1971-12-05
By Eric Pace
Page: 25
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec. 4—As the Security Council met on the Indian‐Pakistani crisis, diplomats and officials here expressed mingled hope and cynicism as they recalled past United Nations efforts at snuffing out conflicts.
As early as 1947, the world body showed that it could end a shooting war, in Indonesia, and in 1965 it cooled off border war between India and Pakistan, which, it was feared, might have drawn in Communist China.
“We accomplished something in 1965,” one rumpled Secretariat official said today as delegates gathered for the Security Council session. “May be we can do it again.”
Idealists here, and they are numerous, cited the organization's roles in stopping wars three times in the Middle East, its quick response when South Korea was invaded and its work in the Congo and on Cyprus.
But its critics, and they are numerous, cited its lack of success in framing enduring accommodations for peace.
“What we do best,” one young Western diplomat observed, “is make words, not peace.”
On this Saturday morning, no Secretariat employes complained of working overtime. One Northern European said, “We have a saying in my country: ‘If you work in a pharmacy, you cannot be sure to get your sleep.’”
The United States delegate, George Bush, looked as though he had had little sleep indeed, but the Italian delegate, Piero Vinci, was urbane in a blue blazer.
Chinese diplomats, including Pekin's regular representative, Huang Hua, appeared at the Security Council offices after representatives of the other four permanent members, and their arrival caused sighs of relief.
Their membership is the main change since the Indian‐Pakistani crisis of 1965, which followed 17 years of discord and frequent appearances of the question in the Security Council.
During the first half of 1965, tension rose, culminating in three weeks of fighting over the desolate Rann of Cutch.
During the period, both Governments sent a series of messages to the Security Council about the disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
On June 30, the two parties agreed on a cease‐fire on the Rann of Cutch, but later, after hostilities broke out in Kashmir in August, the Security Council held 12 meetings about the dispute.