On
Iraq, 3d US Airdrop
to Sinjar,
Empty UN
Statement,
UNinformed
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 9 --
After the US
on August 8
announced
completion of
its second
air-drop of
aid to Sinjar
Mountain in
Iraq, President
Barack Obama
on August 9
said “I don't
think we're
going to solve
this problem
in weeks."
So, one of
the
question that
arises, who
else is going
to play? A second
question, now:
how marginalized
is the UN?
On
August 9, after
the US' third
air drop, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon put
out a
strikingly
empty
statement:
Statement
attributable
to the
Spokesman for
the
Secretary-General
on the
situation in
Iraq
The
Secretary-General
remains deeply
concerned
about the
evolving
humanitarian
and security
situation in
Iraq. The
United Nations
and
the
international
community are
also closely
watching
political
developments
in the
country.
The
Secretary-General
calls upon all
Iraqi
political
parties to
abide by
the
constitutional
timeline that
governs the
nomination of
the Prime
Minister. He
also calls for
reason and
wisdom to
prevail and
urges
all leaders in
Iraq to form a
broad-based
government
that is
acceptable to
all components
of Iraqi
society. Such
a government
should be able
to mobilize
the nation to
confront the
threat from
the
Islamic State
(IS) in a way
that will
bring security
and stability
to
the whole
country. New
York, 9 August
2014
This
same Office of
the
Spokesperson
didn't even
acknowledge
receipt earlier
on August 9 of
a Press
question about
the Permanent
Three members
of the
Security
Council taking
Ban for
granted, here,
on Libya.
What was the
purpose this
Iraq
statement?
On August 8,
Inner City
Press asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq,
who was also
the UN
spokesperson
on "weekend
duty," the
following, by
the UN's
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Since Mr.
Mladenov put
out this press
statement
saying
now that air
drops have
started, the
UN in Iraq is
urgently
preparing, et
cetera. I
wanted to ask,
was the UN
Secretariat
informed in
advance, you
know, either
of the
humanitarian
air drops
or of the air
strikes that
began today?
What’s the
relationship
between… both
of their
aerial actions
in Iraq and
the UN? Should
the UN be… has
it requested
to be
informed? Was
it informed?
What’s the
relation?
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq:
Well, in terms
of
information:
yes, today
the United
States
reported that
it has
undertaken
humanitarian
air
drops to
people trapped
on Sinjar
Mountain in
the Ninewa
province,
using US
military
assets. About
16,000 meals
and 190,000
bottles of
water were
reportedly
delivered via
parachute. For
further
information,
please contact
the US
authorities.
Inner
City Press:
But isn’t
this, I guess
my question
is, is that…
they
were talking
about Ukraine,
but in other
places,
basically it’s
like, what’s
the UN’s role
of
coordinating
humanitarian
action? Like,
isn’t in the
name of OCHA?
So, I wanted
to know,
what’s
going to be
the UN’s role
as various
countries, I
think another
Security
Council member
said it’s
going to begin
humanitarian
drops
in the coming
days. Is it…
what is OCHA,
I guess, what
is UNAMI
[United
Nations
Assistance
Mission in
Iraq], what’s
their role in
being informed
in advance and
trying to
coordinate
various
efforts? Or is
it just a
matter of
every country
does it in an
uncoordinated
basis?
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: Well, the
UN in Iraq is
going to try
to get
information as
it can from
the various
parties and to
coordinate, as
it can. One of
the things, as
yesterday’s
statement
said, was that
the
Secretary-General
was calling on
the
international
community,
especially
those with
influence and
resources to
positively
impact
the situation,
to support the
Government and
people of Iraq
and to do
all it can to
help alleviate
the suffering
of communities
affected by
the conflict.
Inner
City Press:
But did the US
call the UN,
did it
communicate to
the UN
prior to air
strikes?
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: I just
read to you
the
information we
have
received.
Meanwhile
on August 9
Inner City
Press was
reliably and
for then
exclusively
informed that
Iraq had
written to the
UN Security
Council invite
any and all UN
member states
to deliver aid
to areas
controlled by
Islamic State,
with Iraq's
agreement. [On
August 9, the
UK mission
confirmed this
to Inner City
Press, below.]
And so the
question
arises -- what
about aid from
Iran? From
Russia? From
China -- which
has told the
Press of $4.9
million in
medical
supplies to
Guinea,
Liberia and
Sierra Leone
for ebola?
At the US
State
Department's
briefing on
August 8, much
as made of
Iraq inviting
the US, and
only the US,
in . But now,
would others
including Iran
be welcome?
Shouldn't they
be?
Aid is needed,
and not only
in Sinjar.
Update
of 10:18 am:
Ten hours
after
publication of
the above,
Inner City
Press asked
the UK
Mission,
president of
the Security
Council for August,
to confirm
receipt of
Iraq's letter.
By email the
Mission to its
credit quickly
responded,
"Matthew, I
can confirm
the UNSC
received a
letter from
the Perm Rep
of Iraq that
attached a
resolution
passed by the
Parliament of
the Republic
of Iraq on 7
August, which
calls on the
UN and hum'n
organisations
to provide
relief to
refugees."
We'll have
more on this.
Back
on August 7 US
President
Barack Obama
announced
authorization
for airstrikes
on Iraq. Then
three of his
Senior
Administration
Officials
(SAOs) held a
50 minute
conference
call with the
press.
First,
Inner City
Press has
reliably been
informed that
Iraq has only
requested such
military
support from
the US. This
seem to leave
France, which
called for the
Thursday
evening
meeting of the
UN Security
Council and
said military
action is
indeed needed,
out in the
cold. (We note
that France
got invited to
intervene in
Mali, and the
Central
African
Republic -- so
there's that.)
On the
White House
background
call, a SAO
cited ISIL's
“swift” moves
Saturday, its
“military
proficiency,”
and said the
US coordinated
with the
Peshmerga. A
SAO cited ISIL
putting heads
on spikes and
enslaving
women and said
that on Sinjar
mountain it's
120 degree F,
in the day
time.
A SAO
said Secretary
of State John
Kerry spoke on
August 7 with
the foreign
ministers of
France, the
UAE, Turkey
and Jordan --
and cited the
August 7 UN
Security
Council
meeting
(requested by
France), see
below.
On the
military
front, a SAO
said that
during the
airdrop,
planes were
over the area
for only 15
minutes, at
low altitude
(this was
later
formalized in
a Department
of Defense
statement.)
A SAO
confirms no
airstrikes
yet, but said
the US stands
ready. A SAO
said this is
authorized by
the US
Constitution,
to protect US
citizens for
example in
Erbil, also
citing a
“potential act
of genocide”
(Given
the numbers
cited on
Sinjar
mountain,
Inner City
Press couldn't
help wondering
about 2009
when 40,000
people were
cornered &
killed in Sri
Lanka.)
Finally,
the
SAOs were
asked if
President
Obama is going
to postpone
his trip to
Martha's
Vineyard. A
the UN one
might ask if
the UNSC still
going to
Belgium? The
US SAO
wouldn't
answer on
Martha's
Vineyard, said
Obama's day
started early
today with
Ambassador
Susan Rice,
and later
including John
Kerry by video
from
Afghanistan --
this could be
done on
Martha's
Vineyard. But
what's the
technology on
the UN
Security
Council's
planned trip?
We hope to
have more on
this - watch
this site.
Earlier
on August 7
after 6:30 pm,
Council
president for
August Mark
Lyall Grant
emerged to
read a press
statement,
followed by
question and
answer
stakeouts by
French deputy
Alexis Lamek
and Iraqi
Permanent
Representative
Alhakim.
Inner City
Press asked
Lamek if
France will
take military
action. While
we'll await
the French
mission's
transcript,
Lamek
eventually
said "that
needs to be
done indeed."
Inner City
Press asked
Alhakim about
airdrops, if
ISIL has
anti-aircraft
guns and if
the dam has
been taken
over. This
last, he
denied, saying
that ISIL does
not control
the dam.
Update:
after those
stakeouts, a
senior US
Department of
Defense
official told
the press:
“I can
confirm that
tonight, at
the direction
of the
Commander in
Chief, the
U.S. military
conducted a
humanitarian
assistance
operation in
Northern Iraq
to air drop
critical meals
and water for
thousands of
Iraqi citizens
threatened by
ISIL near
Sinjar. The
mission was
conducted by a
number of U.S.
military
aircraft under
the direction
of U.S.
Central
Command. The
aircraft that
dropped the
humanitarian
supplies have
now safely
exited the
immediate
airspace over
the drop
area.”
And shortly
after that, US
President
Barack Obama
announced he
has authorized
airstrikes. He
took no
questions.
There is a
draft
resolution in
the works,
with UK
Ambassador
Lyall Grant
saying that a
new draft
would be
circulated
later on
August 7. The
Security
Council leaves
on August 8
for a
week-long trip
to Europe and
South Sudan
and perhaps
some other
places for now
undisclosed.
Some wonder
how they will
keep up not
only with Iraq
(and the
Levant) but
also Gaza and
conceivably
Ukraine and
other matters.
In a statement
from Baghdad,
the UN mission
UNAMI
announced that
“over the last
48 hours
200,000
civilians have
fled the
advance of
ISIL, with at
least 180,000
crossing into
the Dohuk
district of
the Kurdistan
Region.” UNAMI
said “up to
200,000
predominantly
Yazidi
civilians
becoming
trapped on
Jabal Sinjar
in territory
not controlled
by ISIL.”
Even
before the
Security
Council turned
from its
regularly
scheduled
Darfur meeting
to the urgent
session on
Iraq,
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, not
in the UN but
"in New York"
according to
his public
schedule, put
out a
statement
calling on
those with
“resources to
positively
impact the
situation to
support the
Government.”
Did
that mean air
strikes?
On
July 25 after
the UN
Security
Council met
behind closed
doors with the
Syria
Commission of
Inquiry's
Paulo Sergio
Pinheiro and
Karen AbuZayd,
the two
Commissioners
and UK
Ambassador
Mark Lyall
Grant came to
take questions
from the
press.
Karen
AbuZayd spoke
of abuses not
only by the
government but
also, in
response to a
question, by
what she
called the
Islamic State
of Iraq and
[Syria], ISIL.
Inner City
Press when
called on
asked her
about ISIS'
takeover of
border
crossing,
renaming as
Islamic State
and attacks on
non-Sunni
Muslims in
Mosul.
In
this context,
what did she
think of hers
or another
Commission of
Inquiry
covering the
group's abuses
in Iraq as
well? Bigger
picture, does
the state by
state focus of
the UN make
sense in this
context?
AbuZayd
said
she prefers
not to call
them “Islamic
State,” it
give them too
much credit.
Pinheiro
resisted any
talk of
expanding his
Commission's
mandate --
Syria is
enough.
A US
state media
asked about
foreign
fighters,
including
pro-government;
Pinheiro said
that Hezbollah
is the only
group of
foreign
fighters he's
away of.
This
is strange,
given that the
UN's
own recent
report on
Syria
humanitarian
access
notes that “on
June 29, the
Islamic State
issued a
statement
announcing
that the
Caliphate
included
people from
the following
nationalities:
Caucasian
[sic], Indian,
Chinese, Shami
(Levantine),
Iraqi, Yemeni,
Egyptian,
North African,
American,
French,
German, and
Australians."
Watch this
site.
Footnote: one
wanted to ask
AbuZayd about
developments
-- to put it
mildly -- in
Gaza, where
she used to
head UNRWA,
but this too
was deemed
beyond the
scope of the
stakeout.
Another former
Gaza hand, John
Ging, has
been speaking
on the topic
this week.
Perhaps we'll
hear from Ms.
AbuZayd. We'll
be watching.
* * *
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