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Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - NEW YORK — The UN Security Council has postponed a vote scheduled for Friday on authorizing the use of defensive force to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz from Iranian attacks.
The 15-member body was set to vote Friday morning on a draft resolution brought by Bahrain, but by Thursday night the schedule shifted.
The reason given was that the United Nations observes Good Friday as a public holiday, according to diplomatic sources — despite this fact being known when the vote was first announced.
No new date has been given for voting on the draft.
Bahrain has significantly toned down the proposed draft on reopening the Strait of Hormuz amid opposition from some UNSC members about allowing countries to use force to secure the critical waterway.
Russia, China and France, all veto-wielding countries on the Council, had expressed opposition to approving the use of force.
Iran has placed a stranglehold on the key shipping lane — threatening fuel supplies and roiling the global economy — in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes that triggered the month-old war in West Asia.
“We cannot accept economic terrorism affecting our region and the world, the whole world is being affected by the developments,” Bahrain’s United Nations ambassador Jamal Alrowaiei said this week.
He said the text, which has gone through several amendments and is supported by the United States, “comes at a critical juncture.”
President Donald Trump on Wednesday called for countries struggling with fuel shortages to “go get your own oil” in the Strait of Hormuz, adding that US forces would not help them.
A sixth and final draft, seen by AFP, greenlights member states — either unilaterally or as “voluntary multinational naval partnerships” — to use “all defensive means necessary and commensurate with the circumstances.”
It applies to the strait and adjacent waters to “secure transit passage and to deter attempts to close, obstruct or otherwise interfere with international navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.”
The measure would last for a period of at least six months.
The draft resolution has been molded in a bid to rally several countries that have appeared skeptical, including Russia, China and France.
Revised wording no longer explicitly invokes Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, which allows the Security Council to authorise armed force to restore peace.
The latest version, which was scheduled to be voted on at 11:00 a.m. (1500 GMT) Friday before the postponement, also emphasizes the defensive nature of any intervention — a stipulation that seems to have alleviated French concerns.
Jerome Bonnafont, France’s UN ambassador, said on Thursday that “it is up to the Council to quickly devise the necessary defensive response” after members voted in March to condemn Iran’s blocking of the Strait of Hormuz.
President Emmanuel Macron earlier said a military operation to free the waterway is “unrealistic.”
It is not certain that Russia and China — who both wield veto powers — will back the draft resolution.
“Authorizing member states to use force would amount to legitimizing the unlawful and indiscriminate use of force, which would inevitably lead to further escalation of the situation and lead to serious consequences,” said Chinese ambassador Fu Cong.
Russia, a long-time ally of Tehran, has denounced what it calls one-sided measures.
Considering the possible Russian and Chinese vetos, the text “faces tall odds to make it through the Security Council,” Daniel Forti, an analyst at International Crisis Group, told AFP.
“It is hard to see them supporting a resolution that treats stability in the strait exclusively as a security issue, instead of one that also grapples with the need for a durable political end to the hostilities,” he said.
Normally, around a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
Its near-total closure is impacting global supplies of important commodities including oil, liquefied natural gas and fertilizer and leading to sharp rises in energy prices.
Security Council mandates authorising member states to use force are relatively rare.
During the Gulf War, a 1990 vote allowed a US-led coalition to intervene in Iraq, while in 2011 a similar vote permitted NATO’s intervention in Libya.
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