Resolution 591 was adopted on 28 November 1986. The Resolution served to strengthen the trade limitations on armaments to South Africa, which was subject to apartheid at that time.
UN Security Council Resolution 1386, adopted on 20 December 2001, authorized the establishment of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The resolution authorized member states, working under ISAF, to assist the Afghan Transitional Authority in maintaining security in Kabul and its surrounding areas. It aimed to promote stability and facilitate the establishment of a new government in Afghanistan.
UN Resolution 1441 authorized use of force in Iraq and France, Germany, and Italy all originally voted for 1441 while admitting Iraq had weapons of mass distruction. It goes back further than that. United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 was adopted at the 2981st meeting on 3 April 1991, to declare a formal cease-fire at the end of the Gulf War and impose peace terms on Iraq. It also demanded the removal of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. I don't know which countries voted for it in the final debate, but France approved the resolution as a member of the Security Council.
Yes. In 1947, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 181.
The UN Human Rights Council was established on March 15, 2006 when the UN General Assembly adopted the resolution A/RES/60/251.
No. In 1947, the United Nations, not the United States, adopted a plan calling for the division of the British Mandate of Palestine into a Jewish and Arab States. The United States supported this Resolution but did not "adopt" it.
The question seems to be looking for the answer "the United Nations General Assembly", but that is actually not quite correct. In November of 1947, the United Nations General Assembly adopted UN Resolution 181 which specified that Mandatory Palestine would be divide into an Arab State and a Jewish State. However, the plan was only actualized in May of 1948 when the State of Israel declared independence according to the terms prescribed by UN Resolution 181. So, the plan was adopted in 1947, but realized in 1948.
The United Nations Command (UNC) is the unified command structure for the multinational military forces that supported South Korea during and after the Korean War. After troops of North Korea invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950, the United Nations Security Council adopted resolutions that created the United Nations Command.
The United Nations Command (UNC) is the unified command structure for the multinational military forces that supported South Korea during and after the Korean War. After troops of North Korea invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950, the United Nations Security Council adopted resolutions that created the United Nations Command.
The United Nations General Assembly.On November 29, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly adopted UN Resolution 181 which specified that Mandatory Palestine would be divided into an Arab State and a Jewish State. However, the plan was only actualized in May of 1948 when the State of Israel declared independence according to the terms prescribed by UN Resolution 181.
The resolution to become independent was officially adopted on July 2, 1776. It was on July 4th that congress adopted the actual Declaration of Independence.
In respect to the Korean War, if your not talking about THAT action, please be more specific, and I will try to answer it. The resolution was adopted mainly because the Soviet Union, a veto-wielding power, had been boycotting proceedings since January, in protest that the Republic of China (Taiwan) and not the People's Republic of China held a permanent seat on the council. President Truman had made a statement on June 27, 1950 ordering the United States air and sea forces to give the South Korean regime support. While the United Nations Security Council was convened and had been debating the issue from the invasion forward it only issued Resolution 83 on June 27 which definitively recommended member-states militarily assist the Republic of Korea. The Soviet Union's foreign minister accused the United States of starting armed intervention on behalf of the Republic of Korea before the Security Council was summoned to meet on June 27, and confronting the UN with a fait accompli.
The Convention and its Explanatory Report was adopted by the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe at its 109th Session on 8 November 2001.