by Greg Sheridan
KEVIN Rudd's bid for a UN Security Council seat has been dealt a severe blow after a warning from the Arab League that it is less likely to succeed because of
Hashem Yousseff, chief of cabinet for Arab League secretary-general Amr Moussa, told The Australian Canberra kept "bad company" at the UN, where it often opposes anti-Israel resolutions in alliance with the
Australia's support for Israel, he said, was "one of the elements that will be taken into consideration" by the 22-member Arab League in deciding whether to support Australia's bid for a seat on the UN Security Council for the 2013-14 term.
Mr Yousseff said the Arab nations would consider how different candidates affected their interests. "For us, the Arab-Israeli issue is an important part of the consideration."
But Mr Yousseff's comments indicate it will be difficult for
Mr Rudd has cast his foreign policy as consisting of three pillars - the
The Security Council seat will be voted on by all 192 UN members. Although the Arab League represents only 22 of them, it often votes at the UN in alliances with the African Union and with the Non-Aligned Movement.
Determined opposition from any of these blocs makes an Australian bid unlikely to succeed. It was to avoid blackmail on policy issues such as this that the Howard government abandoned its attempt to win a seat in 1996.
Further evidence of Arab opposition to
The letter, dated November 26 last year, strongly attacks expressions of concern in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's annual report about a clandestine Syrian nuclear program, and blasts the Rudd government for its silence over the Israeli nuclear program.
Mr Sulaiman accuses the Australian government of following an "Israeli concoction" in expressing concern about the Syrian nuclear program.
He makes the link between
"The Syrian Arab Republic does not expect Australia, the peace-loving and responsible member of the United Nations, to accept double or multiple standards when it comes to the Israel state-sponsored terrorism, which is the main threat to peace and security in the world."
But the ambassador goes on to express appreciation for
Under the Rudd government,
However,
On the positive side, Mr Yousseff said that he would explore a more formal dialogue mechanism between
This is likely to be at the ministerial level. The Rudd government last year announced a ministerial-level dialogue with the Gulf Co-operation Council, but this dialogue has resulted in no meetings so far.
Greg Sheridan
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