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Security Council
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Extract
Meeting at the request of the representatives of Canada and Denmark, the Security Council discussed the situation in the Middle East at its 1341st-1361st meetings, held on May 24-June 14, 1967.
Opening the debate on the adoption of the agenda, Nikolai T. Fedorenko (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) declared that his delegation did not believe there were sufficient grounds for a hasty convening of the Security Council in what he termed an artificially dramatic climate fostered by the representatives of certain Western powers. He observed that two members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), rather than any of the parties directly concerned, had asked for a meeting of the Council. To his delegation this indicated a desire to interfere in the affairs of other countries rather than a true concern for the peace and security of the Middle East.
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- International Organizations: Summary of Activities: I. United Nations
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- Copyright © The IO Foundation 1967
References
page 837 note 1 See Document S/7902. For a summary of the Security Council's previous consideration of the Palestine question see International Organization, Winter 1967 (Vol.21, No. 1), pp. 173–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
page 837 note 2 Document S/7896.
page 838 note 3 Document A/6669.
page 838 note 4 Document S/7905.
page 839 note 5 Document S/7906.
page 843 note 6 Document S/7916.
page 844 note 7 Document S/7919.
page 845 note 8 Document S/7935.
page 845 note 9 Adopted as Security Council Resolution 233 (1967) of June 6, 1967.
page 848 note 10 Document S/7940.
page 848 note 11 Subsequently presented as Document S/7941.
page 848 note 12 Adopted as Security Council Resolution 234 (1967) of June 7, 1967.
page 849 note 13 Document S/7952 and S/7951, respectively.
page 849 note 14 Document S/7952/Rev.1–3.
page 850 note 15 Document S/7951/Rev.1.
page 851 note 16 Contained in Document S/7960 and adopted as Security Council Resolution 235 (1967) of June 9, 1967.
page 854 note 17 Document S/7971.
page 856 note 18 Adopted as Security Countil Resolution 236 (1967) of June 12, 1967.
page 856 note 19 Document S/7951/Rev.2.
page 859 note 20 Document S/7968.
page 859 note 21 Document S/7968/Rev.1–2.
page 859 note 22 Document S/7968/Rev.3.
page 859 note 23 Adopted as Security Council Resolution 237 (1967), June 14, 1967.
page 861 note 24 Chapter VII is entitled “Action with Respect to Threats to the peace, Breaches of the Peace, and Acts of Aggression.”
page 861 note 25 Contained in Document S/8047.
page 861 note 1 Document S/7969. For a summary of the Council's previous consideration of this matter see International Organization, Winter 1967 (Vol. 21, No. 1), pp. 199–200Google Scholar.
page 861 note 2 Document S/7996.
page 861 note 3 Adopted as Security Council Resolution 238 (1967) of June 19, 1967.
page 862 note 1 Documents S/8031 and S/8036. For a summary of the Security Council's debate on an earlier complaint by the Cango against Portugal see International Organization, Fall 1966 (Vol. 20, No. 4), pp. 823–827Google Scholar.
page 863 note 2 Document S/8050.
page 863 note 3 Adopted as Security Council Resolution 239 (1967) of July 10, 1967.
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