UNITED
NATIONS,
February 11 --
When UN mediator
Lakhdar
Brahimi took
press
questions in
Geneva on February
11, he
confirmed
he'll meet on
February 14
with the US'
Wendy Sherman
and Russia's
Gatilov, then
return to New
York "sometime
next week" to
tell Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon what's
going on.
(Apparently
phones and
e-mail aren't
good enough --
perhaps wise
in light of
the NSA and
Nuland's
intercepted
call about
Jeff Feltman
and F- the EU.)
Just as at the
US State Department
briefing on
February 10,
Brahimi was
asked, Why
wait until
Friday?
Brahimi said
these are
important
people, it's
hard to find a
day.
Told that
Syria's Mekdad
complained his
government had
not been
consulted,
Brahimi
agreed, saying
that's how
these
trilateral
meetings are
done.
Why don't you
impose an
agenda,
Brahimi was
asked.
He replied, I
can't put a
gun to their
heads.
The next
question began,
since you
don't have a
gun -- Brahimi
cut in, I do
have a gun but
I don't want
to use it. But
what's the gUN?
At the UN on
the evening of
February 10,
at Iran's
National Day
reception
featuring,
among others,
the Permanent
Representatives
of France, the
UK and China,
many
references
were made to
how "delicate"
the talks in
Geneva are.
Some cite this
as the reason
not to vote on
the draft
humanitarian
resolution
Russia's
Vitaly Churkin
calls "beyond
redemption." Could
ending the
talks be
Brahimi's gun?
Here's Inner
City Press tweeted
photo of
French PR Araud
and Iran's PR
Khazaee,
and here's
one of Araud
making some
point to Ban
Ki-moon
moments before.
The
Syria
"humanitarian
draft" which
French foreign
minister
Laurent Fabius
has vowed to
push in UN
Security
Council this
week, while
French
President
Francois
Hollande is in
Washington and
San Francisco,
was described
by Russia's
Ambassador
Vitaly Churkin
on February 10
as "beyond
redemption."
"They were
trying to
convene a
meeting, but
we felt that
was not
necessary,"
Churkin told
the press.
"They were
insisting that
the meeting
should be
dedicated to
discussing a
certain text,
but we felt
the text is
beyond
redemption."
He said Russia
wants to be
back to
"pragmatics."
"This text is
not going to
be adopted,"
Churkin said,
coming out of
the UN
Security
Council
seconds behind
US Ambassador
Samantha
Power.
An hour
earlier in the
US State
Department
briefing,
deputy
spokesperson
Marie Harf had
talked up the
humanitarian
resolution;
she was asked
why the US is
supposedly
deferring to
the too-slow
UN, after the
high level
humanitarian
meeting in
Rome.
Churkin also
said that
meeting has
been "quite
useless" and
that it
"departed from
the original
conception."
UN
humanitarian
chief Valerie
Amos is slated
to brief the
Security
Council about
it on February
13, but now
one wonders:
to what end?
In Geneva, UN
mediator
Brahimi met
with the
Syrian
National
Coalition and
the
government's
Bashar
Ja'afari,
usually its
ambassador at
the UN. Unlike
in the last
round, Brahimi
did not hold a
press
conference.
France 24
showed
Ja'afari
walking into
entrance A13
of the UN in
Geneva, then
the SNC, in a
loop.
Neither they,
nor other
ostensibly
Syria-focused
media have
done much
follow up, but
on January 29
Inner City
Press first
published
quotes from
the UN's
report on
Syria Children
and Armed
Conflict,
specifically
that the Free
Syrian Army
recruits and
uses child
soldiers:
"Throughout
the
reporting
period, the
United Nations
received
consistent
reports of
recruitment
and use of
children by
FSA-affiliated
groups."
Inner City
Press asked
the US Mission
to the UN to
respond to the
report, since
Congress in
its 2008
Child Soldiers
Prevention Act
said the US
Government
should condemn
the use of
child soldiers
by
paramilitaries
like the FSA.
Inner City
Press was told
to put the
request for
comment in
writing, and
did, to the UK
Mission as
well.
The report had
already been
circulated to
Security
Council
members in
English; the
UK said it
would wait to
provide Inner
City Press
with a comment
until the
report was
made official
on February 3,
that is to
say, when it
was translated
into the UN's
five other
official
languages and
put on the
Internet.
Readers asked
Inner City
Press where on
the UN website
to find the
Syria child
soldiers
report. Inner
City Press
told them it
would go
online on
February 3,
and noted
that the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
had previously
opposed the UN
withholding or
delaying the
release of
important
document like
this.
In this case,
however, the
delay
affirmatively
helped the
Syrian
opposition. On
January 29
they were in
Geneva,
issuing
statements
about abuses
by the Assad
government.
They were not
asked about
the Free
Syrian Army's
use of child
soldiers.
On February 3,
Inner City
Press again
asked the UK
for its
comment, and
it did arrive
the following
day on
February 4: