The Security Council voted on Friday to give the United Nations an expanded political role in Iraq, promoting reconciliation between its rival factions and dialogue with neighbouring countries.
The 15-nation council unanimously approved a US-British resolution boosting the responsibilities of the four-year-old UN Assistance Mission for Iraq, or UNAMI, whose existing mandate expired on Friday.
US and British officials have denied that their aim is to offload Iraq's political problems onto the United Nations, then pull their forces out. But they want more UN involvement in recruiting nations in the region to help Iraq.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has already initiated a compact for Iraq with neighbouring nations that sets benchmarks for Baghdad in exchange for debt forgiveness and other aid.
As architect of the resolution, US Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said the unanimous approval showed "a new page had been turned in regard to the Security Council's role in Iraq," a reference to the council's refusal to approve the US-led invasion in 2003.
"This resolution underscores the widespread belief that what happens in Iraq has strategic implications not only for the region, but for the entire world," he said.
Khalilzad said he hoped the world body would convene meetings among political factions "and propose bridging formulas," as well as make sure Baghdad's neighbours "assist the Iraqis in overcoming their difficulties."
The United Nations has had a muted political role in Iraq for the past few years. The resolution gives it a clearer mandate to lead efforts in uniting Iraq's feuding factions.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari made clear in a letter to Ban, however, that any UN action needed "prior consent" of the Iraqi government. Ban, in answer to questions, emphasised "promoting and encouraging political facilitation and dialogue among different factions and ethnic religious groups" as UN duties.
Pakistani Ashraf Qazi ends his term in Iraq as chief UN envoy later this year, but a replacement has not been named. Khalilzad said Staffan De Mistura, a Swedish national who last served in Lebanon for the world body, was "the likely person to be selected" but the decision was up to Ban. Another candidate is Radu Onofrei, a former Romanian envoy to several Middle East nations, UN officials said.
The expanded role is expected to require an increase in UN international staff in Baghdad, who currently number about 50 in the fortified Green Zone diplomatic compound.
Some major Iraqi players, like top Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, were willing to talk to the United Nations, but not the United States or Britain, Khalilzad, formerly US envoy to Baghdad, said earlier.
By coincidence, the new mandate will come amid a fresh political crisis in Iraq, with nearly half the Cabinet having quit, or boycotting meetings. While Ban endorsed the UN role expansion at a meeting last month with US President George W. Bush, some UN rank-and-file staff are concerned that safety issues have not been fully addressed.
Fresh in their minds is the explosion that destroyed the UN office in Baghdad on August 19, 2003, and killed 22 people, including mission chief Sergio Vieira de Mello. The blast led to the temporary withdrawal of UN staff.
On Tuesday, the UN Staff Union called on Ban not to deploy any more people to Iraq and to withdraw those now there. But UN spokesman Farhan Haq said on Wednesday: "We intend to continue with the work that is needed to fulfil our mandate."
The resolution's new mandate asks UNAMI to "advise, support and assist" Iraqis on "advancing their inclusive, political dialogue and national reconciliation," reviewing their constitution, fixing internal boundaries and staging a census. The mission would promote talks between Iraq and its neighbours on border security, energy and refugees, assist the return of millions who have fled the violence, co-ordinate reconstruction and aid, and help promote economic reform.
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