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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-600029,00.html

The Times (London)
March 5, 2003

UN leaders draw up secret blueprint for postwar Iraq
>From James Bone in New York

US forces will hand over three months after Saddam is
defeated

-The UN is breaking a taboo, and arguably breaching
its charter, by considering plans for Iraq’s future
governance while it deals daily with President Saddam
Hussein’s regime as a legitimate member. 
The 60-page plan was ordered by Louise Frechette, the
Canadian deputy of Kofi Annan, the Secretary-General,
and was drawn up at the UN’s New York headquarters by
a six-member pre-planning group. 
-UN sources expected the plan to be implemented even
if the US goes to war without a UN resolution
authorising military action. 
-[M]s Frechette had a 90-minute meeting on Monday with
Jay Garner, the retired US Army general who is in line
to be the US governor of postwar Iraq. 
Lieutenant-General Garner heads the Pentagon office of
reconstruction and humanitarian affairs formed in
January, which is assembling a “government-in-waiting”
of Iraqi exiles and American advisers to head Iraq’s
major ministries and public works agencies.  
-UN sources say that Britain, which is loath to occupy
Iraq because of its colonial history there, pushed for
a full-blown UN administration along the lines of
those in Kosovo and East Timor, and a UN agency to
control Iraq’s oil. 


 
 
The United Nations has drawn up a confidential plan to
establish a post-Saddam government in Iraq in a move
that suggests its leaders now consider war all but
inevitable. 
The plan, obtained by The Times, has been produced in
great secrecy over the past month, even though
Security Council approval of a “war resolution” hangs
in the balance. 

The UN is breaking a taboo, and arguably breaching its
charter, by considering plans for Iraq’s future
governance while it deals daily with President Saddam
Hussein’s regime as a legitimate member. 

The 60-page plan was ordered by Louise Frechette, the
Canadian deputy of Kofi Annan, the Secretary-General,
and was drawn up at the UN’s New York headquarters by
a six-member pre-planning group. It envisages the UN
stepping in about three months after a successful
conquest of Iraq, and steering the country towards
self-government, as in Afghanistan. 

The plan resists British pressure to set up a
full-scale UN administration. It also says that the UN
should avoid taking direct control of Iraqi oil or
becoming involved in vetting Iraqi officials for links
to the President or staging elections under US
military occupation. 

It proposes instead the creation of a UN Assistance
Mission in Iraq, to be known as Unami, to help to
establish a new government. 

UN sources expected the plan to be implemented even if
the US goes to war without a UN resolution authorising
military action. It recommends that the UN immediately
appoint a senior official to co-ordinate its strategy,
who would become the UN special representative in
post-war Iraq. 

Sources said that Lakhdar Brahimi, the UN
troubleshooter who organised the creation of the
Government in Afghanistan, would be approached about a
similar role in Iraq. 

Mr Brahimi, a former Algerian Foreign Minister whose
journalist-daughter has been reporting for the CNN
television network from Baghdad, is said to be
reluctant to take on a major assignment at the age of
68 but is expected to accept. 

A clause in the UN Charter bars it from interfering in
a member state’s internal affairs. When Mr Annan
wanted to discuss contingency plans for war-time
humanitarian operations with the Security Council last
month, Russia insisted that he do so informally in his
own office rather than in the council chamber. 

Yet Ms Frechette had a 90-minute meeting on Monday
with Jay Garner, the retired US Army general who is in
line to be the US governor of postwar Iraq. 

Lieutenant-General Garner heads the Pentagon office of
reconstruction and humanitarian affairs formed in
January, which is assembling a “government-in-waiting”
of Iraqi exiles and American advisers to head Iraq’s
major ministries and public works agencies. 

Although the US plans to take control of Iraq
immediately after a war, diplomats say that Washington
is now more prepared to accept an international role
there later on. 

General Garner told Ms Frechette that he wanted to get
out of the job “as quickly as possible” to be replaced
by a respected international figure. He foresaw Iraqi
exiles in the transitional administration being
replaced in one to six months. “Everyone can swallow
up to three months of US government in Iraq,” one UN
official said. 

The UN plan predicts that, despite the acrimonious
divisions in the Security Council, it will inevitably
be called on to play a role in postwar Iraq. 

“The considered opinion of the pre-planning group is
that, while public statements assert that the
coalition forces will be responsible for military and
civil administration in the immediate period following
the conflict, the likelihood of a more substantial
involvement of the UN in the transition (post-three
month) phase cannot be discounted,” the document says.
“As the extent of coalition force control becomes
apparent, the Security Council and, indeed, members of
the coalition forces may feel that UN involvement may
be welcome in certain areas.” 

UN sources say that Britain, which is loath to occupy
Iraq because of its colonial history there, pushed for
a full-blown UN administration along the lines of
those in Kosovo and East Timor, and a UN agency to
control Iraq’s oil. 

But UN planners insisted on respecting Iraq’s
sovereignty and said that it could not run a country
33 times the size of East Timor. The document says:
“The group found that, although a UN-led transitional
administration may seem more palatable than an
administration by the occupying power, there are key
drawbacks to a transitional administration: the UN
does not have the capacity to take on the
responsibility of administering Iraq.” 

Instead, the UN favours a political process like that
in Afghanistan, where Mr Brahimi worked with US
officials to organise the Bonn conference of prominent
Afghans to set up an interim government. 

“The preferred option for the UN is a UN assistance
mission that would provide political facilitation,
consensus-building, national reconciliation and the
promotion of democratic governance and the rule of
law,” the plan says. “Full Iraqi ownership is the
desired end-state whereby a heavy UN involvement is
unnecessary. The people of Iraq, rather than the
international community,should determine national
government structures, a legal framework and
governance arrangements.” 

 
 


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