Gillerman: World War III already begun
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Associated Press and JPost.com Staff, THE JERUSALEM POST May.
31, 2006
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Syrian and Iranian diplomats traded barbs with Israel's UN
ambassador on Tuesday, as a routine Security Council meeting on
fighting terrorism degenerated into insults.
At a meeting aimed at assessing the progress and work of the
Security Council's three anti-terror committees, Israel's UN
Ambassador Dan Gillerman said that World War III had already
begun and urged the former Allied forces from World War to act
against the axis of terror, consisting of Iran, Syria, Hamas and
Hizbullah.
He called the four entities the "greatest state sponsor of
terrorism and the largest threat to international peace and
security."
Gillerman also lashed out at the oft-repeated argument by Iran
and many Arab states that a distinction must be made between
terrorism and armed resistance movements - namely the
Palestinians' fight against the Jewish state.
The ambassador said Israel has "an intimate awareness of the
need to fight international terrorism," and stressed that there
can be no justification for terrorism.
Syria responded that Israel was the one precipitating a third
world war, saying that "If we examine the matter, we will find
that Israel was behind the eruption of both World War I and
World II."
Syrian diplomat Ahmed Alhariri countered that Damascus had taken
a front-line role in the fight against terror and called on the
Security Council to "avoid double standards in combating
terrorism." Such a battle must be "based on strict legal
criteria, and not flimsy political considerations," he said.
"In this regard, I must stress that Israel is duty bound to
cease this cheap blackmail against the United Nations," said
Alhariri. "All are aware that the source of terrorism in the
region is Israel's continuing occupation of Arab lands, and the
ejection of Palestinians from their land ... as well as
continued aggression against Arabs and the denial of their
fundamental rights."
Israel and the United States have routinely accused Syria and
Iran of supporting terror, either by hosting and funding
terrorist organizations such as Hizbullah, or by doing little to
halt the flow of weapons and foreign fighters into Iraq - a
nation grappling daily with sectarian killings, suicide bombings
and other violence.
Gillerman also recalled that Iran's president has called for
Israel's destruction "denies the Holocaust and is attempting to
develop the nuclear capabilities to perpetrate the next one."
But Alhariri took aim at Israel's own alleged nuclear program,
saying Gillerman failed to mention it while lambasting Syria and
Iran. He argued that the Israeli ambassador "wants to mix the
legitimate rights of those under occupation ... and those who
commit terrorism."
"Perhaps he should read the Charter of the United Nations, which
was drafted to save generations from the scourge of war and from
foreign occupation," said Alhariri. "Those who are ignorant of
such facts perhaps cannot read, and perhaps if they cannot read
they ought not to be here at the United Nations."
Iran joined in, with diplomat Ahmad Sadeghi accusing Israel of
being headed by war criminals and saying the country has
suffered from a "lack of legitimacy" since its inception.
Sadeghi called on the United Nations to step up pressure on Tel
Aviv to open up its nuclear facilities for inspection, mirroring
the same kind of pressure his nation had been placed under by
the international community.
Gillerman was quick to fire back, expressing his "appreciation,
which I hope is shared by members of the Security Council, for
the opportunity afforded to all of us to hear lectures about
terrorism by two of the world's greatest experts on that
subject."
In the meeting, chairmen of the council's committees on
combating terrorism and weapons of mass destruction said
concerns had been raised by various nations about the inclusion
and removal of certain entities and individuals from committee
sanctions lists. They said more effort needed to be exerted to
streamline the process.