The UN Security Council ineffective but indispensable
In the run-up to war, neither key members of the UN Security Council nor senior UN officials did much to discourage the notion that the crisis over Iraq was presenting the Council with its "moment of truth". The crisis was shaped, above all, by the prism through which the United States vie...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | Survival |
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1. Verfasser: | |
Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
2003
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Schlagworte: |
Vereinte Nationen
> Internationale Organisation
> Konfliktlösung
> Konfliktregelung
> Krisenmanagement
> Interessenkonflikt
> Sicherheitspolitik
> UNO/Vereinte Nationen/United Nations Organization
> Friedenspolitik/Friedenssicherung
> Kriegsverhütung/Konfliktverhütung
> Terrorismus/Terrorismusbekämpfung
> Irakkrieg 2003
> UN/United Nations
> peace policy/peacebuilding/peacekeeping
> prevention of war/conflict prevention
> terrorism/measures against terrorism
> Iraq War 2003
> Irak
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Zusammenfassung: | In the run-up to war, neither key members of the UN Security Council nor senior UN officials did much to discourage the notion that the crisis over Iraq was presenting the Council with its "moment of truth". The crisis was shaped, above all, by the prism through which the United States views threats to its own and international security after 11 September 2001. Yet neither those threats, which are real and need to be taken seriously, nor the stormy politics of Iraq at the Security Council in 2002 and 2003, should lead to the conclusion that the UN is destined to become irrelevant. Ihat conclusion rests upon a basic misunderstanding of the UN's role in international peace and security. As the harsh realities of rebuilding Iraq become ever more apparent, as the long-term costs of the diplomatic debacle in New York in early 2003 filter through, and as the challenges posed by terrorism and the proliferation of WMD remain, interest-based calculations and principle both point to a return to the UN. This return would be based, hopefully, on a better recognition of the UN's strengths as well as its frequently deplored weaknesses. (Survival / SWP) |
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Beschreibung: | Lit.Hinw. |
ISSN: | 0039-6338 |