The Polish government, which also supports the military action in Iraq, has now also suggested that it was misled on the reasons for war.

The resolution, which British sources believe will be backed by the Security Council, will also allow the UN a role in overseeing Iraq’s first democratic elections and the judicial and legal framework which the new government will rely on to protect individual freedoms.

Britain will then suggest a Nato role in security matters in Iraq, as happened successfully in Afghanistan.

The move comes as the Labour Party adopted a new foreign policy document this weekend which said that all international conflict had be ‘within a UN framework’. In a potential snub to Downing Street, the document, which is likely to be published as a policy paper before the next election said that military action could only be taken ‘as a last resort’ and had to be ‘in accordance with international law’.

An amendment demanding that all military action must be sanctioned by the UN was defeated at the party’s national policy forum in Warwick.

The push by British diplomats for a new resolution reveals Tony Blair’s enthusiasm for UN ‘cover’ in Iraq. With international support slipping, Whitehall sources believe that the UN is the only route which can ensure pan-European support for a continued presence in Iraq.

‘When we need a resolution is fairly clear — when we are coming up to May and June. We will then need to address the prospect of a transitional government,’ said one senior British official closely involved in the negotiations.

‘We will have to cover the continuing multinational force and endorse that as being the clear wish of the Iraq people. And we’ll need to look forward to what is going to be this enhanced UN role post 30 June.’

He said the UN could ratify decisions made by the transitional government, help it prepare for elections and enshrine democracy.

‘My sense of the Security Council dynamic now is that we are all agreed on an increasing UN role,’ the official said. ‘We are all agreed we should transfer responsibility to the Iraqis on 30 June, and that is the moment when we say you have a transitional government.’

  • A former senior White House aide claimed on Satureday that US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld almost immediately urged George Bush to consider bombing Iraq after the 11 September terrorist attacks.

    Richard Clarke, the counter-terrorism co-ordinator at the time, recounts in a forthcoming book details of a meeting the day after the attacks when officials considered the American response. Even then, he said, they were certain that al-Qaeda was to blame and there was no hint of Iraqi involvement.

    ‘Rumsfeld was saying we needed to bomb Iraq,’ Clarke said. ‘We all said, ”No, no, al-Qaeda is in Afghanistan.”’ – Guardian Unlimited Â