Security Council outlines roles in bringing peace, stability to Iraq
After weeks of intensive negotiations, the United Nations Security Council today unanimously adopted a new resolution
outlining the roles of the United Nations, the United States-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) and the Iraqi
Governing Council in international efforts to bring peace and stability to Iraq.
The resolution, sponsored by Cameroon, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States, recognizes the "temporary
nature" of the power exercised by the CPA and says that the 25-member Iraqi Council and its ministers "are the principal
bodies of the Iraqi interim administration, which…embodies the sovereignty of the State of Iraq during the transitional
period until an internationally recognized, representative government is established and assumes the responsibilities of
the Authority."
The text also says that the UN "should strengthen its vital role in Iraq" including by providing humanitarian relief and
"advancing efforts to restore and establish national and local institutions for representative government."
Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcomed the unanimous vote as "a clear demonstration of the will of all the members of the
Security Council to place the interests of the Iraqi people above all other considerations."
In a statement to the Council directly after the vote, Mr. Annan said: "I shall do my utmost to implement the mandate
established by the Council, bearing in mind the constraints on building up the required capacity and my obligation to
care for the safety and security of United Nations staff. I am grateful to the Council for the flexibility that the new
resolution gives me in this respect."
The resolution adopted today "authorizes a multinational force under unified command to take all necessary measures to
contribute to the maintenance of security and stability in Iraq, including for the purpose of ensuring necessary
conditions for the implementation of the timetable and programme as well as to contribute to the security of the United
Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq, the Governing Council of Iraq and other institutions of the Iraqi interim
administration, and key humanitarian and economic infrastructure."
In the resolution, the Council takes note of the intention of the Iraqi Council "to hold a constitutional conference
and, recognizing that the convening of the conference will be a milestone in the movement to the full exercise of
sovereignty, calls for its preparation through national dialogue and consensus-building as soon as practicable and
requests the Special Representative of the Secretary-General, at the time of the convening of the conference or, as
circumstances permit, to lend the unique expertise of the United Nations to the Iraqi people in this process of
political transition, including the establishment of electoral processes."
The Council also calls on the CPA "to return governing responsibilities and authorities to the people of Iraq as soon as
practicable and requests the Authority, in cooperation as appropriate with the Governing Council and the
Secretary-General, to report to the Council on the progress being made."
The resolution also supports the Governing Council's efforts to lead a process in which the Iraqi people "progressively
take control of their own affairs," and invites it to present by 15 December a timetable for the drafting of a new
constitution, and the holding of democratic elections under that constitution.