{"id":178797,"date":"1967-07-21T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-11T20:44:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?p=178797"},"modified":"2021-10-20T19:04:14","modified_gmt":"2021-10-20T23:04:14","slug":"auto-insert-178797","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/auto-insert-178797\/","title":{"rendered":"1967 war – GA 5th emergency special session debate, vote, adjournment – Verbatim record"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p><\/div>\n
GENERAL ASSEMBLY<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 1558th Plenary Meeting Held at Headquarters, New York,<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n on Friday, 21 July 1967, at 3. p.m.<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n CONTENTS<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Agenda item 5:<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Letter dated 13 June 1967 from the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (<\/span>A\/6717<\/a>)(continued)…..pg.1<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n \n President: Mr. Abdul Rahman PAZHWAK<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n (Afghanistan)<\/u><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n AGENDA ITEM 5<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n letter dated 13 June 1967 from the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (A\/6717) (<\/strong>continued<\/u><\/strong>)<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 1. The PRESIDENT: The representative of Sweden has asked to speak, and I now call on him.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 2. Mr. ASTROM (Sweden): The General Assembly has now been in session for over four weeks considering the urgent and grave question of the situation in the Middle East. Intensive efforts have been made by delegations and groups of delegations to work out a draft resolution which could serve as a substantive basis for the establishment of a situation of peace with justice in the area. During the consultations it has become clear that there is in fact broad agreement on many basic purposes and principles. However, as Members are well aware, it has not been possible to formulate these purposes and principles in such a manner as to command the support required for the adoption of a resolution.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 3. In these circumstances, the three delegations on whose behalf I have the honour to speak-Austria, Finland and Sweden-have come to the conclusion, after wide consultations, that it would be advisable to adjourn this session temporarily. This does not mean an end to, nor a suspension of, our efforts to reach peaceful solutions through the Âé¶¹APP. Therefore, in our view, the President of the General Assembly should be authorized to reconvene the session as and when necessary. Furthermore, a recommendation should be addressed to the Security Council, which is <\/i>already seized of the question, to resume its consideration of the tense situation in the Middle East as a matter of urgency.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 4. By these two provisions, the General Assembly would stress that although it has not been able at this time to arrive at a resolution on the substance <\/i>of the problem before us, the Âé¶¹APP has a continuing responsibility, as indeed have all Member States, to contribute to the solution of the urgent and grave problems pertaining to the area. We are convinced that such a resolution would in no way be prejudicial to the interests or positions of any Member State.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 5. It is in that spirit and in the conviction that the ideas just outlined enjoy wide support amongst the Members that I, speaking in the name of the delegations of Austria, Finland and Sweden, have the honour to introduce the following draft resolution:<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n 6. Mr. ASTROM (Sweden); This draft resolution will be circulated shortly. It is our hope that a decision on it will be taken today.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 7. The PRESIDENT: The draft resolution introduced by the representative of Sweden (A\/L.529] will be distributed within ten minutes. I wish to thank the representative of Sweden for having stated so clearly they wording of the draft resolution and for having read it out twice for the information of the Members.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 8. If there is <\/i>no objection, I propose, on the basis of the remarks of the representative of Sweden, that the Assembly proceed to vote on <\/i>this draft resolution.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 9. Mr. PACHACHI (Iraq): We are grateful to the representative of Sweden for having read out very clearly the draft resolution which his delegation and the delegations of Finland and Austria have presented to the General Assembly for consideration. In spite of the clarity of my friend's diction, it seems to me that it would be helpful, and indeed necessary, for the Members of the Assembly to have the written text before them before proceeding to a vote. As the representative of Sweden stated at the outset of his remarks, this is a substantive decision, this is not a procedural draft resolution, and therefore it cannot be treated as a simple procedural motion which can be disposed of on the basis of an oral presentation. It is a substantive draft resolution of some importance, with very serious implications for the General Assembly, the Âé¶¹APP and future peace and security in the area.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 10. I would therefore urge that this draft resolution be accorded the importance that it clearly deserves and should not be adopted in this fashion, without representatives having had an opportunity to study and consider the text. After all, the draft resolution was read out in English, and I imagine there are many representatives in the Assembly who heard it through the simultaneous interpretation, which perhaps was not so clear as the text will be when it has been translated and circulated to Members. I therefore request that we defer the vote on this draft resolution until we have had time to study it in written form.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 11. Mr. FOUM (United Republic of Tanzania): It will be remembered that, at the beginning of this session of the Assembly, Tanzania expressed its considered opinion regarding the events which have occurred in the Middle East in connexion with the aggression perpetrated against three countries of the Arab world and Africa [1530th meeting]. It was our hope that the General Assembly would execute its clear duty, which was to condemn the aggression, reiterate the principle prohibiting any gains from the fruits of aggression, and seek the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of the occupying forces from the occupied territories. To our consternation and dismay, the General Assembly has presented a lamentable spectacle of paralysis and disarray. The circumstances which have led to this state of affairs might be summed up as being the result of undue influence of certain major Powers,. and acquiescence, if not appeasement, by a certain section of the membership of this Organization. That unfortunate correlation of forces has led the fifth emergency special session of the General Assembly to its present impasse. The draft resolution before this Assembly would put the stamp of formal approval upon this deplorable state of affairs.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 12. The Tanzanian delegation would like to pay tribute to the good intentions of the sponsors of the draft resolution. However, we have grave doubts about the propriety of the proposals it contains, as well as about. its utility and implications. When one takes into consideration the present international situation as a whole and the hopes of people the world over that the Âé¶¹APP will play a constructive role in the maintenance of peace and the protection of the rights of small nations and States, the present draft resolution is a sad disappointment. We cannot help fearing that, if tomorrow or next week one or another of us were to experience a similar situation, then the Assembly would react in a similar manner. Where, then should lie the hopes of the smaller nations in the protection promised by the Charter, of this Organization? Where, then should the countries of the Third. World look for a safeguard against rampant imperialism, colonialism, and international forces of neo-colonialism?<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 13. At this point, my delegation would like to take the opportunity to thank all those delegations that have co-operated with us in a sincere search for a constructive solution to this very difficult situation. We have worked long hours, we have carried out protracted negotiations, and from time to time it seemed as if we might achieve the desired results if it were not for the forces I have already mentioned.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 14. To you, Mr. President, our gratitude for your patient guidance of this session and your unfailing efforts to assist the Assembly in its task. The Tanzanian delegation, out of a desire not to encroach too much upon our time, will not enter into a detailed analysis of the present situation, which certainly warrants the concern of all those who have the interests of this Organization at heart.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 15. For the reasons given, the Tanzanian delegation will not be able to support the present draft resolution.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 16. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): This is a momentous period in the life of the Âé¶¹APP. I say this because this may turn out to be the crossroads: Either we will have an effective international organization, or-as has been the case since the Âé¶¹APP was founded and as was the case before, in the League of Nations-we will have an organization that will be sort of a window dressing for power politics, for spheres of influence and for the assertion of policies dictated by the powerful States.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 17. I mentioned in the Security Council about a month ago [1358th meeting] that the question of peace and war was the prerogative of that body. I warned the Council that I did not see any reason or wisdom in referring this question of Israeli aggression to a special emergency session of the Assembly. However, pressure was brought upon the membership of the Âé¶¹APP-and if it was not pressure, at least persuasion was used to convince members that peace would be served by convening a special emergency session. I was not convinced at the time, and I said that the result would be zero. I am sorry to say today that the result is below zero.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 18. In 1950, I witnessed none other than my friend, Yakov Malik, walk out of the Security Council. Some Powers seized that opportunity in the Co<\/span>unci<\/span>l to <\/span>t<\/span>ransfer the Korean question to a session of this Assembly. The result was the famous Uniting for Peace resolution [<\/span>resolution 377 (V)<\/a>], and today there are two Koreas-one people bisected. Furthermore, there is no assurance that this question will not be shuttled between the Council and the Assembly and then between the Assembly and the Council, and a decade from now the question of Israeli aggression will still be before the Council and the Assembly.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 19. It would seem that the politicians who direct the affairs of nations have learned nothing from the past. The League of Nations was founded in order to transcend political arrangements, secret treaties and the policies which the spheres of influence dictated. The League of Nations foundered. We would have thought that the Âé¶¹APP, after twenty years, would learn a lesson from the failure of the League of Nations. I am sorry to say that the Âé¶¹APP is following the pattern of the League of Nations-a pattern which I personally observed when I was in Western Europe in the thirties.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 20. Why do I speak with such vehemence? It is because I speak with assurance. I do not have to look for the portents on the wall. They are already before us.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 21. Through the courtesy of my good friend and colleague, the representative of Sweden, I have a copy of the draft resolution [A\/L.529] he has submitted with two other colleagues, the representative of Finland and the representative of Austria. In appearance, this draft resolution is what might be called a procedural resolution forwarding this question back to the Security Council from the Assembly and also keeping this Assembly in abeyance, so that, if the Security Council fails, the question can perhaps be shuttled back into the Assembly; and then if the Assembly fails it will be shuttled back to the Security Council. And year in and year out we will be seized of this question-if the Organization survives such machinations, because I really feel very worried about the health of this international Organization. It is now a sick organization. Organizations can die, like patients. And there is no assurance that if we followed, this course of action, this Organization would be immune to disease or even demise.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 22. The draft resolution refers to the "grave situation". I should like to remind my good friend, none other than the Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union, of the letter [<\/span>A\/6717<\/a>] he submitted-the letter which was the raison d'être of this emergency special session. That letter asked for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Arab lands which they had occupied since 5 June.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 23. The same day that that letter was submitted, none other than Ambassador Goldberg, another friend and colleague of ours, broadened the whole question. It was no longer only the aggression of Israel but how to liquidate the whole problem arising from the incursion of Israel in the midst of the Arab homeland. The result is that the aggression has now been watered down to merely a "grave situation" ; the aggression becomes a "grave situation". There are grave situations everywhere in the world. There is a grave situation in Rhodesia. There is a grave situation caused by apartheid.<\/u> There is a grave situation in the Congo. There are multifarious grave situations-and this Israeli aggression has been reduced to a mere "grave situation".<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 24. Where is the conscience of this Assembly? Is it only a "grave situation" or is it aggression? Or do many of you subscribe to the idea that 2,000 years ago there was a Kingdom of Judea or Israel in that part of the world? I do not have to elaborate on this invalid argument, as I have dealt with it many times throughout the twenty years of my presence in the Âé¶¹APP.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 25. This draft resolution states in its second preambular paragraph: "Bearing in mind the resolutions adopted and the proposals considered…". I suppose that the resolutions referred to here cover the three resolutions that were passed by this Assembly, namely, the so-called humanitarian resolution and the two resolutions pertaining to Jerusalem which are lugged in, together with the proposals that failed because of the pressures that were used, as they had been used in 1947, on people in capitals of countries to see to it that the resolution which spelt out Israeli aggression and the necessity of Israeli withdrawal would not receive a two-thirds majority. Friends of mine in the Âé¶¹APP who were 7,000 miles away from Palestine arrogated unto themselves the responsibility to tell us how to act and how to behave-it was if, the Arabs, God forbid, even if they had the power, would arrogate unto themselves the responsibility to tell the countries of the new hemisphere or of Western Europe how they should decide their affairs.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 26. It is not permissible for the Assembly to lug in the two resolutions pertaining to Jerusalem [<\/span>2253 (ES-V)<\/a> and <\/span>2254 (ES-V)<\/a>] with the proposals that failed, instead of at least segregating those two resolutions and taking any action that would lead to their implementation. I beg my three colleagues from Austria, Finland and Sweden to take this into consideration. Since when have we taken it upon ourselves to recommend to the Council what it should do in the case of such a momentous draft resolution as the one we have before us? This could easily have been done by the Secretary-General through a consensus which could have been taken by the President.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 27. No, this is not such an innocent draft resolution after all, for the reasons I have mentioned. And there are other points which I still have to mention, without having to dissect each word of it-because the obvious cannot be hidden, just as you cannot hide a fire under a bush. We see such words as these in the draft resolution in operative paragraph 1: "Recommends to the Security Council to resume its consideration of the tense situation in the Middle East, .." The word "tense" is equivalent here to the word "grave". It is a question of diction; I would not say that they are synonymous in the English language, A war and occupation of the territory of three Member States of the Âé¶¹APP and the trampling of the dignity of 100 million Arab people have taken place and for people who. are 6,000, 7,000 or 8,000 miles away this constitutes only a grave and tense situation, not aggression.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 28. I hope that sufficient time has passed to enable the Secretariat to circulate this draft resolution so that every Member can scrutinize in his own conscience the implications that it has. At the same time I must mention, as I have done time and again, that Governments, whether Arab or non-Arab, will come and go, but the Palestine question will remain because the Palestinian people are not negotiable. It would be shameful if we in this international Organization over-looked the self-determination of the indigenous people of Palestine, which since 1945 has been guaranteed in the Âé¶¹APP Charter.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 29.\t<\/span>Nor are the Arab people at large negotiable. For your information, secret societies are already banding together to kill and assassinate anyone amongst the Arabs who tried to work out an accommodation such as is envisaged by many of our colleagues either in their statements or by their support of certain resolutions. When I mentioned this to a friend of mine-and I do not have to name him; in fairness to our colleagues from the Soviet Union I must say that he was of the Western camp-he said, "That is your problem". In other words, let the situation continue as it is and there will be no peace and Israel will remain in occupation of the Arab lands. And when I said, "Suppose the leaders are killed or the Governments overthrown?" He said, "That is your problem". Let other Governments come into being; never mind, change them just like you change your clothes in the morning. That is how cynical certain Western Powers are regarding our people. And if only one of their nationals is insulted, let alone killed, in a foreign land, good Lord, what they do not do in order to obtain redress for a single person.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 30. But let it be known from this rostrum that the Arab people are not negotiable. The Arab people, I am sorry to say, will have a long period of instability, of uprisings, of turmoil and turbulence if this Assembly does not treat the case of Palestine with the justice which is due it and which has been due it since 1947.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 31. I conclude my statement by saying that Inasmuch as I, like all of you, would like to see peace prevail not only in the Middle East but the whole world over-including South-East Asia; however, I must repeat that there shall be no peace in the Middle East if this Assembly still thinks that the indigenous people of Palestine and the Arab people at large are negotiable.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 32. The PRESIDENT: May I draw the attention of the representative of Saudi Arabia to the fact that there is now a draft resolution before the Assembly which is a procedural one in the view of its sponsors. Any references to the substance of the whole problem are not proper at this stage. In addition, I am quite sure that all Members would want to avoid discussing other issues which are not before the Assembly.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 33. Mr, BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): Mr. President, may I continue?<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 34. The PRESIDENT: With the understanding that you will heed my appeal, you may continue.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 35. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): Mr. President, you are sitting directly behind me. I was taking up my papers and concluding my statement. But, because of the friendship that once bound us together, and I am sure still binds us together, you seem to have a genius for interrupting my speech thirty seconds or so before I conclude. I was not going to talk about Viet-Nam. All<\/p><\/div>\n I was saying was that I, like all of you, would like to see peace prevail in the Middle East as well as In all parts of the world, including South-East Asia-and I am not going to discuss South-East Asia. Mr, President, why did you not interrupt Mr. Gromyko or Mr. Goldberg when they talked about that? Poor Baroody, he is your cousin-never mind. This is a Joha story. There was a man called Joha who could only silence his own cousin .. .<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 36. The PRESIDENT: May I appeal to the representative once again.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 37. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): I stand on my sovereign rights.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 38. The PRESIDENT: I do know something about Joha, and the information that I have about him is quite sufficient for me to know that he is not on the agenda of this Assembly.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 39. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): Mr. President, allow me to finish my statement once and for all.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 40. The PRESIDENT: I shall be very pleased to give you the opportunity to finish your statement if your statement is in order. However, I must tell you that it is my duty to rule out of order any statement which I do not consider to be completely in order.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 41. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): May I proceed?<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 42. The PRESIDENT: You may proceed, Sir, if your statement is in order.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 43. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): I accept what you say, Mr. President, but, before closing, I request you to use the same yardstick with respect to others who sometimes may take more liberties than I have taken. I believe that I have not been taking liberties, but that I was speaking in my own style.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 44. The PRESIDENT: The appeal which I have extended to you I have extended to all delegations , namely , that when they speak they should observe the same requirement that I have asked you to observe.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 45. Mr. BAROODY (Saudi Arabia): All right, I must thank you for your consideration and your forbearance. Let no one think that this incident will in any way vitiate the respect that I have for you as a person, However, if I said what I had to say, I did so standing on my own rights.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 46. Having said that, I would conclude by saying that I wish peace to prevail everywhere, and there shall be no peace in the Middle East if this Assembly thinks that the indigenous people of Palestine and the Arab people at large are negotiable.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 47. Mr. KEITA (Mali) (translated from French): The delegation of the Republic of Mali would like to ex-press its gratitude to the three delegations of Sweden, Austria and Finland, which, after much serious effort, have produced what is now submitted to the Assembly as a "procedural draft resolution".<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 48. At this point, my delegation would like to say the following: to begin with, we are not, we have not been and we shall not be in favour of referring this matter back to the Security Council, on the one hand because we think that the question is still before the Council, and on the other because we know perfectly well, as do all those here, what the situation is in the Security Council.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 49. We all know that it is because no solution could be found in the Security Council that an appeal was made to all the States Members of the Organization to come together and reach a decision on a very important matter. As the fifteen members of the Security Council were unable to find a solution, all Member States were asked to study the problem with a view to finding a solution for it.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 50. The delegation of Mali would like to point out that during the discussions in the corridors and in the course of unofficial contacts, we often heard it said "We are agreed on the withdrawal". But it was never possible, either in the Security Council or at this emergency special session of the General Assembly, to secure the withdrawal of the Israel occupation forces. It seems to me, therefore, that the impasse in the Security Council has been reflected in the General Assembly. And this cannot but be very disquieting, particularly for the small countries, the young nations. In point of fact, this inability to secure the withdrawal of the Israel troops from the territory they have conquered and which they are now occupying is, as we see it, a reward for territorial con-quest. We are not ready to endorse this and we do not think that anyone here who claims to respect the spirit of the Charter can in honesty endorse it.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 51. All the States represented here, and more particularly the small States which have followed the work of this Assembly and seen the results that have been achieved, feel anxious when they realize: "Tomorrow it might be my country. Here they will amuse themselves with talking; stories will be told in the Security Council and capped here, before this Assembly. After which: nothing. Our country will still be occupied, the occupier will still be there". Such is the lesson to be drawn from these discussions, for the small countries.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 52. We said in the Security Council that we are not anti-Jewish, or anti-white, or anti-yellow, or anti-red. From the start of this matter we have emphasized, in the Council, that it must be studied seriously and in its fundamental aspects. That means that the right of the people of Palestine who have been driven from their land to return to their native soil, to the home of their forefathers, must be recognized. We continue to stress this point. We have never claimed that the Jews must be driven out of Palestine or put to the sword. We say that they are human beings. But we consider that the Palestinians must recover their national territory. This is what has not been done, and until this problem is dealt with there will be bloodshed and disturbances.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 53. Here, through our inertia, which I shall not hesitate to dub . complicity, by our collusive inaction, we are demonstrating to the whole world that aggression does pay. Thus anyone, any State, may tomorrow engage in aggression, We shall hear the same speeches; we shall see the same comings and goings, the same contacts, the same little groups; and the aggressor will remain in the territory he has conquered.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 54. It is a different task that we are asked to per-form here, and we, for our part, are ready to set about it at once.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 55. I want to stress this point; as long as there are still troops occupying foreign territory, there will be no peace. We must realize this. All those who admire and support Israel, those who want to do something for it, should understand, that they would be doing it a disservice by. encouraging it to remain in the conquered territories. They must understand that the true owners of these lands' will never allow this occupation to continue indefinitely and they would be creating a permanent state of war for Israel. They must realize that the occupied Arab lands cannot remain in Israel's hands. Those who really wish to do Israel a service must therefore put pressure on it to restore the lands which it now occupies, By doing so they would be proving that they love Israel, that they want to see it live and develop, that they have its interests at heart. But to encourage it to stay in lands conquered by force is an ill service, a bad lesson, no proof of friendship for Israel on the part of those who seem or who claim to be its friends.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 56. This must be made clear, for the situation cannot remain as it is. No country can occupy another's lands by force in the hope that the victim will do nothing, will stay with his arms folded, This is not possible.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 57. The Assembly has before it a draft resolution [A\/L.529]. It may look like, a procedural resolution, but my delegation thinks that in fact it also touches on the substance of the matter to a certain extent. For the substance of the question is that shortcoming of which we are all guilty. Why not say so? We have shown ourselves wanting, we have not succeeded in being honest either with ourselves or with the Charter. Yet this failure incites us, instead of seeking the true remedy, simply to flee our responsibilities. This is the point we have reached. We have not honestly accomplished the task that was entrusted to us. And now we are looking for a way to escape our responsibilities; we are talking about suspending the session, adjourning, because we have not succeeded in finding a solution. This is why I consider that the draft resolution does to some extent touch on the substance of the question. From the point of view of individual morality as well as international morality, each one of us should tell himself that this is not what was expected of us.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 58. For this reason, my delegation does not and will not support a draft resolution of this kind, which bears witness to weakness, incapacity and discouragement on the part of all States. If I say discouragement, it is because the draft resolution in fact accepts things as they are. It is tantamount to saying; "This is how the situation stands; we can do nothing to change it; let us leave it as it is." It is exactly what the Security Council has already done and it is this which has permitted the occupying troops to go on with their occupation; it is this which has encouraged the occupation. My delegation, I repeat, is not willing to accept this once again in the General Assembly.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 59. I have already spoken of the question of referring the matter back to the Security Council. We all know in advance what the situation there would be. We therefore find it rather ridiculous that we should now say that we must go back to the Security Council. In saying this I am not prompted by any desire to slight the good intentions of our friends of Finland, Austria and Sweden, who have made this effort to enable the Assembly to get out of its difficulty one way or another, to save face in regard to the ordinary task which was entrusted to it.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 60. I shall simply say this. Let me remind you of the attitude adopted in the Security Council: aggression is a good thing, aggression pays; when you are strong, you can occupy small countries and impose your will upon them.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 61. In this Assembly, all Member States, large and small, on an equal footing, have been asked to gather together to study a problem which the Security Council was unable to solve and to find a solution for it. Unfortunately, it looks as though we have taken the same road as the Security Council, that is to say, the road of endorsing victories and territorial conquests achieved by force, of admitting that might is right. This is why I have been at pains to point out to all the delegations here how great a responsibility we in the Assembly had. In fact, we were all given an opportunity to reflect upon this problem, first by ourselves and then as the Âé¶¹APP, in order to find the proper solution. Unfortunately, our weakness seems to have been such that not only have we been unable to solve the problem which was put before us but we are now trying to shirk our responsibilities, to find some way out, no matter what; in point of fact, we are no longer looking for results, positive or otherwise; we are only looking for a way to get rid of the problem.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 62. It is for the reasons I have just stated that my delegation does not and will not support the draft resolution before us.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 63. The PRESIDENT: Before calling on the next speaker on my list, I should like to inform Members that draft resolution A\/L.529 has now been distributed to the Assembly in written form.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 64. I would also inform Members that, after the list of speakers is exhausted, I shall wish to ascertain from the authors of the draft resolution whether or not their motion to have it put to the vote at this meeting was a formal one. That was not quite clear to me from the statement which was made on this point. We shall then, of course, have to consider and deal with the situation in the light of the statement of the representative of Iraq.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 65. Mr. BUDO (Albania) (translated from French): After the setback which the work of this emergency special session of the General Assembly culminated in on 4 July, we were forced to the conclusion that no really positive results could be achieved during this . new phase of the Assembly's work. In fact, everything that has happened in these three weeks of work, both in the Assembly and in the corridors and even outside the Âé¶¹APP, has provided enough evidence to convince any honest man of the deplorable state of affairs in this Organization and the inability of the General Assembly to carry out its duties in the face of the situation that has been created in the Middle East by Israel's imperialist aggression against the Arab peoples.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 66. The fact that the General Assembly has not condemned the aggression of which the Arab peoples are the victims, and that attempts have been made to impose conditions on the evacuation of the Arab territories usurped by Israel by means of armed aggression, is the high point of all the injustice and perverseness that we have witnessed in this international institution, one of whose principal purposes, according to the Charter, is to prohibit the use of force against the territorial integrity or independence of a State and to condemn and punish any act of aggression.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n
\n<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n
\n<\/p><\/div>\n