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Volume1- Issue 5-Late Spring
2003
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Green Dove Zine will be published
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Us
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The
words above are from an open book titled "Peace Words"
located in the Indiana University Fine Arts Library.
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GREEN
DOVE NOTE
FROM THE EDITOR
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DEAR
GREEN DOVE
YOUR LETTERS
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| *NEW
GREEN
DOVE SHOP |
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BOOK OF
THE MONTH
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DEAR READER
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United
For Peace
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Not
in Our Name
NO War Without Limits
NO Detentions & Round-ups
NO Police State Restrictions |
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http://www.VoteNoWar.org
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War Resisters League
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MOVEON.ORG
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Bloomington
Volunteer Network - call 349-3433 to find out how you
can help
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"You can look at
war as a massing of arms and matérial and troops, but
you can also see it as something else--as a delicate web of
interwoven choices made by human beings, made out of a certain
consciousness. The decision to order an attack, the choice
to obey or disobey an order, to fire or not to fire a weapon.
Armies and, indeed, any culture that supports them must convince
the people that all the decisions are made already, and they
have no choice. But that is never true." The Fifth
Sacred Thing" by Starhawk
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Current Nuclear News
Click for full articles
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Click 1
or
2 for info on Nuclear Testing
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IERE
The IN Environmental Report
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NORML
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| What
Color is Community? UUC Task
Force - Contact Guy Loftmay, loftpeople@aol.com |
| UUC Government
- Watch Task Force - For information
contact David Wiley, dwiley@earthlink.net |
| The UUC Children's
Task Force - For more information contact Martha Nord, marthanord@hotmail.com |
Habitat for
HumanityGroup
at the Unitarian Universalist Church - Dorothy Sowell, dsowel@alumni.indiana.edu |
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links to
alternative news sources featuring local, national and global
news and Native American publications
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Alternet
is an independent news
coverage site of world events.
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Visit Hart Rock
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The Indiana Holistic Health
Network.
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BloomingtonsurfBest.com
With over 50,000 Access Numbers in more than 10 cities nationwide,
5 FREE e-mails and 20MB of Web space for only $12.50/month,
SurfBest is unbeatable.All 56K modems, Excellent Customer/Technical
Support, Comprehensive FAQ's, 100% automatic start-up software
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Peace,
in the sense of the absence of war is of little value to someone
who is dying of hunger or cold. It will not remove the pain
of torture inflicted on a prisoner of conscience. It does not
comfort those who have lost their loved ones in floods caused
by senseless deforestation in a neighboring country. Peace can
only last where human rights are respected, where the people
are fed and where individuals and nations are free -
The Dalai Lama
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Experience Clean Air!
Let us show you how to protect your home from pollution, dust,
and allergens. Call to schedule an appointment and to receive
your free gift. Toll Free 1-866-803-9821
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Green Dove
Magazine is a news and information publication
offering peace, environmental and community news from local
and world sources and a calendar of peace related local events
for Bloomington and Indiana. The web "zine" is published
by the Green Dove Network every 4-6 weeks, and in print whenever
donations make it possible.
Green Dove is dedicated to being a presence
for peace. It is a peace activist web network, presenting
a alternative news and information connecting individuals,
groups, culture, alternative issues, nuclear resources, society
topics and activist resources, information about peace work,
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books, education, green purchasing, sustainable living resources,
art and Poetry galleries and is currently home to Local
Food.
Green Dove is a non-profit network. Your donations contributes
to the cost of maintaining and developing Green Dove as a
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Volunteers -If you want to help Green Dove
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Wild Wowod
Furniture built by local craftsmen
from the finest Indiana hardwoods. Stools, benches and tables
in a variety of designs. Traditional joinery. Custom orders
considered. Available at By Hand Gallery in fountain Square
Mall (812)334-3255
Click image for larger view
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May
we sow seeds of peace, justice and freedom. May we be seeds
of peace, may we be seeds of justice, may we be seeds of freedom.
G.D.
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Breathe new life into your
old homeFor information call Rob at 812-331-0886
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Jeff
Cooney OMD DIPL.AC. (NCCAOM)
The Center for Wholism
2401 N. Walnut Street Bloomington, IN 47404-2069 812-332-4090
Acupuncturist since 1981. Providing pain management services
and a comprehensive system of healthcare and health maintenance |
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WFHB
91.3 and 98.1 FM
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Boxcar Books and Community
Center, Inc.
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Tea Party - A Journal
of Revolutionary Thought from the Center
for Sustainable Living
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WFIU
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The Ryder
- available in town
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Branches
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The Pinup
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| THE
FIRE THIS TIME audio projecthttp://www.firethistime.org/The
Fire This Time - Deconstructing the Gulf War - a permanent record
of the fate of Iraq and a guide to the language of mass media
propaganda. |
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| In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, and such (and all)
material on this site is distributed without profit to all those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the information
for research and educational purposes. For more information
on this topic click
here. |
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E'tokmit
e'k, rangimarie, hedd, pace, tutquin, shanti, vrede, paquilisli,
MNP, Onai rahu, amani, kev sib haum xeeb,salam, shalom, shaantiM,
hedd, gutpela taim, lalyi, pesca, damai, raha, fred, eirni,
pax, mir, peace, heiwa, amn, nabad, rauha, paz, frid, paco,
shAnti, paqe, danh tu, ittimokla, rahu, paix, beke, shalom,
mnonestotse, kapayapaan
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"The choice is not
between violence and nonviolence, but between nonviolence
and nonexistence." Martin Luther
King
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End
Game? Removing Sanctions in Iraq
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Kroc
Institute/Fourth Freedom Forum Policy Brief F11 (May
2003)
by
David Cortright, Linda Gerber, Alistair Millar, and
George A. Lopez
pdf version for printing
IN BRIEF
The Anglo-American proposal now before the Security
Council calls for an immediate end to UN sanctions.
The lifting of sanctions is necessary to clarify procedures
for the resumption of Iraqi oil exports and to remove
trade and investment barriers that impede Iraq's economic
recovery. The stakes in this debate go far beyond
the question of freeing trade, however. Fundamental
issues of international law also hang in the balance.
The verification of Iraq's disarmament, the UN role
in Iraq's reconstruction and political transition,
the prospects for restraining weapons proliferation
in the region, and the fate of hundreds of billions
of dollars of debt and compensation claims-all hinge
on how sanctions are lifted.
This paper provides a brief overview of some of the
issues associated with the lifting of UN sanctions
in Iraq.
Control
of Oil
The draft resolution ends UN management of Iraqi oil
sales. It replaces the current UN oil for food escrow
account with a new "Development Fund for Iraq."
All remaining funds in the escrow account are to be
transferred to the new Fund, which will be controlled
by U.S. and British occupation forces. The resolution
directs that "all export sales of petroleum,
petroleum products, and natural gas . . . shall be
deposited" in the Fund. Revenues in the account
"shall be dispersed at the direction of the Authority,"
which is defined as the unified command of the U.S.
and British occupation force.
The Development Fund is to be located at the Central
Bank of Iraq, whose current director, Peter McPherson,
is a former deputy Secretary of the U.S. Treasury
and executive of the Bank of America. Disbursements
from the Fund will be made in "consultation with
the Iraqi interim leadership," but actual control
of the Fund will rest solely with the U.S.-led "Authority."
The draft resolution states that the Development Fund
"shall be used to meet the humanitarian needs
of the Iraqi people, for the economic reconstruction
and repair of Iraq's infrastructure, for the continued
disarmament of Iraq . . . and for other purposes benefiting
the Iraqi people."
The Development Fund will have an international advisory
board, whose members will include a UN Special Coordinator
for Iraq and representatives of the International
Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Arab Fund for
Social and Economic Development.
· The advisory board will select accountants
to audit the Development Fund but will have no power
over financial disbursement decisions.
· The resolution provides no mechanism for
representatives of the Iraqi people to participate
in the disbursement decisions of the Development Fund.
· The U.S.-led command will have exclusive
control over these matters. This arrangement will
continue until an "internationally recognized
representative government of Iraq is properly constituted."
The determination of when such a government is constituted
is not addressed in the resolution.
· The draft resolution extends the legal protections
and immunities normally afforded the United Nations
to the new Development Fund.
· It grants immunity from judicial, administrative,
or other legal proceedings to all oil-related revenues.
This immunity is to remain in place until a new government
is properly constituted and a debt restructuring process
is completed. UN member states are instructed to amend
their domestic laws to guarantee this immunity. This
grant of legal immunity would protect the U.S.-led
occupation authority against all legal claims arising
from the disbursement of Iraqi oil revenues.
· Although the Development Fund is controlled
by the U.S.-led occupation authority rather than the
Security Council, the Fund will enjoy the legal privileges
normally reserved for UN agencies.
The
provisions of the resolution are to remain in place
for an initial twelve months but will "continue
thereafter as necessary unless the Security Council
decides otherwise." This means that a vote of
the Council will be required to make a change, and
that the United States and Britain could veto any
challenges to their financial control. Under these
terms U.S. and British officials will gain exclusive
rights to manage and direct Iraq's oil revenues.
The
UN Disarmament Mandate
The draft resolution ignores the provisions of
previous Security Council resolutions relating to
the disarmament of Iraq and makes no provision for
completing the disarmament process. The draft resolution
"reaffirms the importance of the disarmament
of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction" but contains
no actual disarmament provisions. In the original
draft of the resolution this passage included the
phrase "in accordance with . . . previous resolutions,"
but that reference was deleted in the current draft.
· according to all previous Security Council
resolutions, which are legally binding, the lifting
of sanctions requires a UN certification that Iraq
is fully disarmed. The draft resolution ignores these
requirements.
· The resolution makes no mention of the role
of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and
the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission
(UNMOVIC), which are legally responsible for verifying
Iraq's disarmament and making a recommendation for
the Security Council to lift sanctions. UNMOVIC remains
a subsidiary body of the Security Council, but the
draft resolution leaves its status undetermined.
Some Security Council member states have suggested
maintaining a linkage to previous disarmament resolutions
by establishing a procedure for UNMOVIC and IAEA to
certify Iraq's disarmament. The return of UN inspectors
would provide international confidence and validation
for any discovery of remaining weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq. It would also maintain the continuity of
UN disarmament efforts in Iraq, and preserve the precedent
of intrusive weapons monitoring in future cases.
Arms
Embargo
The draft resolution provides for the continuation
of the current arms embargo against Iraq. The resolution
ends all prohibitions on trade with Iraq, with the
exception of the sale or supply of arms and military-related
goods. The resolution makes no provision for monitoring
or enforcing the continuing arms embargo. Nor does
it specify any time limit or conditions for the lifting
of the embargo.
· The continuation of an arms embargo could
have the effect of preventing a new Iraqi regime from
following the path of its predecessor in diverting
resources to unnecessary weapons purchases.
· Without a regional arms limitation plan,
however, an arms embargo against Iraq alone would
be discriminatory. A future government in Iraq, even
if fully democratic, might be motivated by balance
of power considerations to rebuild its armed forces
and perhaps even acquire weapons of mass destruction
to match the capabilities of its neighbors.
· The continuation of disarmament and arms
restraint obligations in Iraq would require a regional
framework. Under the original Gulf War cease-fire
agreement, Resolution 687 (1991), the disarmament
of Iraq was to be a "step toward establishing
in the Middle East a zone free of weapons of mass
destruction." The Security Council thereby recognized
the connection between the security of Iraq and that
of other states in the region. The draft resolution
makes no mention of a weapons-free zone in the region
or of any other regional security arrangements.
UN Role
Although
the draft resolution invokes Chapter VII of the UN
Charter, it excludes the Security Council from any
significant role in shaping Iraq's economic and political
future. It calls for the appointment of a UN Special
Coordinator for Iraq but gives the position no real
authority. The Special Coordinator will report regularly
to the Security Council and work "intensely with
the Authority" and Iraqi representatives to establish
representative government, but decision-making authority
will rest entirely with the occupying powers.
The UN envoy will coordinate humanitarian assistance
and reconstruction activities by "UN agencies
and between UN agencies and nongovernmental groups."
The responsibilities of the Coordinator also include
"promoting" economic reconstruction and
human rights and "encouraging" efforts to
rebuild administrative and police capacity.
· While excluding the United Nations from decision-making
roles related to Iraq's reconstruction and political
transition, the draft resolution places the Security
Council in the position of conferring legitimacy on
the U.S.-led occupation. By adopting the resolution
and "noting" the role of the Authority as
defined in the text, the Security Council would be
"recognizing the specific authorities, responsibilities,
and obligations" of the U.S.-led occupation command
and of whatever government it creates.
· By transferring Iraqi oil revenues to U.S.-led
control, the Council would be turning over legal responsibility
for the sale of Iraq's natural resources to the Authority.
These acts would amount to de facto legal recognition.
Debt
and Compensation
The draft resolution makes only brief reference to
the problems associated with resolving debt and compensation
claims. Iraq's potential obligations from foreign
debt and war-related compensation claims exceed $325
billion, according to an analysis by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies.1 This amounts
to more than $13,000 for every man, woman, and child
in Iraq.
· Estimates of Iraq's foreign debt are uncertain,
ranging from $62 billion to some $130 billion. The
wide disparity results from the secrecy of the previous
regime and disagreements over whether payments from
Gulf States during the Iran-Iraq war were grants or
loans and whether accrued interest should be included.2
· Estimates of pending compensation claims
are also uncertain. The UN Compensation Commission
created after the 1991 Gulf War has received claims
of more than three hundred billion dollars in war-related
damages. Through previous charges on Iraqi oil revenues,
the UN Compensation Fund has paid $16 billion in claims
so far, mostly for individual and family claims. Still
unresolved are $172 billion in government and corporate
claims, 40 percent of which comes from Kuwait.3
·
The draft resolution refers to "multilateral
consideration of issues relating to Iraq's sovereign
debt through appropriate international mechanisms
such as the Paris Club" but otherwise offers
no guidance for untangling these obligations.
· The draft resolution does not offer a solution
to the problem of compensation claims. The resolution
directs that 5 percent of all Iraqi oil revenues be
deposited in the UN Compensation Fund. The resolution
further specifies that "this requirement shall
be binding on a properly constituted . . . Iraqi government
and any successor." Future Iraqi governments
thus will be burdened with paying for the war damages
incurred by Saddam Hussein. Unless some provision
is made for the government of Kuwait and other parties
to waive some or all of their claims, the people of
Iraq will be making war reparations payments for many
decades to come.
·
U.S. officials and some European governments have
discussed the possibility of canceling a portion of
Iraq's debt, much of which was incurred for the purchase
of weapons. These discussions will take place within
the framework of the Paris Club. A write-off of some
or all of the financial obligations incurred by Saddam
Hussein might set a precedent for the cancellation
of so-called "odious" debts. These are defined
as debt obligations incurred by dictators to finance
war and repression. Canceling odious debts in Iraq
might set a precedent that would make creditors wary
of financing future arms purchases by dictatorial
regimes.4
Conclusion
As this paper notes, the lifting of sanctions in Iraq
raises many complex legal and political issues that
are not adequately addressed in the current draft
resolution:
· Additional mechanisms are needed to give
the international advisory board and interim Iraqi
representatives a greater role in establishing expenditure
guidelines and overseeing allocation decisions by
the Development Fund.
· The provisions of the resolution should be
renewable every twelve months through an affirmative
Security Council vote rather than continuing automatically
after the first year.
· UNMOVIC and the IAEA should be directed to
return to Iraq at the earliest practical date to certify
the disarmament of Iraq.
· The UN should convene a conference of states
in the region to develop mechanisms for creating a
zone free from weapons of mass destruction, and to
consider measures for limiting the sale or supply
of weapons to Iraq and neighboring states.
· The UN Special Coordinator for Iraq should
be given greater decision-making authority in matters
related to Iraq's economic reconstruction and political
transition.
· The Paris Club and the UN Compensation Commission
should convene an international conference to address
procedures for writing off portions of Iraq's foreign
debt and canceling war damage claims.
The lifting of sanctions will provide a legal basis
for the renewal of Iraqi oil sales and will generate
urgently needed revenue to finance the country's economic
recovery. If this process is to unfold with the full
confidence of the international community, and with
participation by representatives of the Iraqi people,
additional efforts will be needed to address unresolved
issues.
NOTES
1 Information about Iraq's debt can be found in Frederick
D. Barton and Bathsheba N. Crocker, "A Wiser
Peace: An Action Strategy for a Post-Conflict Iraq,
Supplement I: Background Information on Iraq's Financial
Obligations," 23 January 2003. Available online
at the Center for Strategic & International Studies,
http://www.csis.org/isp/wiserpeace_I.pdf, (19 May
2003).
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