Clarification of UN Verification
by Gerald L. Campbell
Senior Advisor to the Director
United States Information Agency, 1985-1990
I’ve been frustrated for some time that the administration, foreign leaders, and the press have been referring to the UN personnel charged with determining whether Iraq is complying with UN Resolution 1441 as ‘inspectors’. An inspector is one who searches for clues. This is not what the UN team is supposed to do. Their purpose is altogether different.
‘Prove’ and ‘verify’ — these are the key operative words. To date, direct and precise dialogue has not taken place. Confusion abounds.
The UN people are charged with only the task of verifying that Iraq has satisfactorily accounted for the existence of their radiological, chemical, or biological weapons capability. They should be called “Verifiers”. We already know beyond doubt that these weapons did at one time exist. The question now is: where are they or what happened to them. Because the UN ‘verifiers’ have been erroneously called ‘inspectors’ the perception now exists that these UN personnel need more time to do their job, ‘to find more clues’.
Does Iraq need more time to comply with the UN mandate to prove that they have destroyed their weapons? Or, have they had enough time? The simple truth is that they would not need more time if the public perception of their task was as ‘verifiers’. The question is not about whether the inspectors need more time or whether their numbers need to be expanded. The question is about Iraq demonstrating to the world what happened to these weapons.
Remember when Hans Blix said: “We have found no smoking gun.” He should have been called on the carpet right there. He used a turn of language that misdirected the debate from the outset. It implied that the ‘inspectors’ were looking for ‘something.’ That phrase in itself changed the nature of the UN Resolution and no one seemed to notice. He was not challenged.
Further semantic confusion has been introduced: disarming Iraq, regime change, destroying weapons of mass destruction. The use of these terms places the burden on the US to disarm Iraq, to do the job Iraq should be doing. Spelling out the definition of ‘serious consequences’ introduces into the debate additional and troubling notions: the strategy of preemption, a preference for unilateralism instead of multilateralism, charges of bullying, war vs. peace, and so forth. Too many unsettling issues are before the public, contributing to the venom that is now directed at the US from quarters everywhere.
The debate should be limited as much as possible to the terms: ‘Prove’ and ‘Verify’. The UN doesn’t need more inspectors. They don’t need more time. Iraq needs to prove the veracity of their claims plain and simple. The simple truth is: after months, Iraq is not willing to comply with the UN Resolution 1441. Yet, it was up to Iraq to demonstrate their status from the time the UN Resolution was first passed.
Language is important. Indeed
___________________