UN moves to curb extremism
September 24, 2014"This is only the sixth time the Security Council has met at level like this," US President Barack Obama told the 15-member body on Wednesday in a special session.
The members just minutes earlier had passed a binding resolution in a unanimous vote. The 193 nations of the UN are now obligated to hinder the spread of extremism, a decision prompted by the sudden emergence of "Islamic State" (IS) fighters in Syria and Iraq.
Roughly 15,000 foreign fighters originating from 80 nations are believed to have traveled to Syria in recent years, according to the US president.
Further airstrikes in Syria
Following the UN resolution, the Pentagon announced that the US and its Arab allies had launched more airstrikes against IS targets in Syria.
The strikes in Syria, which began Tuesday, are part of a larger military campaign to combat IS. Four Arab countries - Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates - participated in the attacks, while Qatar provided support.
The Pentagon provided no further details of Wednesday's operation, but said it was ongoing.
An anonymous official told the AFP news agency that the targets included militant-controlled oil fields.
'Historic' UN resolution
Obama reminded Security Council representatives that despite the "historic decision" reached on Wednesday, legal action - including banning the recruitment of foreign fighters and preventing extremists from traveling abroad to fight alongside terrorist groups - was only the first step.
"[The] resolution will not be enough. Promises on paper cannot keep us safe. Lofty rhetoric and good intentions will not stop a single terrorist attack. The words spoken here today must be matched and translated into action, into deeds ... for years to come," he said.
The US president had addressed the UN General Assembly earlier in the day, where he, along with other foreign leaders appealed for the international community to combat IS and allied militants before it was too late.
Cameron: 'No easy answers'
The United Kingdom's prime minister, David Cameron, also addressed the Council on Wednesday, showing strong support for the resolution.
"We must defeat the poisonous ideology of extremism," he said, emphasizing that the UN countries must "use all of the weapons at our disposal."
In addition to reinforcing counterterrorist efforts, officials must identify and uproot sources of hatred, which were just as insidious as blatant support for violence, he said, the propagation of conspiracy theories regarding terrorist attacks on the West being just one example.
"There are no easy answers or quick fixes," Cameron said.
dr/rc (AFP, AP, Reuters, dpa)