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Elephant Cemetery : The UN In Lebanon

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  • Elephant Cemetery : The UN In Lebanon

    ELEPHANT CEMETERY : THE UN IN LEBANON
    by Alberto Cruz, CEPRID, in Rebelion

    Scoop.co.nz, New Zealand
    Sunday, 9 September 2007, 8:49 pm

    The main ideological battlefield in the Middle East is Lebanon. However
    much United States media cover the situation in Iraq (and one should
    remember the only thing they worry about is the number of their dead
    soldiers), that country is not the one where the region's future
    is at stake, but rather a small Mediterranean country, also Arab :
    Lebanon. This has been the case since last year produced the most
    important event so far in the 21st century : the defeat of Israel
    in the second Lebanese war. That defeat not only frustrated the
    neocolonial plans of the US - already very shaky thanks to the war in
    Iraq - to create a "new Middle East" pliant to imperialist designs
    and made up of diverse permanently antagonistic religious, ethnic
    and racial visions without a strong central power, visions which,
    being weaker, would to a large degree accept an indefinite US presence.

    Added to the frustration of that goal was the collapse of the myth of
    an invincible, all-powerful Tsaal (Israel's armed forces, trans.) and
    with that began the process currently under way which is nothing
    less than peoples' realization that they are capable of taking their
    destinies into their own hands. That is the source of the situation
    we see now in Lebanon, in Palestine and in occupied Iraq, although
    that country has further to go and is beset with numerous variables.

    The whole world is intervening in this ideological war : France,
    Russia, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Iran, the forever
    inoperative and ineffectual Arab League and even the timid Spanish
    government, converted into a Bush regime pimp in Afghanistan and
    Lebanon after an initial courageous and honest move in withdrawing
    troops from Iraq. All these actors, if we except Russia, which
    maintains its political, economic and military accords with Syria
    and has recently received the main leaders of Hamas, play a role in
    the same script, in line with Pentagon strategy from 2006 known as
    "frontiers of blood" (1) : controlling what they regard as "the Shi'ite
    menace" and avoiding the influence of Syria and Iran in the region.

    A poor screenplay, but with an impressive budget that guarantees great
    special effects. The US godfather, a great producer, offers around
    US$60bn to ensure a spectacular show, with the reservation that in
    this case the dead will not be fictitious, but real. Arming the Saudis,
    Egyptians, Jordanians, the Gulf countries and Israel is no chimera. On
    the one hand it calms down regimes feeling their peoples' breath hot
    on their necks more and more and, on the other, it hands an oxygen mask
    to the self-same US economy by reviving the industrial-military complex
    and trying in that way to arrest the forecast economic slowdown.

    This slowdown is forecast right now in the wake of the property market
    crisis but has still not happened yet.

    Already in 2004 US economists predicted their country could suffer
    structural deficits until 2009 as a result of spending on the Iraq
    war. For their part European economists reckon that the crisis will
    come when the dollar falls to 1.50 against the Euro. (2) In January
    2007 the rate was 1.32. Eight months later it is at 1.36. Crisis yes,
    but not for the moment, so long as China decides against. Given the
    incredible amount of dollar reserves it holds, the key to the crisis
    is in that country's hands.

    But let's stick with Lebanon. This screenplay on an Arab theme,
    as well as moves behind the scenes, make clear that the great US
    godfather is very worried. It cannot get out of the Iraqi morass. It
    sees how its Palestine strategy is breaking up. Only Lebanon offers
    a possible victory - via clear international tutelage - to prevent
    the imperial megalomania falling into the sea like a sandcastle at
    high tide. Hence the obstinacy on Lebanon and the consequent abuse
    of the UN so as to cover its policy with a gloss of legitimacy.

    At the great patron's behest

    The Bush regime has been noted for its demolition of the UN
    multinational system, especially with its neocolonial invasion and
    occupation of Iraq, but like a shameless loudmouth, it now uses the
    UN to serve its purposes. Individuals like Michael Ignatieff and
    Robert Kagan already suggested in 2002 "acting at the margins of
    the UN when it may be useful and resorting to it when it serves our
    interests." They were the ideologues of the New Security Strategy
    pompously presented by Bush that same year which sanctioned the
    renowned "preventive war". In Iraq they dispensed with the UN :
    in Lebanon they are are mis-using it to the point of nausea.

    For that reason nothing the UN has done lately is innocent,
    certainly not in the matter of Lebanon. Just in the last four years
    the anti-democratic Security Council - with its enduring right of
    veto and rejection of democratic expansion to include new permanent
    members - has approved 26 resolutions on Lebanon, an average of 6
    resolutions a year, one every two months. Not a bad average, beaten
    only by African countries like the Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sudan or the
    Congo. Not even Iraq received so many Security Council resolutions
    (only 9 have been passed on that country since 2004, an index we have
    noted in relation to Lebanon ever since the first resolution that
    concerns us on this issue, number 1559) which supports the argument
    made at the start of this article : at the moment Lebanon is much
    more important strategically for the US than Iraq.

    It may be true that the plan to dominate the Middle East began with
    the slogan "the war on terror" after 9-11 and the wars in Afghanistan
    and Iraq, a country that is the weakest link in the plan for strategic
    rearrangement, which also included Saudi Arabia and Egypt ( the US-Arab
    Country Plan for Association presented by Condoleezza Rice on December
    12th 2002) and the intention of seeking a final solution to the
    Palestinian problem in accordance with the interests of Israel. The
    failure in Iraq forced the turn towards Lebanon. Clearly, without
    the struggle by Iraqi patriots the original plan would have worked
    to begin with. So the slowing down of that plan is to the credit of
    the Iraqi patriots. But it is the Lebanese patriots who have stopped
    it in its tracks, increasing the empire's difficulties with their
    victory in the war last summer.

    Of those 26 UN resolutions, 9 are technical, extending the mandate
    of the UNIFIL forces to stay in Lebanon allegedly to monitor respect
    for the Blue Line (the frontier between Israel and Lebanon) and also,
    since August 2006, the cessation of hostilities following last summer's
    second war. The other resolutions are clearly political. Since passing
    resolution 1559 in October 2004 (demanding that Syria withdraws its
    forces from Lebanon, the disarming of Palestinian militias protecting
    refugee camps and of Hezbollah's armed forces) and with the exception
    of those referring to the international tribunal to investigate the
    assassination of Rafik Hariri, former Lebanese Prime Minister, all
    have the same common denominator.

    But since the passing of resolution 1701 in August 2006 which set up
    the "end of hostilities" one has got used to hearing a new argument :
    arms are travelling from Syria to Hezbollah and Palestinian groups,
    so the frontiers are insecure and that has to be dealt with.

    This is also the argument of the latest initiative, a Presidential
    announcement - approved this August 3rd - which is going to be the
    prelude to a new resolution in favour of international intervention
    on Lebanon's frontier with Syria. The current president of the
    Security Council is the representative of the Democratic Republic of
    Congo, someone more amenable to US pressures than his predecessors,
    the Chinese and South African ambassadors. It is worth pointing
    out that South Africa has repeatedly opposed and toned down harder
    resolutions on Lebanon put forward by France and Britain. In fact the
    South African position is described by the US media as "betrayal" (3)
    not only for what is regarded as "obstruction" of US initiatives in
    the UN but for its relations with Iran and the fact that a year ago,
    during the second Lebanese war, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, South Africa's
    Foreign Minister expressed solidarity with Hezbollah's struggle against
    "Israeli aggression".

    So now, with a more docile Security Council President, the US and
    France have managed to get approval for a declaration which in its
    most important aspects calls for "full support for the legitimate
    democratically elected Lebanese government" (here once more the
    argument of the supposed democratic legitimacy of the government
    ignores constitutional rules, that the resignation of Shi'ite and
    Christian ministers denies the government authority to take decisions)
    expressing "serious concern at violations of the arms embargo along
    the length of the Syrian-Lebanese border" (mentioning expressly
    Hezbollah, Fatah-Intifada and the popular Front for the Liberation
    of Palestine General Command) and showing "profound concern" for the
    Israeli soldiers captured by Hezbollah in July 2006, asking for them
    "to be returned immediately and unconditionally". The same as usual,
    in other words.

    More so, given that the declaration restricts itself to admonishing
    Israel for the increase in violations of Lebanese air space and
    "encourages" it to resolve the issue of Lebanese priosners detained
    in its jails.

    That encouragement is very different to the threats applied to
    Hezbollah.

    The imperialist offensive on Lebanon - a recent chronology

    The imperialist powers are worried, and worried a lot, about
    Lebanon. At the end of September it holds presidential elections
    whereby, according to the constitution, the candidate has to be a
    Christian. So there are just three possible candidates : one from the
    neoliberal bloc - divided itself with three pre-candidates - which
    supports the Prime Minister Fouad Siniora; another from the opposition
    bloc around Hezbollah whose visible prime candidate is Michel Aoun;
    and thirdly, one who might be a consensus candidate, current army
    chief Michel Suleiman. The last two are not to the liking of the United
    States, although they see Suleiman as the lesser evil. One should not
    forget that contrary to the government's official version, Suleiman
    has denied that Syria is behind the Fatah al Islam organization
    with which the Lebanese army has fought hard since May in the Nahr
    al Bared Palestinian refugee camp. (4) And he said something else:
    "Fatah al Islam is a branch of Al Qaeda which had planned to use
    Lebanon and the Palestinian refugee camps as a haven from which to
    launch attacks in Lebanon and abroad". A timely dissociation from the
    Siniora government and a clear wink towrds Hezbollah, from whom he had
    distanced himself since the political-military movement's communique
    making clear their position on the fighting in the Palestinian refugee
    camp of Nahr al Bared (5)

    So then, all the measures being taken have the same common denominator
    of aiming to control Lebanon. It is worth making an exhaustive
    chronological review of the initiatives that have been set in train
    so everyone can draw their own conclusions:

    a) May 7th : UN Secretary general Ban Ki-Moon reports on Lebanon
    repeating the arguments it has been sought to realise since the end
    of the war in the summer of 2006, namely those of the penultimate
    initiative of the current president of the Security Council mentioned
    above. Ban Ki-Moon's report was disclosed after the failure by the US,
    Britain and France to get a new resolution on Lebanon approved so
    as to reinforce the Siniora government and accusing Syria and Iran
    of continuing to support Hezbollah with arms and money. The attempt
    to pass a new resolution was blocked by Russia and China as well as
    other member countries of the Security Council like Ghana and South
    Africa. In the draft that was blocked, the UN Security Council was
    asked to form an "independent mission" composed of "a committee of UN
    experts" to control the frontier. (6) A mission that was to have been
    made up of European countries and inviting participation from Egypt
    and Jordan, the only two Arab countries in the region to maintain
    diplomatic relations with Israel.

    b) May 10th : the Siniora government signs an agreement to supervise
    Lebanese State expenditures, something fiercely criticised by
    Hezbollah, Amal and the Free Patriotic Movement (the majority
    organization among Christians made up of that religion's middle
    and lower middle classes). That agreement is an effort to create
    a buffer so as to calm the feelings of countries that committed
    aid worth US$8bn in a conference in Paris in January, right at the
    moment when the country was paralysed by strikes against government
    neo-liberal measures.

    c) May 20th : appearance of the Islamist group Fatah al Islam and
    the beginning of armed exchanges in the Palestinian refugee camps
    of Nahr al Bared. From that day on, both the forces supporting the
    Siniora government and their Western patrons have rushed to accuse
    Syria of being behind that group with the aim, according to them,
    of obstructing the opening of the tribunal investigating the death
    of ex-Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri. For almost two years the issue of
    Hariri ( a Sunni multi-millionaire closely linked to the Saudi regime
    and Bandar bin Sultan in particular, now Saudi Arabia's Security
    Minister) is the only government explanation for what happens in
    Lebanon and is simply a sign of blind obedience to the neo-liberal
    policies designed by the IMF and the World Bank and of their own
    corruption and incompetence. In fact, according to Lebanese trade
    unions, 200,000 internal refugees still remain of the million people
    forced to abandon their homes under Israeli bombardment. Some 120,000
    workers have lost their jobs as a result of the war and reconstruction
    of the bombed areas of the Shia majority continues by Hezbollah,
    with no sign of any government presence.

    d) May 30th : the UN Security Council approves resolution 1757 setting
    up an international tribunal to investigate and bring to trial those
    responsible for the attack on Rafiq Hariri. It does so based on
    Chapter 7 of the UN Charter (which includes the right to use force)
    and is directed against Syria.

    e) June 2nd : on government orders, 300 members of the Internal
    Security Forces deploy along the Syrian Lebanese frontier to support
    the Lebanese army in border patrol tasks. Those forces, known in
    Lebanon as the Hariri militia, are loyal to Saad Hariri, the strong
    man of the governing coalition that supports Siniora and son of the
    assassinated ex-Prime Minister.

    At the end of the war they received US$60m from the US government. (7)
    Weeks later, US military aid would arrive for the Lebanese army.

    f) June 11th : Terje Roed-Larsen, UN Middle East envoy, presents a
    report to the Security Council which expresses his "profound concern at
    the illegal movement of arms" along the frontier with Syria. This man,
    known for his sympathy to Israel, did not conceal that he had sent
    similar reports to the Lebanese and Israeli governments as well as
    "other states" that he did not specify.

    g) June 24th : attack on Spanish troops of UNIFIL.

    This contingent has the worst reputation among local inhabitants
    in the south of Lebanon thanks to their aggression when patrolling
    communities in the area and their intrusion on reconnaissance in search
    of Hezbollah positions and arms caches among hills and locations
    used by local people. Despite that, the attack should be seen as an
    action directed against Hezbollah and the stability of the south of
    the country, in contrast with what has been happening in the north
    with the fighting in Nahr al Bared and the instability in Tripoli.

    h) June 28th : Ban Ki-Moon publishes a new report on Lebanon in which
    he laments that the measures proposed in Resolution 1701 have not
    been implemented, insisting on the porosity of the borders and the
    delivery of weapons both to Hezbollah and to Palestinian organizations
    (mentioning specifically the Popular Front for the Liberation of
    Palestine General Command) and gently rebuking Israel for daily
    violating Lebanese air space, sometimes 20 times a day. Mention of
    Resolutions 1559, 1680 and 1701 is repeated on numerous occasions,
    accusing Hezbollah of non-compliance. (8)

    i) June 29th : publication of a declassified CIA report which
    acknowledges that the Lebanese Shi'ite leader Muhammad Husain Fadlallah
    was targeted and a plan concocted to assassinate him in the 1980s. An
    attack failed - although various people died and around 200 were
    wounded. Fadlallah was considered , the same as today, the main
    religious reference point for HEzbollah, not just for the Shi'ite
    community. The report aimed at reminding the leaders of Hezbollah
    that they are in the sights of the US secret services, especially
    since the end of last year when Bush gave the all clear for covert
    operations against Hezbollah.(9)

    j) July 13th : the Israeli daily Ha'aretz, citing "official sources
    from the government in Jerusalem" publishes that "the UN cartographer
    has confirmed to Israel that the Shebaa Farms are Lebanese territory,
    for which reason Israel should withdraw from the area which would
    become international territory controlled by UNIFIL" (10)

    k) July 16th : another bomb attack on UNIFIL troops, this time from
    Tanzania. It caused no more than light material damage.

    l) July 17th : Miklos Pinte, the UN cartographer studying the
    Shebaa Farms territory reckons that its area extends over from
    between 20 to 40 square kilometres, but the Israelis occupy 70 square
    kilometres. (11) This is an area Lebanon claims for itself while the
    Israelis say it belongs to Syria and the Syrians say it is Lebanese.

    ll) July 18th : Ban Ki-Moon quickly sallies forth to recover the
    situation and says "the UN cannot confirm that the Shebaa Farms
    are Lebanese territory". (12) According to the Lebanese daily the
    "Daily Star" "Israel has warned the UN that carrying out the mapping
    (of the Shebaa farms) could reignite the conflict (with Hezbollah)"
    and Farhan Haq, the UN spokesperson in New York , buries the matter
    saying "the cartographer has still not completed his work".

    At the same time he announces a visit by the cartographer to the area
    without specifying a date.

    Docile Ban Ki-Moon faces a great dilemma since if the UN reckons that
    the Shebaa Farms are Lebanese territory occupied by Israel, as the
    cartographer indicates, it will concede legitimacy to Hezbollah as
    a political military movement of national liberation, leaving null
    and void all the Security Council resolutions ordering the Islamic
    Resistance to disarm.

    Hence the speed with which Ki-Moon rushed in effect to gainsay the
    cartographer.

    m) August 1st : George Bush signs an executive order in the form of
    a decree freezing the financial assets of individuals, institutions
    and businesses that oppose the neoliberal government of Fouad Siniora.

    (13) This decree leaves out nothing since it considers that opposition
    to the Siniora government "contributes to the political and economic
    instability of Lebanon and the whole region" and therefore "
    (the individuals, institutions and businesses that oppose Siniora)
    constitute an extraordinary and unusual threat to the national
    security and the foreign policy of the United States" (Section 1)
    Coming just a few days ahead of the by-elections to fill the seats of
    two assassinated Christian deputies, this is a clear provocation and
    shameless interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign country,
    as well as being an explicit threat to the opposition.

    n) August 2nd : UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace
    process, Michael Williams, admits that he has held "about 20 meetings"
    with leaders of Hezbollah with regard to the exchange of the Israeli
    soldiers captured last summer and Lebanese prisoners held in Israeli
    prisons. (14) Those meetings proved fruitless because for one thing
    Hezbollah refuses an exchange in stages, which the Israelis are so
    fond of (a few prisoners released in exchange for "good behaviour" from
    the other side, something they have always done with the Palestinians)
    and for another because in those conversations those meetings covered
    not just the matter of prisoners of one side or the other but "many
    other components" according to Ha'aretz (15) although which ones
    remain unspecified.

    ñ) August 5th : elections in two mainly Christian districts of
    Beirut. The Free Patriotic Movement, a Maronite Christian organization
    allied with Hezbollah and other Lebanese organizations opposed to the
    government of Fouad Siniora wins in one, Metn. against Amin Gemayel,
    former President of the country and historical leader of the Lebanese
    Phalange. It is worth stressing that the seat in question had belonged
    to Gemayel's murdered son, Pierre. The correlation of forces changes
    and the future Lebanese President cannot be elected without the
    approval of the FPM. The vote of the Armenian community, represented
    by the Tsahnag party, is decisive and indicates cooperation between
    anti-government forces. Tsahnag argued their vote was "a protest
    against the marginalization (of the Armenian community) by the
    (Siniora) government".

    (16)

    o) August 6th : Siniora's pro-Western supporters call fraud in
    the Metn elections and threaten to designate a Lebanese President
    with a simple parliamentary majority (half plus one of the total
    number of members of parliament), which they have, and not with the
    two-thirds parliamentary majority demanded by the Constitution. The
    inconstitutionality of such a decision would mean the formation of
    a new government by the opposition for which reason a sector of the
    government, led by Siniora himself, proposes as a "transition" that
    the Prime Minister, himself, assumes the presidential prerogatives.

    p) August 10th : Prime Minister Fouad Siniora meets with US ambassador
    Jeffrey Feltman to analyse the situation and discuss US aid for the
    Lebanmese army.

    q) August 13th : Lebanese army chief Michel Suleiman, accompanied by
    Nabih Berri, Shi'ite president of parliament, meet with the Maronite
    patriarch to talk about the presidential elections and sound out the
    chances of the general becoming a consensus candidate.

    r) August 14th : Suleiman affirms publicly that he will put himself
    forward to lead an interim government if no consensus can be reached
    to elect a President.

    His role would be transitional pending the development of matters
    overseas, in particular the US presidential elections in 2008. The
    opposition would only view this candidacy kindly if it established a
    transitional government able to guarantee the expected calling of new
    parliamentary elections. However, for Suleiman to succeed he needs calm
    in every sense, which is why an end to the fighting in the Palestinian
    refugee camps of Nahr al Bared is vital. This explains the speeding
    up of the issue, acceptance of negotations for the exit of relatives
    of Fatah al Islam fighters and the intensification of the fighting.

    s) August 16th : France presents a draft UN Security Council
    resolution to extend the UNIFIL mandate for another year. It suggests
    new prerogatives for UNIFIL forces, such as greater presence in the
    villages and an increase in patrols, cut back to a minimum after the
    mortal attack on the Spanish troops.

    t) August 24th : the Security Council approves the French resolution
    unanimously. Still, the text had to be modified because countries
    like Russia and South Africa criticised the fact that what should be a
    technical resolution extending the UNIFIL mandate included "sensitive
    issues" such as the matter of Israeli soldiers captured by Hezbollah,
    whom the UN describes in this resolution as "kidnapped". (17) A day
    beforehand, Israel again violated Lebanese air space with eleven
    flights at both high and low altitude, according to the Lebanese army.

    u) August 30th : the French UNIFIL contingent carries out an exercise
    in the village of Tiri, near the Israeli frontier. It aimed at
    "intercepting an enemy trying to cross the Blue Line (Israel-Lebanon
    frontier) and attack areas under UNIFIL protection".

    Leclerc tanks were used in that military exercise which ended in
    "the capture of dozens of terrorists".

    According to Colonel Chaptal, leading the exercise, the term "enemy"
    referred to"anyone in southern lebanon threatening or obstructing
    implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701". (18)

    Plans frustrated by popular resistance

    The imperialist offensive is under way and increases as September 25th,
    start of the presidential elections, gets closer. The anti-imperialist
    counter-offensive does the same. Israel's defeat in the second
    Lebanese war last summer frustrated US plans in the area. With
    Hezbollah converted into a leading actor on the Lebanese political
    scene, the US has had to redirect its strategy through the UN. Just
    as the UN has been changed into an adjunct of US foreign policy, so
    UNIFIL troops have become a part of the global struggle for control
    of the Middle East, not just Lebanon.

    The Siniora government is skeletal and brittle, incapable even of
    putting in motion its neoliberal agenda - the economy has shrunk by
    2% in the first semester of this year (19) - and with key executive
    functions paralysed. The pompous commitments of Paris 3, trumpeted
    in January, have not materialized and the collapse of the State is a
    fact. So the US has two alternatives : either to carry out a "palace
    coup" along the lines of Abbas in Palestine, namely by prompting
    Siniora to assume the faculties of the country's President or to
    reinforce what Roberto Satloff, the Bush regime's new guru has called
    "constructive instability". Or what amounts to the same thing :
    "neutralizing radical forces" (Hamas in Palestine, Hezbollah in
    Lebanon) even when they have popular support. For the moment that
    effort is being carried out benevolently via the UN.

    But this body has been little more than a fraud ever since the invasion
    of Iraq, justifying and concealing imperialist interests. That is
    without mentioning the anti-humanitarian crime against the Iraq,
    victim of an embargo that killed more than a million people, the great
    majority of them children, after the first Gulf War in 1990. However,
    today the UN is getting its own medicine in Lebanon. What the Security
    Council considers "non-compliance with resolutions" mainly by Hezbollah
    is no more than getting paid in their own coin for cases like Israeli
    exceptionalism and the non-application of tens of resolutions on
    Palestine, without mentioning other examples. The UN in Lebanon is
    like an elephant heading for its cemetery. It goes around in circles
    (the single-issue obsession of the resolutions) sensing death as
    it settles on a spot to drop. But unlike elephants about to die,
    the UN's image lacks all dignity.

    Notes (1) Alberto Cruz, "El grito de la calle arabe, sin justicia no
    hay paz" http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=36850 (2) Alberto Cruz,
    "Veinte centimos" http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=44199 (3)
    The Wall Street Journal, 8 de agosto de 2007.

    (4) The Daily Star, 13 de agosto de 2007.

    (5) Alberto Cruz, "La nueva estrategia de
    EEUU en Líbano: la guerra secreta contra Hizbula"
    http://www.nodo50.org/ceprid/territo rios/mo/mo6.htm (6) The Daily Star,
    20 de abril de 2007.

    (7) Ibid.

    (8) Informe del Secretario General sobre la aplicacion de la resolucion
    1701 (2006) del Consejo de Seguridad.

    S/2007/392. 28 de junio de 2007.

    (9) The Telegraph, 23 de diciembre de 2006.

    (10) Haaretz, 13 de julio de 2007.

    (11) Haaretz, 18 de julio de 2007.

    (12) The Daily Star, 18 de julio de 2007.

    (13) www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/08/20070802- 1.html (14)
    The Daily Star, 3 de agosto de 2007.

    (15) Haaretz, 3 de agosto de 2007.

    (16) The Daily Star, 5 de agosto de 2007.

    (17) Resolucion 1773 aprobada por el CS en su sesion nº
    5733. S/RES/1773 (2007) (18) The Daily Star, 1 de septiembre de 2007.

    (19) The Daily Star, 24 de agosto de 2007.

    Thanks to Agustín Velloso for suggestions on the text.

    --Boundary_(ID_t75WeA/s3t7zq2YwkewUDg)--
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