UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews
Network
/ - 9
September 2006 --
There are two contrasting job descriptions of the post of Secretary-General (SG)
of the United Nations which falls vacant at the end of this year.
One
is by the first incumbent of this position, Trygve Lie of Norway, who famously
called it "the most impossible job in the world".
The
other is by the first, and so far only, Asian SG - U Thant of
Myanmar
(formerly Burma) - who wrote, "The Secretary-Generalship is not the most
impossible job in the world, although it is certainly one of the most
difficult. It is without any question one of the most rewarding."
It
would be all too facile and fallacious to draw conclusions from this contrast.
It is not a question of hardheaded Western pragmatism versus philosophical
Eastern equanimity. Both men worked at the UN during the Cold War era.
Trygve
Lie was forced to resign because of Soviet antagonism while U Thant declined
unanimous offers of a third term. Was it because U Thant was content to be
more Secretary than General or was he a more consummate diplomat harmonizing
the competing interests of the two super-powers of the time?
Today,
times have changed. The Cold war is over. Yet we do have the countervailing
imperatives of a unipolar world on the one hand, with one super power
possessing an accumulation of military, political, economic and 'soft' power
on a global scale that is unprecedented in human history.
On
the other hand, we have a globalized world of rising expectations in a highly
integrated political and economic world order where multilateralism is an
indispensable foreign policy option for the mighty and the meek and for the
rich and the poor.
At
the apex of this multilateral system is the 61 year old United Nations
politically paralyzed when the Permanent Five of the Security Council (P5)
disagree - as in the case of Iraq in 2003 - but remarkably effective when they
do agree.
Based
on universally shared values the UN has set and monitored the implementation
of norms in a wide range of fields from human rights to international trade.
It has been at the forefront in peacekeeping, humanitarian assistance,
development policy and many other areas affecting the daily lives of people.
So
how important is the choice of the next SG of this world body that everybody
wants to reform? Some loudly lament the absence of a formal job description.
Do we make the incumbent more effective by spelling out his complex duties?
How many incompetent Presidents or unpopular Prime Ministers would have
performed better if their written or unwritten constitutions had fleshed out
their functions?
Do
the times determine the job or does the jobholder influence the manner in
which the duties are discharged? What qualifications and experience are we
looking for or is it, as one veteran UN observer has recently written, mainly
a matter of "character and potential"?
And
if so how do you judge that? By common consent no one has enlarged the scope
and stature of the job as much as Dag Hammarskjold (1953-61) did. Was his
exemplary character pre-judged? Succeeding him, U Thant (1961-71) brought the
UN into calmer waters despite the Vietnam War focussing on what the UN can do
rather on what it could not. Was it foreseen that he would be the SG that he
turned out to be?
Then
there is the procedure for the election on which many views have been
expressed. Should it be more transparent and should not the General Assembly
have more control? Should the candidates present manicured manifestos and
engage in a U.S.
Presidential campaign style extravaganza or should they be shrinking violets
waiting coyly in the wings till the call comes?
All
pertinent questions. Today, those disillusioned by the sullied reputation of
the UN seek a Superman as the next SG. The media speculates wildly about past
Presidents and current Prime Ministers forgetting that those elected on
national mandates are more likely to be Generals than Secretaries.
The
UN system has already had many such square pegs in round holes. Perhaps what
the UN needs today is what it has always needed - a SG who is a tried and
tested diplomat with versatility and gravitas derived from experience, a
flexible and modest temperament and the limitless patience of a consensus
builder. We need someone who will be more of a steady moral compass than a
flamboyant political weathercock.
History
has proved that the Charter's Article 100 requirement for impartiality is more
achievable with the citizens of smaller countries with the least amount of
accompanied national baggage of territorial and other disputes in their
international relations. We need a strong manager who will delegate and yet be
finally the person where the buck stops. And yes - even if it is an oxymoron -
we need a practical idealist.
The
limitations of the job are well known. 192 sovereign states are unlikely to
yield more power or latitude to the office of the SG. Nor will the Security
Council be pursuaded to act speedily however often and urgently the SG draws
their attention to situations threatening international peace and security
under Article 99.
Resources
will remain unpredictable and limited. Smooth relations with the host country
and largest contributor to the Budget are a sine qua non. The SG will remain
the lightning conductor when things go wrong whether it is because of what the
Security Council, General Assembly or some other part of the complex UN system
did or did not do.
The
choice will be made in a few weeks. Already some transparency in the process
is evident as candidates are scrutinized by civil society and the media. And
yet doubts remain about the process.
Will
new candidates enter the race dodging critical appraisal? Will the choice be
made on the basis of realpolitik among the P 5? Will bilateral relations and
the propensity for building strategic partnerships, enhanced economic
investment, aid and trade between the voter country and the voted individual's
state be the criteria?
Or
will it be confined to the record of achievements and proven abilities of the
candidates? Only time will tell.
Amb.Dhanapala@MaximsNews.com
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