UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com/ -
8 June 2006 - Thank
you for allowing me to speak to you
today on Power and Global
Leadership. I often get asked
to talk about leadership, but rarely
about power. I wonder why.
With
that thought as my starting point, I
am going to give what might be
regarded as a rather un-UN speech.
Some of the themes -- that the
United Nations is misunderstood and
does much more than its critics
allow -- are probably not
surprising. But my underlying
message, which is a warning about
the serious consequences of a
decades-long tendency by US
Administrations of both parties to
engage only fitfully with the UN, is
not one a sitting United Nations
official would normally make to an
audience like this.
But
I feel it is a message that urgently
needs to be aired. And as
someone who has spent most of his
adult life in this country, only a
part of it at the UN, I hope you
will take it in the spirit in which
it is meant: as a sincere and
constructive critique of US policy
towards the UN by a friend and
admirer. Because the fact is
that the prevailing practice of
seeking to use the UN almost by
stealth as a diplomatic tool while
failing to stand up for it against
its domestic critics is simply not
sustainable. You will lose the
UN one way or another.
Founders’
Vision
Multilateral
compromise has always been difficult
to justify in the American political
debate: too many speeches, too
many constraints, too few results.
Yet it was not meant to be so.
The
all-moral-idealism-no-power
institution was the League of
Nations. The UN was explicitly
designed through US leadership and
the ultimate coalition of the
willing, its World War II allies, as
a very different creature, an
antidote to the League’s failure.
At the UN’s core was to be an
enforceable concept of collective
security protected by the victors of
that war, combined with much more
practical efforts to promote global
values such as human rights and
democracy.
Underpinning
this new approach was a judgement
that no President since Truman has
felt able to repeat: that for
the world’s one super-Power --
arguably more super in 1946 than
2006 -- managing global security and
development issues through the
network of a United Nations was
worth the effort. Yes it meant
the give and take of multilateral
bargaining, but any dilution of
American positions was more than
made up for by the added clout of
action that enjoyed global support.
Today,
we are coming to the end of the
10-year term of arguably the UN’s
best-ever Secretary-General, Kofi
Annan. But some of his very
successes -- promoting human rights
and a responsibility to protect
people from abuse by their own
Governments; creating a new status
for civil society and business at
the UN -- are either not recognized
or have come under steady attacks
from anti-UN groups.
To
take just one example, 10 years ago
UN peacekeeping seemed almost
moribund in the aftermath of tragic
mistakes in Rwanda, Somalia and
Yugoslavia. Today, the UN
fields 18 peacekeeping operations
around the world, from the Congo to
Haiti, Sudan to Sierra Leone,
Southern Lebanon to Liberia, with an
annual cost that is at a bargain bin
price compared to other US-led
operations. And the US pays
roughly one quarter of those UN
peacekeeping costs -- just over $1
billion this year.
That
figure should be seen in the context
of estimates by both the GAO and
RAND Corporation that UN
peacekeeping, while lacking heavy
armament enforcement capacity, helps
to maintain peace -- when there is a
peace to keep -- more effectively
for a lot less than comparable US
operations. Multilateral
peacekeeping is effective
cost-sharing on a much lower cost
business model and it works.
That
is as it should be and is true for
many other areas the UN system works
in, too, from humanitarian relief to
health to education. Yet for
many policymakers and opinion
leaders in Washington, let alone the
general public, the roles I have
described are hardly believed or,
where they are, remain discreetly
underplayed. To acknowledge an
America reliant on international
institutions is not perceived to be
good politics at home.
However,
inevitably a moment of truth is
coming. Because even as the
world’s challenges are growing,
the UN’s ability to respond is
being weakened without US
leadership.
Take
the issue of human rights.
When
Eleanor Roosevelt took the podium at
the UN to argue passionately for the
elaboration of a Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the
world responded. Today, when
the human rights machinery was
renewed with the formation of a
Human Rights Council to replace the
discredited Commission on Human
Rights, and the US chose to stay on
the sidelines, the loss was
everybody’s.
I
hope and believe the new Council
will prove itself to be a stronger
and more effective body than its
predecessor. But there is no
question that the US decision to
call for a vote in order to oppose
it in the General Assembly, and then
to not run for a seat after it was
approved by 170 votes to 4, makes
the challenge more difficult.
More
broadly, Americans complain about
the UN’s bureaucracy, weak
decision-making, the lack of
accountable modern management
structures and the political
divisions of the General Assembly
here in New York. And my
response is, “guilty on all
counts”. But
why?
In
significant part because the US has
not stuck with its project -- its
professed wish to have a strong,
effective United Nations -- in a
systematic way. Secretary
Albright and others here today have
played extraordinary leadership
roles in US-UN relations, for which
I salute them. But in the eyes
of the rest of the world, US
commitment tends to ebb much more
than it flows. And in recent
years, the enormously divisive issue
of Iraq and the big stick of
financial withholding have come to
define an unhappy marriage.
As
someone who deals with Washington
almost daily, I know this is unfair
to the very real effort all three
Secretaries of State I have worked
with –- Secretary Albright,
Secretary Powell and Secretary Rice
-– put into UN issues. And
today, on a very wide number of
areas, from Lebanon and Afghanistan
to Syria, Iran and the Palestinian
issue, the US is constructively
engaged with the UN. But that
is not well known or understood, in
part because much of the public
discourse that reaches the US
heartland has been largely abandoned
to its loudest detractors such as
Rush Limbaugh and Fox News. That
is what I mean by “stealth”
diplomacy: the UN’s role is
in effect a secret in Middle America
even as it is highlighted in the
Middle East and other parts of the
world.
Exacerbating
matters is the widely held
perception, even among many US
allies, that the US tends to hold on
to maximalist positions when it
could be finding middle ground.
We
can see this even on apparently
non-controversial issues such as
renovating the dilapidated UN
Headquarters in New York.
While an architectural landmark, the
building falls dangerously short of
city codes, lacks sprinklers, is
filled with asbestos and is in most
respects the most hazardous
workplace in town. But the
only Government not fully supporting
the project is the US. Too
much unchecked UN-bashing and
stereotyping over too many years --
manifest in a fear by politicians to
be seen to be supporting better
premises for overpaid, corrupt UN
bureaucrats -- makes even
refurbishing a building a political
hot potato.
Making
Reform Work
One
consequence is that, like the
building itself, the vital renewal
of the Organization, the updating of
its mission, its governance and its
management tools, is addressed only
intermittently. And when the
US does champion the right issues
like management reform, as it is
currently doing, it provokes more
suspicion than support.
Last
December, for example, largely at US
insistence, instead of a normal
two-year budget, Member States
approved only six months’ worth of
expenditure -- a period which ends
on June 30. Developing and
developed countries, the latter with
the US at the fore, are now at
loggerheads over whether sufficient
reform has taken place to lift that
cap, or indeed whether there should
be any links between reform and the
budget. Without agreement, we
could face a fiscal crisis very
soon.
There
has been a significant amount of
reform over the last 18 months, from
the creation of a new Ethics Office
and whistle-blower policy, to the
establishment of a new Peacebuilding
Commission and Human Rights Council.
But not enough.
The
unfinished management reform agenda,
which the US sensibly supports, is
in many ways a statement of the
obvious. It argues that
systems and processes designed 60
years ago for an organization
largely devoted to running
conferences and writing reports
simply don’t work for today’s
operational UN, which conducts
multibillion-dollar peacekeeping
missions, humanitarian relief
operations and other complex
operations all over the world.
The report sets out concrete
proposals for how this can be fixed
while also seeking to address the
broader management, oversight and
accountability weaknesses
highlighted by the
“oil-for-food” programme.
One
day soon we must address the massive
gap between the scale of world
issues and the limits of the
institutions we have built to
address them. However, today
even relatively modest proposals
that in any other organization would
be seen as uncontroversial, such as
providing more authority and
flexibility for the
Secretary-General to shift posts and
resources to organizational
priorities without having to get
direct approval from Member States,
have been fiercely resisted by the
G-77, the main group of developing
countries, on the grounds that this
weakens accountability. Hence
the current deadlock.
What
lies behind this?
It
is not because most developing
countries don’t want reform.
To be sure, a few spoilers do seem
to be opposed to reform for its own
sake, and there is no question that
some countries are seeking to
manipulate the process for their own
ends with very damaging
consequences. But in practice,
the vast majority is fully
supportive of the principle of a
better run, more effective UN;
indeed they know they would be the
primary beneficiaries, through more
peace, and more development.
So
why has it not so far been possible
to isolate the radicals and build a
strong alliance of reform-minded
nations to push through this agenda?
I
would argue that the answer lies in
questions about motives and power.
Motives,
in that, very unfortunately, there
is currently a perception among many
otherwise quite moderate countries
that anything the US supports must
have a secret agenda aimed at either
subordinating multilateral processes
to Washington’s ends or weakening
the institutions, and therefore, put
crudely, should be opposed without
any real discussion of whether they
make sense or not.
And
power, that in two different ways
revolves around perceptions of the
role and representativeness of the
Security Council.
First,
in that there has been a real,
understandable hostility by the
wider membership to the perception
that the Security Council, in
particular the five permanent
members, is seeking a role in areas
not formally within its remit, such
as management issues or human
rights.
Second,
an equally understandable conviction
that those five, veto-wielding
permanent members who happen to be
the victors in a war fought 60 years
ago, cannot be seen as
representative of today’s world --
even when looking through the lens
of financial contributions.
Indeed, the so-called G-4 of
Security Council aspirants -- Japan,
India, Brazil and Germany --
contribute twice as much as the P-4,
the four permanent members excluding
the U.S.
Prime
Minister Tony Blair acknowledged
exactly this point on his trip to
Washington last month, and it is
something which does need to be
addressed. More broadly, the
very reasonable concerns of the full
UN membership that the fundamental
multilateral principle that each
Member State’s vote counts equally
in the wider work of the UN needs to
be acknowledged and accommodated
within a broader framework of
reform. If the multilateral
system is to work effectively, all
States need to feel they have a real
stake.
New
Global Challenges
But
a stake in what system?
The
US -- like every nation, strong and
weak alike -- is today beset by
problems that defy national,
inside-the-border solutions: climate
change, terrorism, nuclear
proliferation, migration, the
management of the global economy,
the internationalization of drugs
and crime, the spread of diseases
such as HIV and avian flu.
Today’s new national security
challenges basically thumb their
noses at old notions of national
sovereignty. Security has gone
global, and no country can afford to
neglect the global institutions
needed to manage it.
Kofi
Annan has proposed a restructuring
of the UN to respond to these new
challenges with three legs: development,
security and human rights supported,
like any good chair, by a fourth
leg, reformed management. That
is the UN we want to place our bet
on. But for it to work, we
need the US to support this agenda
-- and support it not just in a
whisper but in a coast to coast
shout that pushes back the critics
domestically and wins over the
sceptics internationally.
America’s leaders must again say
the UN matters.
When
you talk better national education
scores, you don’t start with “I
support the Department of
Education”. Similarly for
the UN it starts with politicians
who will assert the US is going to
engage with the world to tackle
climate change, poverty, immigration
and terrorism. Stand up for
that agenda consistently and allow
the UN to ride on its coat-tails as
a vital means of getting it done.
It also means a sustained
inside-the-tent diplomacy at the UN.
No more “take it or leave it”,
red-line demands thrown in without
debate and engagement.
Let
me close with a few words on Darfur
to make my point.
A
few weeks ago, my kids were on the
Mall in Washington, demanding
President Bush to do more to end the
genocide in Darfur and President
Bush wants to do more. I’d
bet some of your kids were there as
well. Perhaps you were, too.
And yet what can the US do alone in
the heart of Africa, in a region the
size of France? A place where
the Government in Khartoum is
convinced the US wants to extend the
hegemony it is thought to have
asserted in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In
essence, the US is stymied before it
even passes “Go”. It needs
the UN as a multilateral means to
address Sudan’s concerns. It
needs the UN to secure a wide
multicultural array of troop and
humanitarian partners. It
needs the UN to provide the
international legitimacy that Iraq
has again proved is an indispensable
component to success on the ground.
Yet, the UN needs its first
parent, the US, every bit as much if
it is to deploy credibly in one of
the world’s nastiest
neighbourhoods.
Back
in Franklin and Eleanor
Roosevelt’s day, building a
strong, effective UN that could play
this kind of role was a bipartisan
enterprise, with the likes of Arthur
Vandenberg and John Foster Dulles
joining Democrats to support the new
body. Who are their successors
in American politics? Who will
campaign in 2008 for a new
multilateral national security?