France
submits Syria UN resolution with ‘further measures’ on the table
The
international community would enforce “further measures” under
Chapter VII of the Security Council, in case Syria fails to pass a
“continuous review” of the chemical disarmament process, the
draft UN resolution submitted by France suggests.
RT,
14
September, 2013
The
French resolution demands that the Syrian government provides
“unfettered access to its chemical
weapons sites”
and allows “international
inspectors to make surprise visits to locations of their choice,”
according to al-Arabiya.
The
UN supervisors deployed in Syria would “oversee
the dismantlement and destruction of all elements”
of the chemical weapons program to prevent the possibility of its
production or usage in the future.
According
to the draft, Syrian chemical weapons stockpiles are supposed to be
placed under international control immediately after the UN
resolution is adopted to ensure that there is no more production, use
or transfer of chemical weapons. The draft also sets a 90-day
deadline for all political parties in Syria to sit down and form a
transitional government.
After
the consultations between the United States, France and Britain the
strong wording of France’s initial draft resolution was reportedly
weakened to call for imposing “further
measures”
only if the international inspectors considered the Syrian government
was does complying with its obligations.
Meanwhile,
US officials indicated that the UN Security Council resolution on
Syria's chemical weapons was unlikely to include any provisions
threatening possible use of military force.
The
United States would instead insist that the resolution include a
range of consequences, such as stricter sanctions, the officials told
Reuters on condition of anonymity.
However,
US officials have not backed down from pushing a non-military
sanctions provision under Chapter VII.
Chapter
VII of the United Nations Charter allows the UN Security Council to
"determine the existence
of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of
aggression"
and to take both military and non-military action to "restore
international peace and security."
Russia
and China holding veto power in the Security Council have already
used it three times to block Western resolutions with potential
backdoors for direct military intervention in the Syrian conflict.
Meanwhile,
during the second
day of talks
between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov, the parties have agreed the only solution to the
ongoing Syrian crisis lies within the framework of the “Geneva-2”
peace talks. Russian President Vladimir Putin also recently said the
proposal could only succeed if the US and its allies calls off
military strikes.
The
meeting between Russian and US teams is reaching its "pivotal
point"
and will continue on Saturday, RIA Novosti cited a source in the
Russian delegation as saying.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.