|
|
|
 
THE
WASHINGTON SPECTATOR
Since 1974, our feisty
bi-weekly bulletin has
given independent-minded
readers behind-the-scenes
insight into significant
news that is ignored by
the corporate media. In
the tradition of I.F.
Stone’s Weekly, we
scour the big dailies, the
newsweeklies, the foreign
press, and specialist
magazines to pull together
vital information on major
issues of the day, and
strip it of the
distortions of the spin
controllers. A one-year
subscription to the
Washington Spectator costs
just $15. Visit: WASHINGTON
SPECTATOR |
|
|
|
Free!!
Free!! Free!!
Available
for Media Interviews: JeffreyLaurenti@MaximsNews.com
|
MaximsNews
Contributor Jeffrey Laurenti
Jeffrey
Laurenti is a senior fellow in international
affairs at The
Century Foundation. He is an
expert in international security,
international law and multilateral
institutions. Jeffrey Laurenti is a
Contributor to MaximsNews
Network.
|
FROM
ANNAN to BAN, a KOREAN SURPRISE by JEFFREY
LAURENTI (MaximsNews.com, U.N.)
|
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com,
UN/ - 07 October 2006 -- Unless
ambassador John Bolton’s purring about being
“very pleased” with the Security Council’s
settling on a candidate sets off a stampede in
the General Assembly against him, Korean foreign
minister Ban Ki-moon seems set to become the
next secretary-general of the United Nations.
Ban’s
nomination by the Security Council represents a
historic coming-of-age for Korea, which for
sixty years has been much more an item on the UN
agenda than a driver of it.
A nation
still smarting from conquest by Imperial Japan,
still divided as a Cold War laboratory of
diametrically opposed social systems, will now fête
one of its own as secretary-general of the world
organization. For a country that in 1960 had the
same per capita income as Ghana, this is a
global affirmation of Korea’s great leap
forward—in its southern half.
Almost as if
to remind the world that the more traditional
“hermit kingdom” to the north refuses to
slink into the shadows, the “democratic
people’s republic” in Pyongyang responded to
Ban’s topping the Security Council’s straw
poll by announcing plans to stage a nuclear
test.
It is a
reminder that the new secretary-general will
still have to deal with explosive issues from
home—North Korea’s nuclear arsenal,
Japan’s nationalist assertiveness—where he
must nonetheless show impartiality.
Ban
certainly has earned the deep respect of top
government officials of the major countries
collaborating to manage North Korea’s nuclear
breakout. Ironically, he has found more
comfortable alignment with China and Russia than
with Washington, which has been frustrated by
South Korea’s determined pursuit of détente
with the North rather than confrontation.
But once it
became clear that the Bush administration could
not break the UN’s regional rotation, which
promised the secretary-general’s post to
someone from Asia (Bush’s personal favorite
was Latvia’s American-raised president, Vaira
Vike-Freiberga), Ban appeared to be the most
palatable candidate for Washington’s reigning
conservatives.
South Korea
is, after all, the only Asian country presenting
a candidate that is in the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, a club of
higher-income countries. Conservatives expect
that Secretary-General Ban will be warmer in
embracing free trade as the solution to poverty,
and less hectoring on development assistance for
poor countries, than Kofi Annan has been—or a
successor from South Asia might have been.
On this,
they are likely to be disappointed. Ban’s
public statements have made clear he will not
retreat on the Millennium Development Goals
(emphasizing education, environment, and
health), and in his address to the UN General
Assembly last month he specifically singled out
the international development assistance target
of 0.7 percent of wealthy countries’ GNP as
“the cornerstone of our strong commitment”
to achieving those goals in the poorest
countries.
The global
politics would make it impossible for Ban to do
any differently even if he did not believe in
the development goals. The reason Ambassador
Bolton’s quixotic crusade to strip last
fall’s UN summit declaration of any mention of
the Millennium Development Goals and aid targets
ignominiously failed is because the Europeans
have swung firmly behind the cause, leaving the
Bush administration isolated.
There is,
however, another dimension to Ban’s candidacy
about which Washington conservatives may be more
hopeful. While he is an astute practitioner of
the diplomatic arts of negotiation, compromise,
and impartiality—a “harmonizer,” in his
own words—Ban is not an accomplished public
speaker.
He succeeds
a secretary-general whose most extraordinary
accomplishment has been to marshal the support
of world publics for the moral vision of the UN
Charter.
In so doing,
Annan has raised the bar for public expectations
of the secretary-general. He has commanded media
attention to give voice to the shared
aspirations of much of world opinion—on human
rights, on the responsibility to protect
endangered populations, on nuclear disarmament,
on international justice.
Annan’s
fluency in English—today’s world language of
diplomacy—made his task easier. He could reach
American audiences, even with messages annoying
to officialdom in Washington. It will be hard
for Ban to fulfill this role of global
visionary—and for U.S. conservatives who have
seen Annan’s UN as an implicit counter-weight
to U.S. global dominance, that is just as well.
Perhaps Ban
will carve out a role more like that of Javier Pérez
de Cuéllar, the soft-spoken Peruvian who was
chosen secretary-general in 1981 after China
vetoed Kurt Waldheim’s bid for a third term
(which both Ronald Reagan and Leonid Brezhnev
supported). Oratorically challenged, the
unassuming Pérez de Cuéllar was virtually
invisible to world publics.
Yet he
quietly forged major new roles for the UN and
the secretary-general—convening the five
permanent members to press them to shut down the
Iran-Iraq war, launching a new peacekeeping era
of UN interim administration in Namibia, and
peace enforcement in Kuwait.
Perhaps
Ban’s biggest challenge will be to establish
himself early as a significant force to press
for a permanent peace settlement between
Israelis and Palestinians. That conflict, more
than any other, is the source of constant
challenges from all sides to the legitimacy and
credibility of the UN and international law.
Ban’s first tests will be in that region,
picking up where Annan leaves off. If his
talents as a harmonizer can bear fruit there,
his reputation will be assured.
JeffreyLaurenti@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
|
|
|