iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Richard N. Haass

GET UPDATES FROM Richard N. Haass
 

Syria: Beyond the UN Veto

Posted: 07/19/2012 5:10 pm

The Russian and Chinese veto of the UN Security Council draft resolution that would have declared the situation in Syria a threat to international peace and security, extended the UN diplomatic mission headed by Kofi Annan, and set the stage for new sanctions and possibly UN-authorized military action was hardly surprising. More important, it is not all that significant.

What explains the veto is not just Russia's and China's opposition to the use of military force to unseat the Assad regime, something which would have required another Security Council resolution in any event. They also are uneasy with anything that legitimizes international involvement in what they see as the domestic affairs of countries. Both the Russian and Chinese governments fear precedents that could be turned against them. By contrast, the United States and many others believe outsiders have a responsibility to act if governments mistreat their citizens. If nothing else, it is time for a moratorium on the use of the phrase "international community" in situations such as this one where no such consensus exists.

The vote in New York will not materially affect the situation on the ground. The Syrian government has lost control over important parts of the country, and the opposition has demonstrated an ability to strike successfully in Damascus. Fighting is likely to intensify; the opposition will want to build on the momentum of this week's successful bombing; the Assad regime will want to demonstrate it is still able to defeat any and all challenges.

The failure to renew the diplomatic mission being led by Kofi Annan (with its associated group of observers) is no great loss. The peace plan under which Annan was operating had and has no chance of being accepted. It would be far better to terminate this effort and establish a new one with the mission of bringing about the exit of the current Syrian regime.

Last, the United States and other like-minded governments should not equate the United Nations with multilateralism, nor should they see the UN as having a monopoly on legitimacy. To the contrary, they should form a coalition of the willing and able, composed of NATO countries, selected Arab governments, and others that are committed to increasing sanctions against not just Syria but those countries supporting it, building up the strength and political appeal of the Syrian opposition, pressing for war crimes indictments against Bashar al-Assad and his inner circle, planning for strikes against Syrian chemical munitions, and preparing for a post-Assad Syria. As hard as it is proving to bring about the regime's downfall, it will likely prove far harder to manage a transition to something stable and democratic.

This post originally appeared on CFR.org's First Take.

 
 
 
FOLLOW WORLD
The Russian and Chinese veto of the UN Security Council draft resolution that would have declared the situation in Syria a threat to international peace and security, extended the UN diplomatic missio...
The Russian and Chinese veto of the UN Security Council draft resolution that would have declared the situation in Syria a threat to international peace and security, extended the UN diplomatic missio...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 72
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
12:48 PM on 08/08/2012
For a different perspective and some useful insight into the situation in Syria including: levels of violence, weapons used, network relationships and the future of Assad please see this short post http://tiny.cc/awsyria
photo
Sam7even
You're either with Humanity or you're not.
09:08 AM on 07/23/2012
The West should stay out of Syria's internal affairs. Haas is a CFR lacky and globalist of course the MIC et al want in because its more money for them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
altheschrod
I'm pedaling hard.
08:34 PM on 07/22/2012
Neverthe less, Kofi Annan is a man of peace, means well and his mission costs peanuts compared to any other efforts. On that basis, he should not be discouraged from continuing it, since it's the first time the UN has been involved in meaningful dialogue for many years.
10:02 AM on 07/22/2012
This is another "divide and conquer" strategy. Use the animosity between the Sunni and Shia to get rid of a leader that poses a threat to our "interests". Just my two cents.
photo
68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
07:24 PM on 07/22/2012
A sound expenditure of your two cents. F&F'd
09:37 AM on 07/22/2012
Actually, this article was on this HP website buried among mostly anti-Assad articles and it is worth reading to get alittle perspective......
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/120719/not-everyone-hates-bashar-al-assad
07:43 AM on 07/21/2012
Kofi Annan specializes in developing peace plans that keep ruthless dictators in power. His oil for food scandal that kept Saddam Hussain in power (and enriched his son) was a crime. Now he has a plan to keep Assad in power. This corrupt and ineffective "diplomat" should return his Nobel prize and publicly apologize for his "contribution" to mankind.
09:55 PM on 07/20/2012
Don't you think things have changed now, though, as U.S. citizens can now 'legally' torture U.S. citizens ? Can Russia and China complain legitimately about U.S. torture of U.S. citizens ?
08:48 PM on 07/20/2012
Many countries mistreat their citizens. If the UN decided it must intervene in all countries that mistreat its people, the world would be full of conflict by UN authorized armed forces.
06:04 PM on 07/20/2012
Always useful to search the author in Wikipedia when such unbiased comments are so gracefully made.The last paragraph, specially, is a gem.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phyllis Kunz
10:57 AM on 07/20/2012
Ship Assad off to Africa on the Mediterranean Sea and thereby Russia's President Putin and Assad
cannot continue to have a symbiotic relationship.
photo
checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
09:59 AM on 07/20/2012
A Syrian ceasefire ? Well, the Syrian government could call a ceasefire in twenty four hours, it is a central authority. The Rebels ? Impossible because of the simple fact they have no central command, no one to give the cease fire order. In fact, if the government falls we have no idea who will be running the country other than the group with the most weapons. We tell the Syrian government they must secure their chemical weapons, while at the same time trying to help the Rebels get control of them. When we talk about the people of Syria, we seem to refer only to those who support the Rebels. What about Syrians who support the government? Shouldn't they be considered ? Which group is in the majority ? Do we know and do we care ? Evidently not.
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
09:43 AM on 07/20/2012
Syria is a sovereign nation. The world has no say in Syria's internal affairs, or in ours.
08:51 PM on 07/20/2012
If Obama wants to be re-elected the first thing he must do is rein in Hillary Clinton and her sidekick Susan Rice. At the rate they are going they will get the US involved in another shooting war in the Middle East and jeopardize Obama's re-election campaign.
08:47 AM on 07/20/2012
The amazing arrogance and hypocrisy of the US and other western powers is truly astonishing. It is just a continuation of the colonialist attitude toward other peoples. Sanctions are a form of economic genocide upon families and children. There is no moral high ground there whatsoever. When our own house is not in order we have no right to intervene and tell anyone else what to do. First of all we in partnership with Israel have provoked this conflict to create an excuse to go to war with Iran and continue the crusade to steal oil. What the UN should do is sanction the US and Israel for creating instability and murdering many people in this part of the world. But of course the UN is owned by these powers, so what can we expect. Where was UN outrage about Iraq? Central America? The Congo, the Sudan? Who is creating all this violence in the world? Our paranoid, sociopathic, disfunctional USA, that's who. Our insane militaristic government sees the whole world as it's toy to destroy at whim murdering millions to forward our empire of corporate greed. Enough, stop it. Fix this country. That should be our priority.
11:13 AM on 07/20/2012
I don't completely agree with your tenor, but I'm definitely against intervention. There has been too much of it and this is going to lead to ugly human suffering.
11:46 AM on 07/20/2012
Good post. Seems like we forgot we had a civil war in America as well and many died or were injured. Fight against the compelling need to stick our nose where it does not belong. Solve problems at home. We have class warfare here that we need to address.
08:15 AM on 07/20/2012
Does Richard N. Haas seriously think that a "democratic" Syrian government wlll abandon the demandas to regain the Golan Heights, or is he gambling that the new government will be so weak that it will be subervient to the wishes of Israel and the USA? My take is that, "democratic" or not, any Syrian government will NOT abandon the Golan heights and will NOT abandon the freedom aspirations of the Palestinian people. The Mulsim-steeled and Arab culture-nurtured soul of the Syrian people will live on no matter what.
09:44 AM on 07/22/2012
We'll see....I expect this has already been arranged.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
gutenmorgen
a.k.a. crowsnest
07:54 AM on 07/20/2012
The Obama administration is between rock and a hard place on Syria. The rock is the strident demands to "stop the killing by the Assad government". The hard place is Israel which is ambivalent on this matter because it is far from clear what the rebels will demand with regards to the Golan Heights and whether they will destroy the existing chemical weapons. How can the Obama administration overlook a demand for the return of the Heights to a regime that is already an "ally" in the Middle East?