S/PV.1748 Security Council

Sunday, Oct. 7, 1973 — Session 28, Meeting 1748 — New York — UN Document ↗ OCR ✓ 27 unattributed speechs 1 duplicate speech
This meeting at a glance
66
Speeches
12
Countries
2
Resolutions
Resolutions: s/11039, S/RES/339(1973)
Topics
General statements and positions General debate rhetoric War and military aggression Security Council deliberations Israeli–Palestinian conflict Syrian conflict and attacks

The President unattributed #129611
The first name inscribed on the list of speakers is that of the representative of Egypt, on whom I now call.
A lot of precious time has already been lost since we asked that the Council should meet. I do not therefore propose to lose any more time. We have asked for a meeting of the Council to consider the non-implementation of its resolution 338 (1973), the breaking down of the cease-fire ordered by the Council. Provisional agenda (S/Agenda/l748/Rev.l) 1. Adoption of the agenda. 2. The situation in the Middle East: Letter dated 7 October 1973 from the Permanent Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council (S/ 11010). 5. Mr. President, if you would allow me, I would defer any remarks until the Council has taken a stand on this subject.
The President unattributed #129620
I call on the representative of Israel. The meeting was called to order at 4.35 p.m.
Before the vote on Security Council resolution 338 (1973) I declared at the meeting of 21 October, in conveying the positive response of the Government of Israel to the proposal made by the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, that “the Government of Israel hopes that the bloodshed and hostility which have tormented the Middle East for so many years will be replaced by an era of peace and co-operation between all the States in our region” f I 747th meeting, para. 1$4j. Adoption of the agenda The agenda was adopted. The situation in the Middle East: Letter dated 7 October 1973 from the Permanent Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council (S/l 1010) 8. Bloodshed has not stopped because those who started the bloodshed on Yom Kippur of 6 October are continuing it. The attitude that the parties would take to the Security Council’s cease-fire call was evident from the very beginning of the Egyptian-Syrian aggression. I. The PRESIDENT: In accordance with the decision taken at the 1743rd meeting, I propose now, with the consent of the Council, to invite the representatives of Egypt, Israel and the Syrian Arab Republic to take their places at the Council table in order to participate in the discussion without the right to vote. 9. It was no secret that the Security Council on 12 October suspended its week-long discussions of the renewed fighting, unable to reach any decision on the cessation of hostilities, because Egypt and Syria and their supporters did not want any such decision. It is no secret that the Security Council did not meet for nine days between 12 October and 21 October, while the fighting was raging, because the Arab aggressor States and their followers wanted the bloodshed and destruction to continue. The attitude of the partics to a cease fire was also evident at our last meeting. At that meeting Israel expressed its readiness to comply with the proposed cease-fire on the understanding that it would be accepted and observed by all the States taking part in the fighting. The Syrian representative remained silent. The Egyptian Foreign Minister had some At the invitation of the President, Mr. M. H. El-Zayyad (Egypt), Mr. Y. Tekoah (Israel) and Mr. H. Kelarzi (Syrian Arab Republic) took places at the Council table.
The President unattributed #129628
In accordance with further decisions taken at previous meetings, I propose also, with the consent of the Council, to invite the representatives of Nigeria and Saudi Arabia to participate in the discussion without the right to vote. I shall ask them to take the places reserved for them at the side of the Council Chamber, on the understanding that they will be called upon to take a place at the council table when it is their turn to address the Council. 1 I. The Government of Israel responded immediately with the following communiqu&: “The Government of Israel has been informed that the Government of Egypt has instructed the armed forces of Egypt to cease hostilities in accordance with the Security Council resolution concerning a cease-fire. Following on this, the Government of Israel has given orders to the Israel defence forces to stop the fighting on the Egyptian front at 1852 hours this evening local time, provided it is confirmed that the Egyptians have indeed ceased hostilities. The cease-fire will therefore come into effect at the end of the 12-hour period stipulated in the Security Council resolution.” 12. It soon became apparent, however, that Egypt’s professed acceptance of the cease-fire was not being translated into action. Those who followed the news from the area yesterday as the hour of the cease-fire was approaching and then after the cease-fire deadline recall that there was virtually no time during which the Egyptian forces stopped shooting. The cease-fire never became effective. One report after another carried by international news agencies and correspondents at the front, broadcast over the radio and television, gave information of continued Egyptian attacks in violation of the cease-fire. 13. The shooting became particularly violent at 2038 hours when Egyptian forces opened fire on the Israel bridgehead on the west bank of the Suez Canal from the east and from the north. At 2056 hours the Egyptians opened fire on the Israel bridgehead from north of Devcrsoir. Later, Israeli forces were shelled from bazookas. At 2123 hours Egyptians again opened fire on the Israeli bridgehead. At 2132 hours there was bazooka shelling, and at 2134 hours the bazooka shelling of Israeli forces intensified and was extended in area. While this was taking place the spokesman of the Israel defence forces repeatedly drew attention to these Egyptian attacks. 14. At 20 hours local time, only one hour and eight minutes after the cease-fire hc announced: “Egyptian artillery fire at the area of Israel’s bridgehead north of the Bitter Lake. Artillery fire on Israel forces in the northern section of the front. Egyptian fire on Israel forces in the area of Ismailia.” 16. At 0555 hours the communiq& stated that the Egyptians had opened artillery and other fire on Israel forces towards the end of the night of 22-23 October; at 0800 hours, early this morning, that the Egyptians had opened heavy fire on Israel forces on the west bank of the Suez Canal; and at 0900 hours, that the Egyptian forces were continuing to violate the cease-fire in the southern sector of the Suez Canal. 17. Facing this situation, the Israeli defence forces were ordered to continue fighting in this SeCtOr Of the front. 18. It is clear who accepted the cease-fire and who rejected it, who has observed it and who has violated it. Of all the 10 Arab States attacking Israel, there was only one that was willing to announce that it would order its forces to cease hostilities. However, even this announcement has thus far proved to be spurious. 19. In the light of the developments, Egypt’s announcement yesterday that it accepted the cease-fire appears to have been nothing but a propaganda move under the cover of which the Egyptian forces expected to continue their attacks in places of their own choosing and in the hope that the Israeli forces would remain restrained by the cease-fire orders. It was inevitable that such a design should misfire. It was inevitable that the Israeli forces should react to Egyptian aggression. 20. That, and only that, is what has been happening since last night. Israel cannot acquiesce in the notion that the Egyptian forces should be free to attack us and to inflict casualties while the Israeli defence forces should remain passive, confined to their positions, and should refrain from taking all the action necessary for self-defence. 21. The fact of Egyptian aggression is the cause of Israel’s military actions since yesterday, and it is the fact that wilE determine the Israel Government’s attitude towards any draft resolution or resolutions submitted to the Security Council. 22. Israel’s position remains as expressed in my statement to the Security Council on 21 October. Israel is prepared to cease fire immediately, provided Egypt ceases fire. As I emphasized in my statement at the last meeting, Israel accepted the cease-fire in the hope that all the Arab States would accept it and all the parties wouId observe it. 23. The problem which together with the actual obscrp ante of the cease-fire weighs most heavily upon us is the question of prisoners of war. Our experience in the past compels us to feel serious concern regarding the situation of Israeli prisoners of war and to strive for their speedy release in the framework of a general exchange of prisoners of war. We have taken note of the undertaking expressed at the Council meeting of 21 October on behalf of the sponsors of
I have formally proposed that the draft resolution be put to the vote. I wish to put forward my procedural proposal that the draft resolution submitted by the Soviet Union and the United States should be voted on immediately.
I have been authorized by my Government to sponsor with the Soviet Union a draft resolution [S/11039] which reads as follows: “The Security Council, “Referring to its resolution 338 (1973) of 22 October 1973,
The President unattributed #129638
I call on the representative of China on a point of order. “I. Confirms its decision on an immediate cessation of all kinds of firing and of all military action, and urges that the forces of the two sides be returned to the positions
Mr. President, the Chinese delegation would like to speak. We cannot allow any imposition of view. May I speak now? they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective;
I wish to speak on a point of order. “2. Requests the Secretary-General to take measures for immediate dispatch of United Nations observers to supervise the observance of the cease-fire between the forces of Israel and the Arab Republic of Egypt, using for this purpose the personnel of the United Nations now in the Middle East and first of all the personnel now in Cairo.”
The President unattributed #129650
The representative of the Soviet Union has raised a point of order. Could 1 ask the representative of China to wait while we hear the point of order that is raised by the representative of the Soviet Union? 25. I should like to reserve the right to comment briefly at a later stage of the proceedings.
There is no question of imposing anything. We have here a draft resolution, a very simple resolution, with which a11 members of the Security Council became acquainted a few hours ago. Israel, the aggressor, has violated the decision of the Security Council on the cease-fire, and Egypt, as the victim of aggression, has proposed to the Security Council that it should convene urgently. The meeting was scheduled for 12 o’clock. Because of various manipulations, the meeting started, in fact, only at 4.30 p.m. This is an urgent matter and the situation is critical. According to rule 34 of the provisional rules of procedure, 1 am proposing that this draft resolution should be voted upon and that we should hold a discussion after that. I am accordingly presenting the formal motion that my proposal on the vote on the draft resolution should be put to the vote for a decision by the Security Council.
I should like to reserve my right to speak on the substance of.the question somewhat later. 27. For the present I wish to state that the Soviet delegation, jointly with the United States delegation, is introducing a draft resolution, the aim of which is to confirm the decision taken by the Security Council on 22 October for an immediate cease-fire and the withdrawal without delay of troops to the positions they occupied at the time when the Council ordered the cease-fire which came into force on 22 October 1973. 28. This draft resolution also provides that the Secretary- General be requested to dispatch United Nations observers immediately to the cease-fire area. I should particularly like to emphasize that both sponsors of the draft resolution, the Soviet Union and the United States, consider that the troops of the parties should be returned to the positions they occupied at the time the cease-fire adopted in resolution 338 (1973) came into force-that is, their positions at 1250 hours New York time on 22 October.
The President unattributed #129662
I ask the representative of China to state what 1 understand is his point of order.
Mr. President, the statement just made by my colleague, Mr. Malik, is completely unreasonable. Before the United States and Soviet draft resolution is even tabled, you allow no one else to speak. This is the wrong attitude. We are firmly opposed to that. The United Nations is not a tool to be manipulated by the two super-Powers. 29. The Soviet delegation would urge members of the Council to take a decision immediately on the basis of the draft resolution before it, and I formally propose that, in view of the urgency of this question and the situation on the spot, the draft resolution should be put to a vote immediately and all delegations wishing to speak should have an opportunity to do so after adoption of the draft resolution. 40. This morning the President of the Security Council informed the Chinese delegation that an urgent meeting of the Security Council would be held to discuss the so-called 41. The Chinese delegation firmly opposes such a malicious practice of using the United Nations Security Council as a tool to be juggled with by the two super-Powers at will. In our opinion, this also shows utter disrespect for the other States members of the Security Council. The Chinese delegation cannot tolerate such a practice, We have something to say. We believe that the other States members of the Security Council also have something to say from the bottom of their hearts. 42. Now the Chinese delegation would like to state once again our views on the Middle East situation and on the manipulation of the Security Council by the two supcr- Powers, the United States and the Soviet Union. 43. Since 6 October the broad masses of the army men and people of Egypt, Syria and Palestine have won a series of brilliant victories in their heroic fight against Israeli aggression. Egyptian national flags have again fluttered over the territories on the eastern bank of the Suez Canal which had been occupied for more than six years. The Syrian army men and people have inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy troops at the Golan Heights. The Palestinian guerrillas have also launched attacks valiantly. The sacred fight against aggression- 44. Mr. MALIK (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) [translation from Russian): I wish to speak on a point of order. 45. Mr. CHIAO Kuan-hua (China) [interpretation from Chinese): This is unreasonable, Mr. President. It is unreasonable for the representative of the Soviet Union to interrupt my statement. Why should he have such a privilege?
The President unattributed #129669
1 must say to the representatives of China that it is, I think, the normal practice of this Council when a point of order is raised by a member to give that member the opportunity-
Mr. Presiclcnt, I did not interrupt his statement. He should aIlow me to finish my statement. Mr. Malik, you can speak when it is your turn to do so. Could you not wait a little while?
The President unattributed #129676
Could I appeal to the represCntative of the Soviet Union to allow-
I wish to speak on a point of order. I should like to point out that anyone delaying with futile talk the adoption by the Security Council of an At this point a number of representatives, without havirtg been called upon by the President, made interjections simultaneously from their places at the Council tabIe, and others at the side of the Council Chamber culled out.
The President unattributed #129684
Order, please. This meeting is suspended for ten minutes. like meeting was suspended at 5. IO p.m. and was resumed at 5.30 p. in.
The President unattributed #129686
I call on the representative of China. 53. Mr. CHIAO Kuan-hua (China) (interpretution frotn Chinescl: Mr. President, my statement was interrupted. I should like to express my dissatisfaction. I should like to voice my protest. 54. On 21 October the Soviet Union and the United States concocted a draft resolution allowing no one the time for consideration and allowing no one the time to report to and ask for instructions from their respective Governments, trying to railroad the draft resolution through the Council, Such imposition is intolerable. As far as the Chinese sideis concerned, taking into consideration the over-all situation, we refrained from vetoing it and adopted the method of not participating in the vote. Originally we couId have vetoed it. Why not? Why cannot a United States and Soviet draft resolution be vetoed? However, our goodwill has been abused. 5.5. Today, before the draft was introduced and even up to now we still do not have the Chinese text. How can we vote? Now, there is talk that we should take a vote right away. Does the world belong solely to the United States and the Soviet Union? It does not. The Chinese have the right to speak. The other members of the Council have the right to speak. Because you interrupted my statement, Mr. President, I should like to start from the beginning. 56. I know that my colleague, Mr. Malik, has something to say. Of course, Mr. Malik, but please wait. What does it matter? If you have truth on your side, what does it matter if you wait a few moments? Is that not right? You should do things with style. Show your style. Why the hurry? There is no hurry. It does not matter. If you have something to say, you can say it. There is place for you to say it. You can say it here. Please wait, do not be in such a hurry. I have known you for decades. You have never changed your old habits. Why do you not change your ways a little bit? 57. NOW, Mr. President, I should like to start from the beginning, and I ask for your indulgence. 58. This morning the President of the Security Council informed the Chinese delegation that an urgent meeting of 59. The Chinese delegation firmly opposes SUC]~ a mdici- OUs practice Of using the United Nations Security Council as a tool to be juggled with by the two super-Powers at will. In our opinion, this also shows utter disrespect for the other States members of the Security Council. The Chinese delegation cannot tolerate such a practice. We have something to say. We believe that the other States members of the Security Council also have something to say from the y bottom of their hearts. 65. The Soviet Union also made a big hue and cry that the Arab peoples’ struggle against aggression had confronted detente with a “dangerous development of events” and that the development of the situation “ran counter to” the easing of tension recently attained. 66. What does this show? This shows that what the Soviet Union calls “ditente” is based on the submissive prostra. tion of all oppressed nations and peoples before the condominium of the two super-Powers. The United States and the Soviet Union, contending as well as colluding with each other, have blamed and obstructed in every possible way the just struggle of the Egyptian, Syrian and Palestine people against aggression and are trying by all possible means to strangle it, for the purpose of stopping the struggle of the Palestinian and other Arab peoples, biting their hands and leaving them at the mercy of the two super-Powers. 60. Now, the Chinese delegation would like to state once again our views on the Middle East situation and on the nYanipuIation of the Security Council by the two super- Powers, the United States and the Soviet Union. 61. Since 6 October the broad masses of the army men and people of Egypt, Syria and Palestine have won a series of brilliant victories in their heroic fight against Israeli aggression. Egyptian national flags have again fluttered over the territories on the eastern bank of the Suez which had been occupied for,more than six years. The Syrian army men and people have inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy troops at the Golan Heights. The Palestinian guerrillas have also launched attacks valiantly. 67. In order to further divide up spheres of influence in the Middle East and re-impose the situation of “no war, no peace” on the Arab pepples, the two super-Powers, after hectic bargaining behind the scenes for their respective interests, produced a draft resolution at the Security Council early on the morning of 22 October in an attempt to use the United Nations and the Security Council as their hired tool to rubber-stamp the dirty deal of the two super-Powers. 62. The sacred fight against aggression and for the recovery of occupied territories waged by the army men and people of Egypt, Syria and Palestine has broken through the situation of “no war, no peace”, deliberately created by the two super-Powers in the Middle East for their respective interests, exploded the myth about the “invincibility” of Israel and demonstrated the strong fighting will of the Arab and Palestine people, who have been greatly encouraged. At the same time, many Arab countries have successively sent out their troops to the front of war against aggression and fought shoulder to shoulder with the army men and people of Egypt, Syria and Palestine. 68. All people with a discerning eye will see clearly that that so-called draft resolution is even more ambiguous than resolution 242 (1967) and is a scrap of paper, a fraud, which can solve no problems. Basically speaking, the Chinese delegation was not in favour of this so-called draft resolution. However, it was only taking into consideration the desire of certain countries concerned that the Chinese delegation refrained from voting against it and did not participate in the voting, As we have foreseen, as Soon as that draft resolution was adopted, the Israeli Zionists immediately and flagrantly continued to expand their aggression against Egypt and Syria. It can thus be seen that what the Soviet Union calls justice is partiality towards Israel. 63. Many other Arab countries and people are giving active support and assistance by various means to this war against aggression, demonstrating the unprecedented militant unity of the Arab countries in their common fight against the enemy, The facts prove that the Arab and Palestinian people are heroic people and that the struggle they have been waging since 6 October is perfectly just. The United Nations and all justice-upholding and peace-loving countries and people of the world are duty bound to give the most active support and assistance to it, and no one has any right to engage in obstructions and sabotage. 69. We firmly support Egypt and Syria in their just denunciation of Israel’s expanded aggression. No matter what measures the Egyptian, Syrian and Palestinian People may take on their own occupied soil for the recovery of their lost territories, they are all just, whereas any slight provocation made bY Israel constitutes a criminal act. 64. However, we have to point out with indignation here that the two super-Powers have played a most inglorious role t/~rougllout the incident. It is known to all that the dangerous development of events in the Middle East is caused not by the Arab and Palestinian people but by the 70. We maintain that the two super-Powers, which have al1 along been obstructing and sabotaging the just struggle of 71. Following the resolution of 22 October, the United States and the Soviet Union have today introduced a new draft resoluticm on what they call supervising the cease-fire. This is a fresh insult to the United Nations. Like the previous resolution, this draft resolution is a mere scrap of paper which makes no condemnation of Israel’s expanded aggression, puts Ihe aggressor and the victim of the aggression on a par, and still fails to make the slightest mention of the demand for the immediate withdrawal of the Israeli aggressors from all rhc occupied Arab territories. 72. Fundamentally speaking, the Chinese delegation is opposed to this Idraft resolution. 73. I deem it also necessary to point out that lhe evolution of the United Nations to the present state of affairs has reached intolerable limits. What is the need for the Uni’ted Nations? Would it not suffice to have the condominium of the United States and the Soviet Union plus a Secretary-General? Nevertheless, out of respect for the countries concerned, we would give considcration to this draft resolution. Rut we will’never allow it to be imposed on us. They want to force through the draft resolution before it is distributed. What on earth kind of logic is this? If the countries concerned-I repeat, the countries concerned-want such a thing, we have no alternative, but the maximum WC can do is to refrain from opposing it. But we arc deeply convinced that the broad masses of the Arab pcoplc will never allow themselves to be controlled by the two super-Powers perpetually. History is long. The people will invariably carry on the struggle and live on. All this will be nothing but an interlude when we look back after a few decades. 74. Fundamcntaily speaking, the days are gone when the two super-Ijowcrs could manipulate and dominate the affairs of the world. Neither one super-Power nor the two super-Powers combined can impost their will on the people of the world, on the third world countries and other States members of the Security Council. The Palestinian and other Arab peoples are politically conscious people with a strong will. Tested and tempered in the struggle against aggression over the past years and in the recent clays, they will still less docilely allow themselves to be manipulated and duped by the two super-Powers. The 700 million Chinese people and the numerous third world countries and peoples, as well as all those upholding justice, sympathize with and support them. 75. So long as the national rights of the Palestinian people are not restored and the lost territories of the Arab countries arc not recovered, there can be no lasting peace in the Middle East. The heroic Arab and Palestinian people will certainly draw the necessary lessons from what the two super-Powers have done, continue to break through the situation of “no war, no peace” which the two super- Powers try to reimpose on them, continue their persistent struggle, enhance their unity, act independently and on their own initiative, ceaselessly strengthen thcmsclves,
The President unattributed #129688
There are no further names in. scribed on the list of speakers. I take it, therefore, that the members of the Security Council are now prepared to proceed to the vote on the draft resolution in document s/11039. A vote was taken by show of hands. One member (China) did not participate in the voting The draft resolution was adopted by I4 votes to uone.1
The President unattributed #129691
I shall now call upon representatives wishing to speak in explanation of vote after the vote.
Vote: s/11039 Recorded Vote
I should like to put on record my delegation’s deep regret that our proceedings were interrupted by unfortunate disorder. I wish also to compliment our President, Ambassador McIntyre, on his patient efforts to maintain and restore order in the chamber. This wrangle was particularly regrettable because of the urgency of the issue before us. The issue is peace, and while we speak men are dying. 79. My delegation, for its part, was prepared to allow the representative of China to speak. We did not believe he would speak for an unreasonable period of time. The issue has been resolved, and we fervently hope that we may be spared further interruptions in the future. 80. The United States joined with the Soviet Union in introducing the draft resolution adopted by the Council because of its concern that the cease-fire ordered by the Council on 22 October be made fully effective at the earliest possible moment. 81. There have been charges from each side of violations allegedly committed by the other. It is obviously impossible at this moment to determine the accuracy of those charges. No third-party evidence from an objective source is available to us. 82. The resolution just adopted confirms the Council’s decision of 22 October on an immediate cessation of all kinds of firing and of all military action, and it urges that the forces of the two sides be returned to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective. The resolution also suggests that the Secretary-General take measures to dispatch United Nations observers immediately to supervise the observance of the cease-fire, using person. nel of the United Nations now in the Middle East and first of all the personnel in Cairo. 83. We consider the central features of the resolution to be those in which the Council confirms its position for a cease-fire and in which it provides for the stationing of observers between the forces of Israel and the Arab 1 See resolution 339 (1973). 84. We have agreed, for reasons of principle, with the provision of the resolution urging the forces to return to the positions they occupied when the cease-fire became effective. We put forward the principle of return to positions occupied before hostilities broke out in the statement I made in this chamber on 8 October [17’3rd meeting]. At that time the principles did not receive support from the Council. Consistent with our view at that time, we agree today that forces should return to the positions occupied at the time the cease-fire became effective. But we must point out that there will be great difficulty in establishing actual cease-fire lines and in fixing the positions of forces which have been manoeuvring in the desert. I hope that this will not become our central preoccupation as we search for a just and durable peace. 89. The Security Council and all responsible international parties, especially those directly involved in the attempts to influence the situation in the Middle East so directly,have an obligation and a duty under the Charter to make Israel stop its firing and all its military activities, and to stop violating the cease-fire and immediately to start implementing Security Council resolution 242 (15X7), as requested in paragraph 2 of resolution 338 (1973), in all its parts. The withdrawal of Israel’s occupation forces from all Arab territories seized in the 1967 war back to the lines of 5 June 1967 is one of the basic provisions of resolution 242 (1967), and its immediate implementation means that Israel must start its withdrawal now. 85. It is important that the United Nations resume at once the function of observation of the forces of the parties. Fortunately, the United Nations has in the area officers of the United Nations Truce Supervision Organization who can proceed quickly to the cease-fire area. With the adoption of this resolution we would expect the Secretary- General, through the Chief of Staff of the truce supervision organization, to put observers in place at once and to receive immediately reports from them on events in the areas of contact between the two sides. These reports would, of course, be transmitted to the Security Council forthwith. 90. Instead, we have a situation very reminiscent of our past painful experience of every cease-fire, which resulted in Israel’s expanding its territorial hold, which has always meant the sowing of the seeds of new wars in the Middle East. Are we now to conclude that so soon after we adopted the Soviet-American draft, so soon after resolution 338 (1973) was to be implemented without delay, instead of moving to peace and to a just and lasting settlement, despite all assurances which were made in order to enable the Council to adopt its important decision of 21 and 22 October, that so soon after that, all we have is another repetition of Israel’s thwarting of any promise of peace because Israel covets other people’s territories, which means war? 86. Finally, we must look to the future, Our paramount task is to bring about an effective cease-fire and to halt the bloodshed. WC are therefore glad that the Security Council gave prompt consideration to the United States-Soviet resolution, SO that the fighting may be stopped and negotiations can begin, looking towards a just and lasting peace.
It was very late, last Sunday night and early Monday morning, when the Security Council had been convened for an extremely urgent meeting, on the 21st and 22nd of this month, that we were asked to adopt the joint Soviet-American draft resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire in place and for the immediate implementation of Security Council resolution 242 (1967). We have adopted that draft resolution which has now become Security Council resolution 338 (1973). That resolution is now only two days old. We expressed the hope then that following the cease-fire peace would finally come to save not only the lives of the fighters involved in the war operations but also future generations from the same tragic events. Peace was our sincere hope and we truly would not like this hope to be transformed again into an illusion. 91. My delegation, aware of the urgency of the situation in the field which called for prompt action on the part of the Security Council, voted in favour of the draft resolution contained in document S/l 1039.
When we accepted the ceasefire resolution we did so in trust, and therefore refrained from discussing its implications. We marked the hasty manner in which it was conceived, we marked the hasty manner in which it was presented to us, we marked OUI rejection, as loyal members of this Organization and as a non-aligned country of any concept of condominium that reduces this Council to a rubber stamp. We observed that it would be a supreme insult to this Council-and indeed to the United Nations-if the term “appropriate auspices” meant anything other than this Organization. But, on the other hand, we were ready to forgo all those considerations if that would help stop blood-letting. 88, ‘The cease-fire in place was to take effect and all military activities were to end, 12 hours after the adoption of the resolution. By a special communiquC of 22 October 1973, Egypt accepted the resolution. But less than 40 hours have elapsed and once again we arc confronted with Israel’s usual behaviour-that of utilizing cease-fires in order to 93. Unfortunately it now appears that we have not achieved much of that by simply adopting resolution 338 (1973). 95. However, there is no way for us to run away from our responsibilities. It is the duty of this Council to supplement immediately its resolution with a decision to reinforce the United Nations observers who are already there and entrust them with the job of observing and controlling the cease-fire. The Powers who conceived the resolution may now call upon the Secretary-General to help in the translat.ion of the Council’s resolution into action. We have entrusted him with this task under Security Council resolution 242 (1967) and we reaffirmed our support for that resolution only yesterday. If we call upon the parties to implement resolution 242 (1967) in all its parts, we cannot in the same breath violate the same resolution by diluting if not negating the role of the Secretary-General and of the Security Council. It was in this spirit that we voted positively for the draft resolution in document S/l 1039. 96. We do not believe that Security Council resolution 338 (1973) is an open sesame. It cannot, by itself silence the shooting. Let us all back our words with deeds and let us not deceive ourselves, and for an obvious reason. The silencing of war machinery will not mean peace. It is only the point of departure for peace and the road is long, very long in fact. A lot of goodwill is needed, goodwill that not only should be there but should be seen to be there. It is needed even if human genius can settle the question of withdrawal and of boundaries. It will take another long and camest heave to set people’s minds at rest. The mind of the area was poisoned for more than half a century, and peace is predominantly an attitude of mind. This cannot be achieved through gimmickry. It cannot be achieved through hopeful procrastination, and it shall certainly not be achicvcd through vague compromises concluded by Powers outside this Organization and brought to us only to have us cloak them with the garb of respectability.
My delegation voted in favour of the draft resolution which the Council has just adopted since it was clear to us that ‘fitrther action was urgently required to back up resolution 338 (1973), adopted by this Council ycstcrday. While we welcome the fact that both Egypt and Israel have accepted the call to end the fighting, the cease-fire is clearly not yet fully effective; in certain areas fighting is still continuing. In 98. My delegation also welcomed the fact that &e resolution which we have just adopted provides for the immediate dispatch of IJnited Nations observers to super. vise the cease-fire in Egypt. I agree with the Prime Minister of the Sudan that, with the advantage of hindsight, it is unfortunately clear that a cease-fire in such a complex military situation could not have been self-policing, If tile cease-fire is to be maintained, there must be proper arrangements on the ground to supervise it, of the sort which have been tested and have on the whole proved effective over the years. In this connexion, it seems to my delegation that the number of existing United Nations observers may be inadequate for the task they are being called upon to perform, and that this number may well have to be increased if they are to be able to provide this Council with the comprehensive coverage which will be needed. If this should prove to be the case, my delegation would see no objection to the Secretary-General’s takilrg the necessary action, in consultation with the Chief of Staff of the Truce Supervision Organization. 99. If in what I have said I have concentrated on the cease-fire, this is not because my delegation does not attach the highest importance to the earliest possible start of tllc negotiations referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 of resolution 338 (1973), which are designed to bring about the implymentation of resolution 242 (1967). Rather the reverse: it is because we feel that a start should be made at once on the difficult and delicate task of achieving a settlemeat, that we believe that the cease-fire must be made effectivi! without delay. 100. Mr. MALIK (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) (translation fionz Russins j: The Security Council has olet today at the request of the Government of Egypt, because of the extreme urgency of considering the question of tllc violation by Israel of the decision of the Council concerning a cease-fire, the decision adopted by the Council in resolution 338 (1973), on 22 October. 101. The statement made by the representative of Egypt in the Council has outlined the concrete facts, namely that Israeli armed forces, in violation of that decision of the Council on a cease-fire, have renewed hostilities against Egypt, with the participation of large military units, in order to expand the territories they have scizcd. Thus the Council has once again been confronted with a nc\v challenge by Israel, in contempt of the Council’s decisions on a cease-fire and in continuation of its aggression in tllc Middle East. 102. The Council is well aware of the cynical aad contemptuous attitude of Israel towards decisions taken by the Council and decisions of the United Nations as a whole. Only recently, at the last meeting of the Security Council, the representative of Israel engaged in abusive, provocatiw and contemptuous tirades against the United Nations. ‘IIre Security Council has on many occasions considered the question of violations by Israel of decisions of the United Nations and has sternly condemned Israel for such violi& 103. Israel’s distaste-Israel’s hatred, even-for the United Nations is entirely understandable. The aggressors and racists whose politics have been so frequently condemned in the United Nations did not and do not find these United Nations decisions to their liking. But, as we all know, the United Nations was created for the establishment and strengthening of peace and for guaranteeing international security and restraining aggressors, and an aggressor is obliged to bow to the decisions af the Security Council and carry them out faithfully. Yet we have once again, at the present moment, a repetition of the usual story of Israel’s actions. At this very moment, while this meeting of the Security Council is proceeding, the armed forces of Israel are continuing their attempts to extend their incursions further into Egyptian territory. ‘“The entire world was gratified and relieved to hear of the decision of the Security Council on 22 October on a cease-fire and a cessation of all hostilities in the Middle East. “The Egyptian leaders have started their readiness to fulfil this decision of th,e Security Council and to put an end to hostilities on the Egypt-Israel front. “The Government of Israel also announced its agreement with the Security Council decision. However, the Tel Aviv statement was actually a blatant falsehood under the cover of which the Israeli military treacherously threw itself on the positions of the Egyptian troops and also on populated civilian points in Egypt. These actions on the part of Israel arc a gross flouting of the Security Council’s decisions and a challenge to the peoples of the entire world. For these gross violations of the Security Council’s decision the Government of Israel must bear full responsibility. 104. As you know, the Government of Egypt declared that it accepted and supported the decision of the Security Council for a cease-fire and cessation of hostilities in accordance with the time-limit laid down by the Council in its resolution 338 (1973). However, Tel Aviv, in pursuance of its policy of aggression and expansion in the Middle East, decided to take advantage of the fact that Egypt was observing the Security Council resolution and treacherously to deal new blows in order to seize new strategic positions and enlarge its beacli-heads. “The Soviet Government and the entire Soviet people voice their angry protest at this treacherous act on the part of the Israeli Government and demand that Israel should immediately cease firing and all military hostilities against the troops of Arab States and withdraw its troops to the cease-fire line of 22 October, in accordance with the Security Council decision of 22 October 1973. 105. In the extremely grave situation now developing in the Middle East, fraught as it is with danger for the maintenance of international peace, the Soviet delegation considered it necessary that the Security Council should be immediately convened, and accordingly at once gave full support to the proposal to that effect made by the Egyptian delegation, in the persons of the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. El-Zayyat, and the Permanent Reprcsentative of Egypt to the United Nations, Mr. Abdel Meguid. We immediately took steps to ensure that the Security Council should adopt a decision confirming its previous resolution of 22 October and should make the aggressor withdraw from the territories he had seized after the coming into effect of the cease-fire. “The Soviet Government warns the Government of Israel”-1 would like the Israeli representative to heed this statement-“of the very serious consequences involved in the continuation of its aggressive actions against the Egyptian Arab Republic and the Syrian Arab Republic.” 109. And now a few words on the cynical anti-Soviet statement of the representative of China. China, by delaying the taking of a decision by the Security Council, has helped the aggressor to continue for some time his violation of the cease-fire. 110. The rules of procedure enable the Council to vote on the proposal without prior discussion. This was an extremely urgent matter, and a proposal was made by the delegation of Egypt. The meeting was convened for 12 noon; then it was put off until 4.30 p.m.; and the Chinese delegation has helped to drag out the meeting until almost 6 o’clock. 106. The Soviet delegation expresses its gratification that the Council was able to take an urgent decision immediately and to request the Secretary-General to take effective measures for the immediate dispatch of observers to the cease-fire line, so as to compel Israel to respect the decisions of the Council on the cease-fire and to withdraw its troops from the territories it had seized after the cease-fire came into effect. 1 Il. All members of the Security Council were aware of the two main points in the draft resolution: it confirmed resolution 338 (1973) and urged that the aggressor’s troops be withdrawn to the cease-fire lines of 22 October. Members of the Council were well aware that a provision was also included which requested the Secretary-General to take measures for the immediate dispatch of United Nations observers-those now in the Middle East, and first of all the personnel now in Cairo -to the cease-fire lines. 107. The attempts on the part of Israel further to pursue its policy of expansion in the Middle East by taking advantage of the fact that Egypt is observing the decisions of the Security Council are inadmissible and cannot be tolerated by the Council. It is time to put an end to this cynical attitude of Israel’s towards the decisions of the Security Council. 113. The fact that Council members are speaking after the vote and not before is the best possible object lesson and a slap in the face for the Chinese delegation. It shows the isolation of China in the Security Council, for no one supported the Chinese representative in what he did. These are the hard facts. And despite all the Chinese representative’s frantic efforts to invent anti-Soviet lies, these facts are plain to the entire world and to the entire United Nations. 114. Mr. Chiao should draw the appropriate lesson from this-if he is able to realize the situation in which he finds himself at this meeting of the Security Council. He spoke because he is an apologist of chaos; his policy is: “the worse it is, the better”. That is the essence of what he said. He threatened to veto the previous resolution in June and July and also the present draft resolution. Suppose the veto had been applied. I should have liked to see Mr. Huang or Mr. Chiao raise their hands and veto resolution 338 (1973) and today’s resolution. Such a veto could have helped only Israel, and Israel would have set up a monument to them in Tel Aviv as a sign of gratitude for giving such assistance to the aggressor. That is what China’s policy would lead to. The fact that China decided not to use the veto only shows the cowardly and unprincipled nature of its position in this matter. It was impossible in this case to use the veto and thereby help the aggressor. And instead of putting his hand up, Mr. Chiao chose to hide it under the table. But such an attitude also helps the aggressor. 115. If all the members of the Security Council had done the same, who would have thanked us, Egypt or Israel? 116. If we ask that question, the answer is perfectly clear. Israel would have thanked us for such an attitude on the part of the Security Council and its members if they had taken up the position adopted by the Chinese represcntative in this matter. 117. Mr. Chiao spoke about the outstanding successes of the Arab people and armed forces. Yes, WC are all delighted; the Arab people and its armed forces have shattered the myth created by Zionism throughout the world about the “invincibility” of Israel. 118. The heroic armed forces of the Arab people have shattered the myth that the Arabs do not know how to and are unable to wage war. 119. But, Mr. Muang and Mr. Chiao-I am sorry he is not here-1 should like to ask whether it was China, with its 120. In conclusion, it should be noted that if China had given the Arab world as many rifles, machine-guns, automatic weapons, tanks, rockets and planes as the Chinese representatives have vented bile and anger here in the Council against the Soviet Union, the Arabs would have had more tangible help from China. The anti-Sovietism of the Chinese delegation in the United Nations is of no help to the Arabs as victims of aggression. On the contrary, it is useful and profitable only to the Israeli aggressor. 121. Mr. de CUlRINGAUD (France) (interpretation from French): It is almost two days since we adopted resolution 338 (1973). Yet we are told that the fighting has not yet stopped. In particular, military operations arc continuing on the Israeli-Egyptian front, which is likely scrioltsly ta 122. In that connexion the draft resolution which has been submitted to us for a vote under the joint sponsorship of the United States and the Soviet Union, and which we have just adopted, seems to us to respond at least to the immediate needs of the situation. Paragraph 1, on observing the cease-fire, urges that the forces of the belligerents withdraw to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire become effective. That specific statement seems to be fully warranted. 127. So while we shall support all measures to enforce the cease-fire, in our view such a cease-fire is only a prelude-a most temporary prelude-to a search far a just and lasting peace, We would urge, therefore, that while the cease-fire is being made increasingly effective, negotiations should begin immediately and simultaneously in order that the terms of resoIution 338 (1973) are faithfully carried out. and the seeds of conflict in the Middle East are eliminated with a degree of assurance and permanence. 123. The last paragraph of the draft resolution refers to the establishment of a system of observers along the new lines occupied by the forces involved. The Secretary- General is requested urgently to take measures by using the UNTSO personnel available. In the event that such personnel were to be insufficient in number, because of the responsibilities they would have to undertake and because of the new cease-fire lines, doubtless it would be desirable for the Secretary-General to be authorized to proceed to the recruitment of an additional number of observers. The desirability of setting up a satisfactory observation mechanism will be clear to all, I am sure.
Two days ago we were asked to vote on a draft resolution practically without being given time to study it properly. Because my delegation did not want the fighting in the Middle East to continue one second longer than necessary, we voted for the draft resolution, although with some apprehensions as many questions remained unanswered in our mind with regard to the implementation of its provisions. If we had asked at that time how the sponsors thought that the provisions in paragraph 1 on the cease-fire were to be implemented without providing an instrument for its verification and observation, this stormy meeting perhaps would have been avoided, although the meeting of two days ago might have lasted a little longer. 124. Those considerations, which I need hardly prolong, explain why my delegation voted in favour of the draft resolution submitted to us, in the hope that it will put an end once and for all to the fighting and thus make it possible in a short time to begin genuine negotiations.
On the morning of 22 October when we adopted resolution 338 (1973) I commented on the circumstances and the procedure we were obliged to follow. I do not consider it necessary or useful to repeat those comments. However, when we adopted that resolution we had assumed-it seems wrongly-that all parties to the conflict had agreed in advance to respect the cease-fire if it were decided upon by the Security Council, and to make an immediate beginning on the implementation of resolution 242 (1967) and undertake negotiations for bringing about a just and durable peace. That resolution had barely been put into effect, and only the paragraph 1 of it to begin with, when we were faced with complaints of cease-fire violations. 129. Now wt? have voted for another draft resolution submitted to us by the same two super-Powers because apparently the provision for a cease-fire in paragraph 1 of resolution 338 (1973) has not been respected by the parties, My delegation has voted in favour of the draft resolution for the same reasons that we did two days ago, when we supported the adoption of resolution 338 (1973), although this time again with some apprehensions. We would have voted for the draft resolution with less apprehension if the sponsors had given us some clarification on paragraph 1 of the text, which reads: “Confh~s its decision on an immediate cessation of all kinds of firing and of all military action, and urges that the forces of the two sides be returned to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective;“. 126. Today’s resolution, which has just been adopted, became necessary, first, to ensure that the cease-fire would be respected’and that any infringement would be brought to our notice immediately so that remedial measures could be taken at once. In voting for the draft resolution we were guided by one consideration, and one alone: that the parties, the parties which are actually fighting, accepted it. This was also the supreme consideration in our mind when supporting resolution 338 (1973), adopted yesterday. Obviously, in order to observe that the fighting is not renewed, the United Nations observers will be necessary, and probably we should have provided for them even 130. We are concerned about the following: who is going to determine where those positions are exactly situated, and how is it going to be done? Second, when was the exact moment that the cease-fire became effective, as fighting apparently has not ceased since the adoption of the resolution? My delegation hopes that the resolution WC have just adopted will be respected and will pave the way to the full implementation of resolution 338 (1973). My 131, Mr. PEREZ de CUELLAR (Peru) (interpretation from Spanish): In my statement on the night of 21 October, I stated that my delegation could not object to the adoption of the draft resolution submitted by the Soviet Union and the United States of America, which was later adopted as resolution 338 (1973), despite its obvious lack of clarity [ I747th meeting, para. 1221. 132. Now I am bound to say that my delegation deplores the continuation of military action which has given rise to this additional meeting. But we believe that its continuation could perhaps be attributed precisely to the lack of clarity in resolution 338 (1973) and also to the excessive speed with which it was adopted. 133. Once again we have adopted, almost without considering it, a draft resolution submitted by the United States and the Soviet Union. We agree with the view that the situation on the battlefront makes it necessary for the Council to take immediate action, and we have therefore supported it. Nevertheless, we wish to state for the record that recourse has not been had to the necessary prior consultations called for. 134. We well know that the five permanent members of the Security Council, because of the veto, are in a special situation in the peace-keeping machinery which the Council is. But it is not the individual members but the Council as a whole which, under the Charter has primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security. That is why Article 28 of the Charter provides for the permanent presence at Headquarters of the representatives of all members of the Council. There is, therefore, no excuse for not holding consultations among all the members whether they represent large or small States. 135 The text we are now considering, in so far as it refers to resolution 338 (1973) of barely 40 hours ago, is obviously just as unclear-and therefore entails the same risks, However, we completely agree with paragraph 1 since it calls on the forces to return to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective. We hope that the provision of paragraph 2, namely the dispatch of United Nations observers, will contribute something which may have been lacking two days ago. 136. It is our understanding that the Council’s decision to shoulder its responsibility and to state that it is responsible for the maintenance of peace, means that the Security Council will be continually seized of the matter. Our decision, adopted as it was for lack of something better, is binding. 137. For its part, the delegation of Peru will fully co-operate in the Council so that it can discharge its duty in
The Soviet representative, Mr. Malik, just now made a lengthy statement slandering the Chinese delegation. However, his statement has completely ignored facts and is filled with lies. I should like to cite a few facts which everyone here has seen. Who delayed the proceedings of the Council? This morning the Chinese delegation arrived in the Security Council chamber on time, as notified by the President, and said that it was ready at all times to take part in the formal meeting of the Council to discuss related proposals. But we saw no draft resolution until this afternoon. It was only after the formal meeting of the Council had begun, in the process of the statement by the Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs of China, that the representatives received the draft resolution in English. 139. It was only after Mr. Malik interrupted the Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister’s statement that we received the draft resolution in Chinese. How can the Security Council tolerate such an unreasonable demand: we were asked to take a vote before the representatives had even seen the draft. This morning until the afternoon, because of the differences between you two, the United States and the Soviet Union, the proceedings of the Council were delayed. Behind the scenes you were making a deal and you did not present your draft until after the afternoon meeting of the Council had been convened. Is that not a fact known to all? But Mr. Malik lied by saying that the Chinese delegation knew about the content of the draft long ago and that the statement of the Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister had delayed the Council’s action. 140. Secondly, Mr. M&k accused the Chinese delegation of creating disorder. This is all the more a deliberate fabrication by Mr. Malik. You have put forth a totally unreasonable point of procedure in order to deprive the Chinese representative of the right to speak. This disorder was precisely created by Mr. Malik’s unreasonable behaviour. 141. Thirdly, who assisted Israel in its aggression? Mr. Malik talked unabashedly about China and Israel forming a so-called alliance. This is making a mockery of the common sense of the representatives. We, the People’s Republic of China, have never had any diplomatic, economic or cultural relations with Israel. And how about you? It is precisely the Soviet Union that has long maintained diplomatic, trade and cultural relations with Israel. After the 1967 aggression launched by Israel against the Arab countries, you have stepped up sending immigrants to Israel, with over 30,000 per year, including technical and military personnel. What is your purpose? You are preparing to take over Israel in the future so that it can turn from the ally of one super-Power into the ally of the other super-Power. 142. Take the draft resolution concocted by you two on 22 October. That resolution contains no reference whatsoever to the supervision of the cease-fire. Could that be an
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The Secretary-General has asked to make a statement, and I now give him the floor. 149. The SECRETARY-GENERA],: Yesterday, I submitted to the Security Council, in document S/7930/ Add.2210, a summary of the current status of the United Nations Truce Supervision Organization (UNTSO) as of 1200 hours GMT on 22 October 1973. As I stated in this report, pending a further directive from the Security Council I have instructed the Chief of Staff of UNTSO to hold the United Nations military observers in readiness in their present locations. 143. The United States and the Soviet Union, at the meeting of the Security Council on 22 October, after your behind-the-scene deals, you hurriedly produced a draft resolution allowing none of the other members of the Council the time to hold consultations or to seek instructions from their respective Governments, and you asked for an immediate vote on that draft. This is your arbitrary attempt to establish a United States-Soviet condominium in the Security Council. Such behaviour is an insult to the Security Council. You have placed many members of the Council in a very difficult position. All self-respecting representatives of sovereign States cannot tolerate such gross and arbitrary manipulation of the Security Council. 150. Now that the Council has decided that the military observers should be stationed to observe the cease-fire called for by the Security Council in resolution 338 (1973) of 22 October 1973, I shall immediately take steps to put the military observers in place in the shortest possible time. 144. Marry members of the Council have expressed their dissatisfaction with your behaviour. Yet Mr. Malik has shown utter contempt for this just opinion. Today Mr. Malik, even more openly and more flagrantly, asked the Security Council to take a vote before the Council had even seen the draft. What is the purpose of that? It is precisely to prevent the Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister from speaking, because he is afraid that the Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister would expose the dirty deal made behind the scenes between it and another super-Power, because in the Security Council he wishes to establish a new order of manipulation of the Council by the two super-Powers. This will never succeed. From the clumsy performance by Mr. Malik at today’s Security Council meeting, people can see that they have applied power politics of the super- Powers to the Security Council. 15 1, As all members of the Council are aware, the active functioning of military observers requires the active cooperation of the parties concerned and is based upon their acceptance of the cease-fire. 152. I also wish to inform the Council that it will in all probability be necessary to increase the number of military observers now available in the area in order to carry out effectively the intentions of the Security Council. The Chief of Staff of UNTSO will be in immediate contact with the military authorities concerned with a view to working out the details of the observation operation. It goes without saying that I shall keep the Council promptly informed of further developments.
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I now call on the representative of J%yP- 145. The Chinese people adhere to principles. We are not afraid of your slanders. We shall definitely not allow YOU to establish any kind of super-Power condominium in the Security Council. Mr. Malik said that the Chinese delegation had obstructed the realization of the cease-fire. YOU are making a mockey of the common sense of the representatives around here. If you are truly concerned about the Palestinian and other Arab people who have been displaced for a long time and who have shed their blood in sacrifice, then what have you done over the past six years?
I should like first to thank our colleague Ambassador Sen of India for having had the courtesy to offer to let me speak before him. I had thought that I could put forward some remarks-brief remarks, as always-which would perhaps be of some benefit to the Council. Of course I could have spoken at the beginning of the meeting, but, because of my great respect for human lives, I thought it would be much better to delay speaking if by that we could indeed save some lives. 146, Israel has not withdrawn even for an inch. There is still no trace of the national rights of the Palestinian people. For the past six years, in order to contend with another super-Power for hegemony, at one time you turn on the tap and at another time you turn off the tap, saying that you are concerned about the sacrifices of the Arab people, saying that you have supported the struggle of the Arab people. That is a hundred per cent hypocrisy. You are only shedding crocodile tears. As the Chinese saying goes: “The cat is crying over the death of the mouse”. That is sheer hypocrisy. In short, you are a downright hypocrite. That is your true feature. 155. The Council has now adopted a resolution and has confirmed again its decision of 22 October 1973 that “an immediate cessation of all kinds of firing and of all military action” should take place and urged “that the forces of the two sides be returned to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective”. 156. The cease-fire became effective 12 hours after the adoption of the Council’s previous resolution, that is, resolution 338 (1973). And if there were some doubts in some minds, whether real or fictitious, the Secretary- General knows that I replied to his letter to me at 1840 hours Cairo time, 1240 hours New York time, on 22 147. From today’s meeting, I hope that everyone will draw a lesson: that is that they must heighten the vigilance “In view of all these considerations, the President, in his capacity as Supreme Commander of Armed Forces, has issued an order ta the High Command to cease fire at the time fixed by the Security Council on the basis of reciprocity.” That letter and its annex were received, as I said, at 1240 hours New York time yesterday by the Secretary-General. 158. The President speaks in that declaration about “considerations” for his acceptance of resolution 338 (1973). Let me tell the Council and everyone here what these considerations are. 1.59. It was the weight of the two countries proposing the draft resolution, the United States of America and the USSR, that guaranteed to us that whatever we were trying to do by ourselves would indeed be done by the international community and the permanent members of the Security Council, mainly responsible for the maintenance of peace and order and having special responsibilities by virtue of the veto power and other prerogatives they have in this Council. Our target was simple, is simple, remains simple, and will always be simple: liberating our occupied territories and giving the Palestinian people the rights to which they are entitled under the Charter and by virtue of the Council’s resolutions, 160. We are not fond of blood. We do not want to use it or to spill it or sacrifice it if there is a way to avoid it under international law, through the international community. Our presence here in this Council, in this Chamber, in June and July testifies to this. But in accepting the draft resolution which was adopted by this Council on 22 October 1973, my Government had reason to understand that the two countries proposing the draft resolution indeed guaranteed that the cease-fire would take effect on the spot at the given time and hour; that is, 1252 hours New York time on 22 October 1973. Since this resolution which has just been adopted urges that the forces be returned to the positions they occupied at the moment the cease-fire became effective, we refuse to take this as only lip service to a principle. We think that it means what it says, and we take it to mean that the forces must be returned, to the positions which they occupied when the cease-fire went into effect. This has been supported by almost all the speakers around the Council table, the last of whom was the representative of Peru; and I can mention also the representative of France and many others. Indeed, without this support, the voting would be in vain. 161. The question of the principle of withdrawal, which has been asserted by the representative of the United States of America, really should have been explained as withdrawal to the lines from which the attack began, as referred to in resolution 242 (1967)-that is, those of pre-5 June 1967. This is the principle, if a principle is to be respected. 162. The second understanding, on the basis of which Egypt made no objection to resolution 338 (1973)-which resolution we accepted before the expiry of the I2 hours-was indeed that it was to begin the machinery for putting into effect resolution 242 (1967), asking for specific provisions in order to obtain peace in the area. Our main objective was the withdrawal of all forces of occupation from our lands. I have said repeatedly, and I cannot repeat too often, that occupation means resistance. Resistance is war; and you cannot have war and peace; you cannot have occupation and peace. We must remove this occupation because this is the condition sine qua non. Shce we fight for peace and insist on peace, we hope to solicit the help of all members of the Council in this struggle. It is our understanding that the responsibility of the two super-States, the two permanent members which have produced resolution 338 (1973), will be accepted. We hope that the cease-fire will be respected. 163. I do not wish to take up the time of the Council, but I can read communiques issued this morning-and just about one hour ago there was a last communique issued, at 2300 hours Cairo time or 5 o’clock New York time. And all these communiques detail the sordid story of the Israeli forces using the cease-fire to occupy further territory and to attack civilians as well as military forces, as has been mentioned by the representative of the Soviet Union, Mr. Malik. 164. If our communiques are not sufficient, I have here something from Senator Jackson saying that he has learned from his sources that Israeli units drove freely over pontoon bridges guarded by Egyptian soldiers, who waved at the Israeli troops because they were in Syrian uniforms, in Syrian tanks, and told them that they were coming back to refuel. Mr. Jackson reported this from his sources-I can assure the Council that they are not Egyptian sources. And, again, this happened after the cease-fire. 165. We are not taking this Council lightly. We are indeed living in historic moments, not only hours and not only days. We are engaged in a generation’s struggle for peace. For the sake of peace we accepted the draft resolution offered by two permanent members of the Council, the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. For the same reason we accept now and take literally and seriously everything in this resolution which has just been adopted by the Council, We hope that they will live up to their responsibility. Indeed it is a source of satisfaction to see that the Soviet Union has issued today what seems to be a response to this responsibility. 166. Before I conclude, and before WC speak about aggression and non-aggression and all that --ways of trying to get more time to kill more people in the Middle East-I mUSt say that we arc grateful to those members of the Council who have upheld our case in the Council; and not 174. The United Nations Secretariat and also my office have received many requests for copies of my previous statement because on certain channels there was static and a commentator who was speaking at the same time as me, as though my English is an enigma like Einstein’s theory of relativity. Is that the freedom of information the host country has always boasted of? Of course the United States Government might say, “We have freedom of the press”; Is freedom of the press the freedom to distort the news? Is it freedom of the press to use static when I speak, so that the people may not get our message? “Consistent with her stand of opposing territorial annexation . . . and because Israel has failed to withdraw from the occupied territories, Ethiopia has decided to sever her diplomatic relations with Israel until such time as Israel withdraws from the occupied territories. We express the hope that all nations will make their maximum contribution towards bringing permanent peace in the Middle East.” 175. When he was addressing this same Council a few years ago they faded out Chief Adebo of Nigeria in the middle of his speech. Then he learned, and many others learned, that it W;IS because Baroody was to speak after him, and some of the mass information media gave the excuse that there were some technical difficulties, while others said the time allotted to the United Nations had run out. 167. The maximum contribution that all nations must make is to exert all their efforts, to spare no efforts, in order to implement at least this resolution religiously, and not to say tliis is only put forward because of a principle which does not happen to be applicable here or cannot be applied with accuracy. 176. So let the American people to whom I am speaking through you, the representative of the United States, heed so that the voice of justice-not necessarily my voice; the voice of others also-may prevail. And if you want to check how the commentators are behaving now-by omission and distortion-it is your privilege to do so. And you do not have to report to me; you are not, after all, responsible to me. But you are my colleague, and I think I have the right to address you in a friendly manner. If you want to reply, you can do so. If you do not want to reply, your silence will be ominous. 168. Those who, as the representative of the United States just said, think there is no evidence available as to who attacked after 6 October certainly have ways and means of informing themselves and, indeed, of informing the Council concerning. who broke the cease-fire after it took effect at the time fixed by the Council. f69. We should like to consider it a test of good faith, a test of a real effort to bring peace to a world that has been hungry for peace for the last quarter-century, that the resolution just adopted be applied by all. The observers who are to go to the area cannot, indeed, push back the forces of aggression to the places they came from. But there are forces in the Mediterranean and off our shores which have always been displaying their force and making a show of force everywhere. Let them-the two sponsors of the resoIution--make a joint effort to apply the resolution just adopted. That is, let them get all forces back to where they were and should have stayed according to this Council’s resolution of 22 October. 177. When I asked Ambassador Bennett, when there were rumours, whether it was true that your country was sending arms to Israel, every member of the United States delegation avoided me. They said they would determine what was going on in Washington. I was avoided for three days. I had asked for that information because I am responsible to my Government to tell it what is going on in the United Nations. And finally you made it official. You were doing it surreptitiously, clandestinely-thinking you could get away with it, blaming the Soviet Union, saying they had sent arms to the Arabs. 178. So here you had your client. Or are you a client of Israel? You were the client of Israel, or Israel was your client. Because the Soviet Union was allegedly sending arms to the Arabs, you began to send Israel your most sophisticated arms to preserve what your senators claim to be the only democracy in the Middle East. 170. That is the test of faith; that is the test of peace, the test of whether or not our efforts in this Council and everywhere else are going to be crowned will; success. Failing that, I am afraid we shall have to leave this Council with a message of despair.
The President unattributed #129731
I now invite the representative of Saudi Arabia to take a place at the Council table and to make a statement. 179. You have a monopoly on democracy, have you? That democracy is by subscription and contribution, and I want to tell you how it is by subscription and contribution. A few years ago an American friend went to an Arab ambassador to Washington and said, “YOU people do not know what the power of lobbying is in this country”. He thought, maybe, that we did not know. We know, but we
Mr. President, thank you for finally calling upon me. I now speak by the grace of God and my very good friend Sir Laurence McIntyre. 180. The First World War was fought to save the world for democracy, not to preserve the empires against the imperialistic incursions of the Germans of the Kaiser. But the motivation was to save the world for democracy, and after the First World War there was less democracy all over the world than before it. So your motivation is wrong and you cannot dupe anyone. 181. And you, my good friend, Sir Laurence: you should have taken into account when I pleaded with you to allow me to speak earlier than usual. You seem to have forgotten that we are a party to this struggle. Our oil has been cut off. Not from Russia; Russia has a lot of oil. You know from whom. And Mr. Laird is shown in a cartoon asking the people to sew sweaters; they will shiver. We do not want to make you shiver. We lived without air-conditioning in the desert of Saudi Arabia since the dawn of history. You can do without the oil. Do not mix issues. Do not rattle your weapons. You are not yet 200 years old-1776 to 1973-three more years to go. You arc a young nation drunk with power. You left the shores of Europe so that you would not be conscripted-drafted, as they call it here-and in order to find opportunities. It was a laudable goal to pursue. And then the Zionists railroaded you into the First World War and you have been in trouble ever since. You grew to be a mighty power. 182. Phantoms-God ‘knows what else you are trying to invent of diabolical weapons. You want to emulate the Soviet Union, which also has weapons of mass destruction. Maybe you are genuinely afraid of each other. The Soviet Union-wrongly, in your estimation-is trying to support some Arab States which have been dealing with it. What went on over that “hot line” between Mr. Nixon and Mr. Brezhnev-or, perhaps, through Mr. Dobrynin, who, I remember, used to sit over there? He was the Under- Secretary for Political Affairs, a very capable and quiet man. 183. Have you told the Soviet Union: Put your cards on the table and we shall put ours? Why should we destroy one another? Well, if I were the Soviet Union, I might act to save themselves from a world conflict, but why at the expense of the people of the Middle East? Now I am 184. I am not taking old skeletons out of closets, but I can tell you that for two years I researched whether there was an understanding by the United States with the Governments of Britain and France of those days. 185. After Mr. Bulganin-of course upon instructions, I repeat, from Mr. Khrushchev-gave his warning, the holierthan-thou Mr. Dulles said that he was flabbergasted and sent a warning to Britain and France to withdraw from the soil of Egypt. He acted as if Britain and France had not consulted the United States before that adventure. Can you imagine that Britain and France, members of NATO with the United States, would have done that without the, if not connivance, approval of the United States? I found out in France and Britain-from the French and the British, not from Arabs in Port Said, who were killed-that the United States knew of the adventure. And finally, assessing the situation, the Governments of France and Britain came to the conclusion that it would be better to withdraw, because, suppose-as some of them thought-Russia was not bluffing? Then you would not have to throw missiles at Paris and London; a mere bomb, in those days, would have been enough to drive the French and British people to lynch their own Governments, after they had had five years of war. 186. Why am I recalling this? I myself, you know, thought the Soviet Union did very well then by the Arabs. And Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge finally came with two draft resolutions, one after the other, to liquidate the Palestine question and see to it that Israel would become invulnerable. The Arabs, well known for their good hearts, were duped, just as they may be duped now. I think the Foreign Minister of Egypt, Mr. El-Zayyat, is beginning to sense that they are being duped, judging by the last statement he made. This is in our tradition. Saladin when he laid his hand on Richard the Lion-Hearted-who came from a distance of 3,000 miles to slaughter the indigenous people of Palestine on the pretext that the Western Europeans of that time were going to wrest the Holy Sepulchre from the hands of the infidels-Saladin could have killed him. But he reprieved him. Every time he fought battles with him after that, he sent him fruits. This is all in our tradition. We are 187. I am going to make you listen, my dear Sir-I know how difficult a task has been given to you-because you are my Secretary-General. Listen to this. And what assurance do we have now that these two resolutions, adopted on 22 October and today, are not a sort of trap? Because they are SO ambiguous-worse then resolution 242 (1967). As we say in Aiabic, everything that is built on something that is unjust is also unjust-of course, I am paraphrasing in translation, But mark my words, there will be no peace, because these resolutions are traps designed to weaken the Arab people. 188. it is the acme of cynicism that the two super-Powers should meet in secret and concoct, as if in collusion, draft resolutions, and keep us all in the dark-unless the two super-Powers have taken their allies into their confidence. I say this in view of the fact that Mr. Kissinger passed through London and briefed Sir Alec Home, the British Foreign Minister on the situation and on what he had done with Mr. Brezhnev. I do not know whether any emissaries were sent to France to disclose the Kissinger-Brezhnev plan; but I think that if Mr. Kissinger had sent messengers to France, he would have been discriminating. France should be treated on an equal basis, to say the least, with Britain. Kissinger goes to Sir Alec Home. Incidentally, it is written H-O-M-E, but he is a Scotsman, so it is pronounced “Hume”. Home, who when Layla Khalid, a highly-educated Palestinian, tried to hijack a plane and did not succeed, stood on the podium and called it “a barbaric act”-1 am paraphrasing-“of those Palestinians”. He forgot what Balfour had done to the Palestinians. Then I immediately took the floor. And nobody, Sir, delayed me so long from taking the floor. The President immediately gave me the floor for my right of reply. Today I had to wait three hours to take the floor. When I took the floor then, I saw Sir Alec Home, from the podium, making a bee-line toward the exit. I said, “You go away, Mr. Alec Home. They will tell YOU what I have said.” I said, “The frustrated Layla Khalid hijacked that plane. We do not condone hijacking, but she was frustrated, like all the Palestinians. They have no army, nobody heeds them. You call her act a barbaric act, but you hijacked a whole Empire-the whole Empire you hijacked-and that is a blessed act.” Poor Sir Alec Douglas- Home: he is pmC; the man in the street knows how PUSS& such statements are. 192. Somebody told me: “You have no representation in China”. I said: “But I support China in its request because it is elementary justice that they should express their views”. And I thought China was a permanent member of the Security Council. But they were brushed aside, and you know what happened. I will not go into the details. 193. I think the President made amends finally by allowing China to take the floor before the vote. He acted rightly, but he was confused. You cannot biame a confused man when there are so many pressures upon him. It was the United States, I heard, that asked for the postponement so that the Israelis, who keep harking back to Yom Kippur, may have a rationalized stand and say, “They deceived US, so now it is time we deceived them”. Let us put things in their proper perspective. 194. Beware: we Arabs-and, 1 presume, non-Arabsrefuse to be the stooges, marionettes and lackeys of the super-Powers. The last two resolutions are like salads: hurriedly prepared, perhaps without washing the ingredients, and dressed with a combined Russian-American sauce. I do not know whether they conflict or not: I know there is a French dressing, which everybody likes; there is an Italian dressing-vinegar and olive oil-but I have not heard of a sauce made up of Russian dressing mixed up with American dressing. It may be bitter, it may be sweet, but they would not even give the representative of China a chance to see it or taste it. 195. That is arbitrary action, my good friend Ambassador Malik. I think this time you were outmatched by Mr. Scali: he kept silent as a mouse and made you do the talking. He was very happy. Yes, laugh: it eases the tension; we should laugh, yes. 189. Is the detente between the two super-Powers based on expediency and mutual accommodation, my good friend Ambassador Malik? I would also put that question to our good friend Scali, but I do not see him here. Is the detente between the two super-Powers based on expediency and mutual accommodation? 196. Incidentally, for your information, a Jewish lady-1 can reply to her now-sent me a telegram because I sometimes relieve the tension with a joke, Here it is: 190. We know that the stakes are high in the Middle East, not only because oil-or petrol, as some call.it-and other natural resources happen to be in great abundance, but also because of the strategic position of the Middle East, lying as it does at the crossroads of three continents. “Representative Saudi Arabia, UN Council, 42nd Street and First Avenue. Sir:“-at least she is polite-“You must be the comedian of the century. I have been chuckling ever since you spoke. If you believe and wrote all that I am replying to you, Elizabeth Waldman. I stand on your freedom to express yourself, although you might have been hysterical at the time you sent this telegram. You live at 1.5 Dexter Road, Westport, Connecticut, Got my message? I am not going to read you the 50 letters I have received from non-Jews-and a few from Jews-thanking me for briefing the American people on the situation, because it would be patting myself on the back to do so. 197. The policy of “no war, no peace” has backfired, but that policy is still being pursued, I am afraid, to serve the national interests of certain Powers. The major States--or the super States, as they have rightly been called by our Chinese colleagues since we began to hear their voice in the United Nations-have been resorting to secret diplomacy. What do we have the United Nations for? Let us scrap the United Nations Charter and engage in secret diplomacy on a bilateral basis. And then they come with all kinds of solutions and impose them even on a permanent member of the Security Council, a member that represents 700 million to 800 million people. “Who are those Chinese? “, they ask. They still have that colour complex, I am afraid. I do not think this is true of the Russians, because they are mixed up with the Mongols and things like that, but it is true of those who came down from the Anglo-Saxons. “Who are those Chinese? Who are those Arabs? Who are those Africans? ” We know you. 198. I shall translate an Arab proverb for the benefit of those who do not know Arabic: “If ever you see the prominent teeth of the lion, never believe that the lion is smiling at you-he may be ready to pounce on you,” There are ways of pouncing on us. By secret diplomacy they pounce. They are not lions, they are human beings, but that is what it means. 199. After they lost their empire, they smiled at us; they became agreeable. I am not talking of the common people. The common people are sheep, they are sent to the slaughter in wars. 200. Why, then, have the United Nations? Have you forgotten what happened to the League of Nations? Those of you who are old enough-as old as I am, and I observed the League of Nations ex-officcio-wiIl remember the Emperor of Ethiopia warned the League of Nations that it was giving the green light to Mussolini to invade Ethiopia and to continue his adventure in Africa. 201. And to brief members of the Council on how diplomacy has been conducted-and I believe we have not changed very much-I happened to be in London between 1929 and 1939 and I was involved in Arab and Asian affairs. I had a very good friend none other than the ing them. What assurance do we have that this is still not taking place in a different form? 202. Having addressed the United States, I hope my good friend Mr. Malik, whom I have admired and respected since 1948, will bear with me. What about the influx of Jews from the Soviet Union into Palestine? I have tried and tried to find the facts of that mass immigration. To us, it was mass immigration. Of course there are 3 million Soviet Jews, I am told, who are allegedly maltreated in the Soviet Union. My analysis is as follows. 203. The Zionist mass information media seem to have succeeded in tarnishing the Soviet Union in the Western world and the United States of America. Otherwise, why should there be 78 Senators in the United States who seem to be servilely propitiating the Zionists by bringing pressure to bear on the United States Government to allow those immigrants to flock into Palestine? 1 thought this was an internal matter for the Soviet Union. Those Jews are Soviet citizens. Of course, Mr. Tekoah considers every Jew, not only in the Christian but also in the atheist world, a national of Israel, because that is the philosophy of Zionism. 204. Secondly, the Zionists have by various means influenced the legislative bodies of the United States and that is why conditions are set for trade between the United States and the Soviet Union. 205. Thirdly, I think the Zionist plan may be-though I may be wrong-to see to it that many Jews come from the Soviet Union and when the Soviet Union behaves according to their code, the Zionist code, then there will be a sort of bridge between the Jews of Israel and the Jews of the Soviet Union. And remember, my good friend Mr. Malik, how the Zionists turned their backs on the Soviet Union. When they saw the Zionists turn their backs, the Soviet Union began to work with some of the Arabs. Not with Saudi Arabia. We do not have representation there, but we are on good terms with you as diplomats, 211. I was talking about Kermit Roosevelt who left the Government because perhaps they did not pay enough of a salary and joined the oil consortium and went to negotiate with Mr. Mossadegh, you remember, who nationalized the oil. He was the precursor of nationalization of resources in our area. Incidentally, I saw Mr. Kermit Roosevelt in Saudi Arabia at the airport. I said, “Why are you coming? ” He said, “I am a public relations man.” I said, “Are you sure? ” That is all I said. 207. All of you have referred to resolution 242 (1967). The record speaks for itself. I was a dissenter of resolution 242 in 1967 because I thought it was a fraud, like these two resolutions before you-and I hope I am wrong-the resolutions passed on 22 October and today. At least I have someone of the same opinion, It is the delegation of China. They are not my cousins. We have no ambassador in Peking, but you should give them credit. Someone, in order to drive a wedge between the Chinese and me said, “But you don’t recognise them”. I said, “But if they arc right, we recognize that they are right”. See how mischievous people can be. They want to sow trouble between the Chinese and me. Baroody stands for right. This is why, Mr. President, I asked you to please let the representative of China speak before the vote, because he was right. And although it suited the Arabs-some Arabs, not all of the Arabs, because I have no right to speak for all of them-that an immediate vote be taken, but the Chinese were right. I am glad, Sir, that YOU saw the light. 212. Look at the budget of the CIA. It is legitimate for any intelligence agency to gather information from other States, States which they think might have hostile designs upon them. That was the classical role of intelligence agencies. What are the big intelligence agencies doing now but resorting to terrorism, coups d’gtat, bribery. But now the CIA and other intelligence agencies will not succeed because they cannot subdue the peoples of the world who rise against them. By your CIA you have alienated many peoples of the world. So don’t try any mischief again. 213. You may buy some people here and there, but you will not succeed because you have alienated yourself-the Government of the United States-from our people. WC did not alienate ourselves, you alienated yourself from us. 208. We Arab people stand against the manipulation of outside forces, We are not imposing our will on others and we refuse that others should impose their will upon us, whether they be super-Powers or any Power for that matter. After all, we have occupied the area for centuries, from the Atlantic to the Gulf, the confines of Iran, and from Syria to the Sudan. We will survive all these conflicts, as we have done in the past, even before some of us were Arabized. Because Arabism is not something of blood or race. It is a culture, a way of life, a common interest and a common language. Above all, common interests. 214. Concerning the KGB, the Russians are very secretive and they do not publish books by authors, so 1 cannot comment. 215. My dear Ambassador Malik, you warned Israel shortly about not obeying the cease-fire, and said that it better do that. Well, I am sure you said that sincerely. But are you sure your Government will do it, or will the Government or Mr, Scali bring pressure on your Government not to do it? That is the question. I believe you when you say something, but after all, like everyone of us, you implement the policy of your Government, And many of us believe now that there is collusion between the Soviet Union and the United States. I hope I am wrong, because we have to pay the price. As the Arabic proverb says: “When the wind quarrels with the sea, it is the sailor in the boat that pays the price.” And we are the sailors in the boat. I hope that we will not suffer as the result of such alleged collusion. 209. And don’t think, United States, you can intimidate US, as you have done in our area. I am talking of the CIA role in Iran. I witnessed what happened. There was a gentleman who is the grandson of Theodore Roosevelt. His name is Mr. Kermit Roosevelt. When I met him at receptions I would say, “How are you, Mr. Roosevelt? ” He was a member of the Government of the United States. He always was sympathetic and receptive to certain remarks I I made about this sad conflict between us and the Zionists. One day I said, “How are you doing? ” He said, “I am no longer with the Government.” I said, “Why? There is a tradition among the Roosevelts, not only your grandfather but President Franklin Roosevelt too, of service to the people of the United States.” He said, “Well, I took a job with one of the oil companies.” “Ah, they pay better.” “Yes,” he said, “they pay better.” After all, he is human, looking after his interests. 216. The cease-fire is tantamount to a fait accompli in order further to weaken the Arab armies so that they can be more easily manipulated by the United States. 217. And here, from the bottom of my heart, I want to repeat what 1 have been saying again and again, in the General Assembly and in the Security Council, that the Zionist hierarchy unwittingly and inadvertently may pus11 things so far that the people of the United States and the 210. Then when Mossadegh came on the scene and I met Mossadegh, we found that Mr. Kermit Roosevelt was sent 218. I am not the enemy of anyone, I hope, as a person. Believe me, I harbour no hatred or rancour, even against those who hurt us. I may be angry. The Arab people may be angry. We are human. But as one who has worked for 26 years in this very Organization for the sanctity of the human person, as it is spelt out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequently in the provisions of the International Covenant on ‘Human Rights, I would be saddened to see-and perhaps many of us would stand to defend-any Jew who might be persecuted by this mighty nation, the United States. The writing on the wall has begun to appear. You Zionists, do not push the United States too far. Inadvertently, unwittingly-
Mr. President, I beg your indulgence-
I never interrupted this gentleman-
I must appeal that this forum which is being watched now by millions of people-
-should not be turned into an anti-Semitic market place-
You are anti- Semitic, you are against the Arabs.
It is a shame and a disgrace that no one interrupts the representative who is speaking here-
If you not stop that man, I will stop him. Oh, shut up,
-and I ask you, Mr. President, to put an end to this disgrace.
The President unattributed #129778
Order.
Order. Why does he create disorder? I am not anti-Semitic. I am a Semite. He said yesterday I was supporting the Hitlerites. Will you stop him and not appeal to me? I never interrupt him. What kind of interpretation is this?
The President unattributed #129786
I must call the representative of Saudi Arabia to order. I have a great temptation to suspend this meeting again. But please-
Mr. Baroody SAU Saudi Arabia on behalf of his Government #129790
I must insist on my right not to be interrupted. 234. The United States and the Soviet Union exercise power. If they speak two words or they speak 2,000 words, it is they who exercise power. But we, who do not exercise power, should be given the right, each one in his style, to express what he has to say on behalf of his Government, For Heaven’s sake, Sir, you remember I told you: “Ask this gentleman not to interrupt me because I never interrupted him.” And now he is up to his tricks. He is afraid that my words might have some effect. Why do you not tell him something? I am waiting to see what you tell him. Ask him not to interrupt me.
You are resorting to anti- Semitism-it is a disgrace for all of us to be listening to it.
Why do you not ask him now? Am I resorting to anti-Semitism? I am a Semite. Why do you not ask him? Why do you not appeal to him? You appeal to me. Do not take advantage. Are you giving him the floor, Sir, or what? Please, I will abide by what you say. I warned him the other day, through you, not to interrupt me, and he drives himself-he is hurt to the quick, and then he begins to interrupt me while 1 am sitting next to him. I never say anything when he is speaking, although I think many of the things he says are distortions. He has the right to make them. But I do not say that they are distortions until he has finished. If I want to say it, I say it after he has finished. He has maligned the Arabs; he has maligned the Egyptians; he has maligned the Palestinians, He speaks of barbarians, and this and that. Why did not the representative of the United Kingdom interrupt me when I was referring to certain historical facts? Because he is polite. Ask Mr. Tekoah to be a little more polite and then I will not have to say “shut up”. Do you think I relish telling him to shut up? But you cannot shut him up. Who wiil shut him up? You are our President. Please appeal to him to wait until I finish. Let him kindly be patient. May I proceed? Will you kindly appeal to him not to interrupt. Why do you appeal to me only’? Appeal to him and then I will proceed. If you want to tell me to shut up, I will shut up. Appeal to him.
The President unattributed #129800
I ask the representative of Saudi Arabia to proceed with his speech. Hc responded, if I may say so, very gallantly and well to an appeal that I addressed to him at a meeting a few nights ago and I think that tell him not to interrupt me. I really feel sorry to have to resort to such terms as “shut up”, but while I am getting my thoughts together he begins to interrupt me and he says that I am an anti-Semite. Good Lord, many Jews are personal friends of mine, but they are the Jews of our part of the world. Anyway, I predict that it will not be long before innocent Jews-and their number is legion-may become scapegoats, and wrongly so, because they are pushing the super-Powers too far. 244. The points contained in our proposal are reflected in resolution 338 (1973) wMch was brought to us 10 days later. Instead of the super-Powers taking heed at that time and acting on those two points, they stepped up arms supplies, worth billions of roubles and billions of dollars, to the Middle East, supplies which have been used and are currently being used to inflict large-scale death and destruction and untold suffering, and also to cause bitterness among people who are destined to live together in that area. It appears as if the super-Powers took. action only when their detente was threatened. 239. My last words-and this is in order to respond to Your appeal, Mr. President; I have another sheaf of notes which I will not use-are these: The Arab peoples-and I am talking now as one of the earliest Pan-Arabs; that is why I have the right to speak on behalf of the Arab peoples, as a Pan-Arab-will be generous if the Zionists relinquish their dream of domination and restore the rights of the Palestine people. And, ironically, many of them had been Jews and embraced Christianity, while some embraced Islam. Should they curb their imperial plans and wish to abide amongst US, whether they be the Semitic Jews of our area or the Khazars who adopted a Semitic religion, they will be welcome. And there would be no need to talk of cease-fire, and there would be no need to let the super-Powers interfere in our area. I am not talking about today or a year or two from today; I am talking about the longer-range future, 245. The world looks to the Security Council to bring about peace in the Middle East. The world is also blaming the Council for failure to do so. Under the Charter the Council is charged with the primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security. This responsibility is a collective one and Kenya would like to see proper consultations held in future among all members of the Council; otherwise, this Council will be reduced to a membership of only two. 240. I appeal to the super-Powers to take into account what I have said today. I appeal to the Jews of the world not to be impressed by the Zionist doctrine, but rather to prevail on the political Zionists to come to their senses SO that they, the Zionists, as Jews, and the Jews of our area may live in that region in peace, without interference from outside. 246. Resolution 338 (1973) has not been implemented because of the lack of enforcement machinery. We therefore join hands with those who have asked for an increase in the strength of the United Nations observer corps to be placed at the disposal of the Secretary-General to enable him to carry out effectively the decision of the Security Council. He must be given the tools.
The President unattributed #129803
I call on the representative of Kenya, who wishes to explain his vote on the draft resolution. 247. My delegation trusts that the Council will not fail the peoples of the Middle East, who must be yearning for a genuine and lasting peace in their area.
We voted affirmatively for the &aft resolution which the Council has just adopted because of our concern about the lives that are being lost in the Middle East and the large-scale destruction of property that is being caused. We did not speak before the vote in order to save time, because time is of the essence. However, we cannot fail to notice the manner in which the super-Powers submitted these two draft resolutions. 248. Finally, may I appeal to the parties and the negotiating machinery, when set in motion, to concentrate their efforts on the substance and not the form or the mechanics of how to get started on the substance. It will be regrettable and tragic if once again in the future we have to come before this Council to discuss war and peace in the Middle East because of further frustrations among parties resulting from non-implementation of this and other decisions of the Security Council, 243. Last Sunday, 21 October 1973, the Council was urgently summoned and presented with a draft resolution worked out by the United States and the Soviet Union. Today, we have had a similar experience. Eleven days ago in this Council-that is, on 12 October 1973-I said that the Council should enforce the following elements:
The President unattributed #129814
I now give the floor to the Secretary-General, who wishes to make a statement. 250. The SECRETARY-GENERAL (interpretation from French]: I have just received a communication dated 23 October 1973 from the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs of Syria, who has asked me to inform “First, an immediate cease-fire should come into effect. Such a cease-fire would obviate further unnecessary loss [The Secretary-General read out the te.xt of the cornnzunicatio~ contained in document S/l 1040. j /The Secretary-General continued in English. J 251. Since I have the floor I wish to inform the Council of a report which I have just received from the Chief of Staff of UNTSO, General Siilasvuo. It is as follows. 252. As a first step, General Siilasvuo has instructed the officer in charge of the Control Centre at Ismailia, in co-operation with the Egyptian authorities, to deploy immediately three observation teams: one in the northern sector, one in the central sector, and one in the southern sector of the Suez Canal area. The Israeli military authorities have been informed of this and the Chief of Staff is discussing with them a similar observation operation based on the Kantara Control Centre on the eastern side of the Canal.
The President unattributed #129816
I call on the representative of the Soviet Union in exercise of his right of reply.
I have asked to speak to make a point clear. The distinguished representative of Saudi Arabia, my old friend Mr. Baroody, expressed doubts on whether I have instructions to utter a stern warning to Israel. Not only do I have such instructions but I received the text of an official declaration, made by the Soviet Government on 23 October which I brought to the notice of the Security Council and its members. I shall repeat part of it for Mr. Baroody’s information. “The Soviet Government warns the Government of Israel of the serious consequences involved in the continuation of its aggressive actions against the Egyptian Arab Republic and the Syrian Arab Republic.” I hope this piece of information will dispel Mr. Baroody’s doubts. 255. Obviously, the Chinese representative is in need of some information as well. He stated that I was slandering China’s position. That was not slander, but simply a reply to slander. 256. Who was it who delayed the entire meeting? The Chinese representative should check his facts before attacking the Soviet Union with his slander. The fact that I requested the immediate convening of the Security Council to adopt a resolution can be borne out by our distinguished President of the Security Council. Mr. Baroody, too, has explained who delayed the conxlening of the Council. Unfortunately, there was little time, and we could not delay. We heeded the request made by the Egyptian delegation, which required an urgent meeting of the Security Council at 12 noon and the adoption oPa decision, and we were guided by the most honourable motives, namely to help our Arab friends and not to hold up a decision by the Security Council. Any delay would have been inadmissible. But if there had been more time, would the policy of China have changed? We all recall quite well 257. And what did another permanent member do? It hid its hands under the table as at today’s meeting. On this occasion there was little time. There was some reason, some pretext for hiding its hands under the table and not voting-that is, voting neither for nor against nor abstaining, as is the normal procedure in the Security Council. But at that time the draft resolution was an excellent one. The entire third world not only supported it, but had in fact worked out and prepared it. It was acceptable to the Arab side, it condemned the aggressor and it upheld the victims of the aggression. And once again I should like to emphasize that our friend Mr. El-Zayyat then stated that that draft resolution was a reflection of world pubIic opinion since it condemned the aggressor and supported the victims of the aggression. But how did China vote? It again hid its hands under the table. despite the consultations that had taken place, despite the fact that it had been able to study the draft resolution for a long time in detail and to apply for instructions from Peking. But the situation then was just the same. At that time the draft resolution was sponsored by eight countries, while this resolution was sponsored by two, but China’s position remains the same, so that this is not a question of either time or consultations. The hands remain under the table.
The President unattributed #129824
I call on the representative of China, who wishes to speak in exercise of his right of reply.
From the statements of many members of the Council, I think everyone can see clearly who is creating confusion in the Security Council, who is trying to impose on the Security Council a draft resolution concocted by the two of them, 260. With regard to the draft resolution submitted at the June meeting of the Security Council, the Chinese delegation acted in accordance with its position of principle and did not participate in the voting. The Chinese delegation long ago made an explanation of its position. Mr. Malik is trying to use that to distort China’s position and sow discord in the relations between China and Egypt and other Arab countries as well as the third world. He will never succeed.
The President unattributed #129831
I call on the representative of the Soviet Union, who wishes to speak in exercise of his right of reply.
The President unattributed #129836
I call on the representative of Saudi Arabia, who wishes to exercise his right of reply. 269. I think the Soviet Union is to be praised for all the aid it has extended to Egypt and Syria. But what about the avalanche of aid, the massive aid that is still being sent by the United States through Portugal-or rather the Azores, which is a Portuguese Territory, where it has a base. Spain refused it a base, What if the United States persists in sending another 2 or 3 billion dollars-worth of lethal sophisticated weapons of mass destruction to Israel? Is the Soviet Union ready to contest the injustice of United States action, or would the warning subside and resolve itself into words without implementation?
I am speaking in exercise of my right of reply and to seek a clarification in view of what my good friend Ambassador Malik said in regard to the warning that emanated from his Government, which he kindly read to us-specifically, the warning to Israel. Since he was kind enough to tell us that he is of course acting on instructions from his Government, I want to ask him to clarify-not necessarily now, but at a later date-what will happen if Israel, as in the past, does not heed the warning of the Soviet Union? What will the Soviet Union be able to do, when it knows perfectly well that the United States can neutralize such a warning? And what if the United States threatened the Soviet Union if it took action-just action-to implement that warning? These warnings have been treated wantonly by Israel-not only now, but for the last twenty years or so. So what comfort does the warning just read by our good colleague from the Soviet Union bring the Arabs, when the United States, with which the Soviet Union has a dhtente, still pursues a policy of seeing to it that Israel expands at the expense of the Arab peoples? 270. I am saying this sincerely to my friend from the Soviet Union. The United States has been doing this since the days of Mrs. Roosevelt-who used to tell me, “Whether you like it or not, Arabs, Israel is there to stay.” And who was Mrs. Roosevelt to be the arbiter of our fate? But that is a fact. 271. So if the United States wants to stay mum because it has no answer, that is its business. But is Ambassador Malik in a position to clarify how the warning can be translated into action in view of the United States standing adamantly on its aid to what we consider our foe? All we have here is words, words, words. And I think we are entitled to know. But if for some reason we should not know, of course we cannot force any one of our colleagues to say anything for which he might be considered responsible.
The President unattributed duplicate #129844
I call on the representative of the Soviet Union, who wishes to speak in exercise of his right of reply.
I think that Egypt and Syria know clearly what the position of the Soviet Union is and what the possibilities open to the Soviet Union are, more SO than Saudi Arabia.
The President unattributed #129849
I now propose to adjourn this meeting. The Security Council will continue to give this situation its closest attention and will remain ready to be convened immediately, as circumstances demand.
The President unattributed #129852
I call on the representative of Saudi Arabia, who wishes to exercise his right of reply. The lneetirzg rose at 9.15 p.m. HOW TO OBTAIN UNITED NATIONS PUBLICATIONS Unitr I Nations publications may be obtained from bookslorrs and di.rtritnrtors throughout the world. Consult your bookstore or write to: Ilnitrtl Notions. Salts Section, New York or Geneva. COMMENT SE PROCURER LES PUBLICATIONS DES NATIONS UNIES Les publications des Nations Unies sont en vente dam Its librairics 1st IW ~cn~s depositaires du monde entier. Informez-vous aupr&s de votrc! lihmirr ou II~~W.~RW.VOUR A : Nations Unies. Section des ventes, New York ou GenPve. Litho in United Nations, New York Price: $U.S. 2.00 (or equivalent in other currcrlcies)
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UN Project. “S/PV.1748.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/meeting/S-PV-1748/. Accessed .