|
|
|

The
Nation Independent
Journalism Since 1865
The Nation was founded in
the United States by
slavery abolitionists in
1865 and our magazine has
remained true to its
original commitment to be
the critical, independent
voice in American
journalism.
James Baldwin, Ralph Nader
and Hunter Thompson
published their first
pieces in The Nation.
Other contributors have
included Martin Luther
King Jr., Albert Einstein,
Eleanor Roosevelt, Emma
Goldman and Jean-Paul
Sartre.
The Nation has a proud
literary history as well,
having published the work
of W.H. Auden, Langston
Hughes, Sylvia Plath,
Henry James, Willa Cather,
Thomas Mann and hundreds
of other major writers.
MaximsNews Readers may
have four trial issues at
our expense, then a total
of 24 issues for only
$13.95. Click
here to subscribe through
MaximsNews.
|
|
|
|
Free!!
Free!! Free!!
Available
for Media Interviews: IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
|
The
MaximsNews Global Pundit
Ian Williams

Ian Williams is an
international journalist and the past
president of the United Nations
Correspondents Association. This article was
published with permission from The
Nation. See his Blog: DeadlinePundit. Ian
Williams is a Columnist for MaximsNews
Network.
|
U.N.
LOW-KEY LEADER for HIGH-ANXIETY TIMES by
IAN WILLIAMS
(MaximsNews.com, U.N.)
|
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com,
UN/ - 05 October 2006 --
Short of major
catastrophes, the next UN Secretary General will
be South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon. On
Monday, at the first UN Security Council straw
poll that revealed the vetoes hitherto held up
the delegates' sleeves, Ban had fourteen votes
to encourage his candidacy, and only one
"no opinion."
The Council agreed
that the official vote would be taken October 9.
A separate vote by the General
Assembly--strictly a formality--is expected to
follow shortly.
US Ambassador John
Bolton was wearing an uncharacteristic smile
when he came to the microphone outside the
Council chamber to give his spin on the almost
certain confirmation of Ban. Some observers saw
joy at the election of Bolton's favored
candidate, others the smile of an assassin
wiping his blade and contemplating his
handiwork, scuppering other candidates with a
discreet and anonymous veto.
But Bolton's smile
may be premature. Short of illegal and/or
unprecedented maneuverings by the Bush
Administration, Bolton's influence at the UN
will soon be over. His temporary "recess
appointment" expires at the end of this
year, and prospects are dim for a Senate hearing
to confirm his appointment.
It may also be
premature to regard Ban as a puppet who would
dance to strings pulled by Washington. Much was
made in the UN about his statement at a recent
Asia Society event, that the United States was
the "most important member" of the
United Nations. But this was surely just a
statement of the obvious.
The Secretary
General's key relationship is with
Washington--and under George W. Bush's direction
this demands almost as much psychotherapy as it
does diplomacy. Kofi Annan has been mutually
supportive with Powell and Rice, and while one
may argue about how far he should have gone,
those relationships have certainly have had some
pragmatic benefits for the world.
Washington, as Bolton
has said, has long wanted a UN leader who is
"more Secretary than General." But the
more lucid members of the US establishment know
that the UN's power is its prestige--its
"unique legitimacy," as Annan puts
it--and that cannot happen with a leader who is
merely a clerk. If the organization is to have
global legitimacy, the Secretary General must
have moral authority--and the role has developed
over the years to the point where it has become
almost a secular papacy.
In the early days of
the UN, the Secretary General mediated between
power blocs in the absence of any effective
opposition to the United States; his job today
is clearly to mediate between the United States
and the rest of the world.
It is a job that
Annan, in the absence of visible support from
the Bush Administration, has been undertaking
quite successfully for his two terms: reminding
Washington of basic principles without going out
of his way to antagonize incumbent
office-holders there.
When asked about the
handling of such relationships, Ban has referred
to South Korea's exposed geopolitical position
between Russia, China, the United States, North
Korea and Japan. In fact, South Korea's Social
Democratic government has indeed performed a
noteworthy tightrope walk: It cannot do without
the United States, in case North Korea does go
over the top, but it has distanced itself from
the wilder talk in Washington about possible
solutions while doing the minimum necessary to
keep the United States engaged.
South Korea has
maintained good relations with China and Russia,
while engaging as constructively as possible
with its northern neighbor, which now and again
hints that it is prepared to nuke its way to
unity. And South Koreans are actually grateful
to the UN, which delivered for them, albeit with
the usual caveats that accompany any extension
of the UN franchise to the US military. Ban
comes to the job, in fact, with impressive
references.
Most of the world's
countries do not want a grandstanding,
evangelical multilateralist at the UN's helm.
They would actually prefer someone who is quiet,
laid-back and principled--but not noisily
so--because otherwise his position would have no
moral authority.
Ban's speeches keep
stressing "harmony," and that seems to
be just what the world wants in a Secretary
General: someone who can turn down the volume
and the heat in bellicose situations. His
challenge will be to hang on to basic principles
in the face of pressure not only from the United
States but also from China, which is similarly
idiosyncratic in its view of multilateral norms
and the UN Charter.
Over the years,
devout US Republicans have often been appointed
to head UN agencies and within months or years
have come out sounding like Swedish Social
Democrats. In the case of Ban, one suspects that
he will fill the position in a similar way,
expanding to fill the role--but he will not have
to change his stripes to do so.
In his campaign for
the post, Ban has expressed strong and
unequivocal support for the International
Criminal Court, and for the "Responsibility
to Protect," the concept of
humanitarian intervention accepted in principle
at the 2005 Heads of State Summit. John Bolton
has spearheaded the Bush Administration's drive
to eviscerate the ICC for the last five years.
Ban has given no
indication of abandoning basic international
principles, whether to be elected or to keep
Washington happy. His quiet approach may well be
the last laugh over the stentorian Bolton and
the American UN knockers--who may not be in
office in five years when his reappointment is
due.
Even so, looking at
his low-key campaign for the seat, one hopes
that Ban's public profile and oratory have
hidden depths waiting to be displayed. Even a
secular pope has to know how to preach.
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
~~~~~~
MaximsNews.com,
An Independent Voice from the U.N., provides
commentary and analysis from leading world
figures: King Abdullah II (Jordan), HRH
Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein (Jordan), Sir Brian
Urquhart, Hans Blix, Amb. Richard Holbrooke,
Anwar Ibrahim, Bianca Jagger, Shashi Tharoor,
Kerry Kennedy, Ian Williams, Stephen
Schlesinger, Sen. Timothy E. Wirth, Marc Morial,
Barbara Crossette, Amb.
Jayantha Dhanapala (Sri Lanka), Amb. Pierre Schori (Sweden),
Amb. William H. Luers, Mehri Madarshahi, Gloria
Feldt, Jeffrey Laurenti, Rodney D. Smith, Rory
O'Connor, Genevieve Stamper, Max Stamper and
others.
|
MaximsNews Network® LLC is a Global News Network reaching over 30,000 in the International Community. It is associated with MediaChannel.org and Globalvision News Network, global news and media information services with more than 350 news affiliates in 135 countries.
MaximsNews®LLC is in partnership with the United Nations Foundation and the Better World Fund.
Max Stamper, Ph.D., London School of
Economics, Publisher &
Editor-in-Chief
MaximsNews Network, former United
Nations Official, U.N.
Population Division,
Department of Economic
and Social Affairs. DrMaxStamper@MaximsNews.com
Genevieve Stamper, Associate Publisher, GenevieveStamper@MaximsNews.com
Front Page
| About Max Stamper | Key Clients | International Affairs |
Your
Savvy Guide for Dealing
with Journalists | The History of MaximsNews
Max Stamper is eager to explore your international public affairs and communication needs, and to discuss our services. Phone: +1.201.848.6162,
Suite 112, 76 North Maple Ave., Ridgewood, NJ 07450 U.S.A.,
The views expressed are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of MaximsNews® LLC,
www.MaximsNews.com MaximsNews@MaximsNews.com
©
Copyrights 1999 - 2006, MaximsNews® LLC. All rights
reserved.
To
Unsubscribe: Unsubscribe@MaximsNews.com
|
|
|