United States Embassy
Tokyo, Japan
State Department Seal
Welcome to the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo. This site contains information on U.S. policy,
public affairs, visas and consular services.


   
Consulates
Osaka
Nagoya
Fukuoka
Sapporo
Naha
   
American Centers
Tokyo
Kansai
Nagoya
Fukuoka
Sapporo
   
UN Security Council Endorses Afghan Agreement

By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent

United Nations -- The Security Council December 6 unanimously endorsed the agreement reached on interim arrangements for Afghanistan pending the re-establishment of a permanent government and declared that it is willing to support a request for a UN-mandated security force.

Acting one day after the agreement was signed in Bonn, the council also called on all Afghan groups to implement the agreement in full, cooperate with the interim authority which is to take office on December 22, and to allow unimpeded access by humanitarian organizations to people in need.

Secretary General Kofi Annan said the resolution is "a good one. I like the support it gives to the efforts" of the UN special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and his team who mediated the nine days of talks which resulted in the agreement.

"But the difficult task is ahead," the secretary general said. "We have many hurdles ahead and we are going to try to do our best and we expect the Afghan parties to cooperate with us."

"They have a basis for action, a basis to move forward when Mr. Brahimi is able to go back to Kabul and will be able to sit with the parties and discuss practical steps for implementation of the agreement," Annan said.

U.S. Ambassador James Cunningham said that the most important aspect of the resolution is "the political impulse and endorsement" of the agreement.

The council also "made clear its expectation that the agreements reached there should be implemented and set in train further work in that regard," Cunningham noted. "There are other elements of the resolution asking for assistance with the humanitarian operation which we all know is pressing."

Annan said that an essential part of the Bonn agreement is the request for a multinational force to assist in maintaining security for Kabul and surrounding areas and then progressively expand to other urban centers and areas if needed.

In its resolution, the council said that it was willing to take further action, based on a report by the secretary general, to support the interim institutions and requests to help implement the agreement.

Cunningham, who is the deputy US permanent representative to the UN, said that "it will take a little bit of time" for the council to mandate a multinational force.

"The first thing that has to happen is a number of countries need to discuss how to meet that request. Then it will up to the council to act on that understanding," the ambassador explained. "There are some discussions that still need to take place outside the council among countries who are willing and able to fulfill that request."

"Discussions are still at an early stage. It's a difficult undertaking for countries who are going to do this and they need some time to get their own thinking in order before the council acts," Cunningham said.

In the resolution, the council also called on bilateral and multilateral donors to strengthen and implement their commitments to assist with the rehabilitation, recovery and reconstruction of Afghanistan in conjunction with the UN and the interim authority as long as the Afghan groups fulfill their commitments.