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East Timor - US Laws Delay Arrival of UN Police Monitors 17 Jun 1999 UNITED NATIONS, May 28 (IPS) - The UN's hopes of quickly deploying police monitors in increasingly volatile East Timor have hit a new snag, with US President Bill Clinton forced to delay US approval until he consults Congress. With a vote on East Timor's status set for Aug. 8, UN officials had hoped to send an international police force to the Indonesian- occupied state long before that date. Officials had planned to have slightly more than 270 police officers in place by the end of June. The delay by Washington - necessitated by a 1993 directive issued by Clinton in the aftermath of Washington's bungled involvement in a UN mission in Somalia - likely will delay approval of the police by the 15-nation UN Security Council until June 10. That in turn could complicate the entire voting timetable, say UN officials. "There is a draft resolution in place" for Council approval of the police monitors, says Francesc Vendrell, director of the Asia/Pacific Division of the UN Department for Political Affairs. However, he adds, "the United States has to give two weeks' notice to Congress" before it can approve the deployment of the UN Mission in East Timor (UNAMET). The United States is one of five veto-holding permanent members of the UN Security Council. The delay is a result of Presidential Decision Directive 25 (PDD-25), issued by Clinton in response to criticism of US troop involvement in the troubled 1993 UN mission in Somalia. The directive places strict conditions on US approval of any UN mission with peacekeeping implications, including the insistence that any mission have a definite end point and a limited mandate. To placate Congress - which was upset about the idea of US troops serving under UN co ! " # $ % & |