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UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com@
U.N./
- 09
June 2006 -- Mark Malloch Brown, the UN's Deputy Secretary-General,
spoke the truth in his speech Tuesday in New York City when he called on the
United States, for the first time in a long time, to take the United Nations on
as a public partner in its foreign policy.
His
address constitutes a rare instance when a top UN official has thrown diplomatic
politesse to one side to remind the world's only superpower that it depends
heavily on cooperation with the UN, whether it admits it or not -- so why not
begin treating the organization with the seriousness and respect it deserves,
especially if it wants the UN to survive.
One
can see how the frustration among UN officials has grown after reviewing the
curious on-again, off-again relationship the UN has had with the Bush
Administration in its almost six years in power.
When
George Bush first arrived at the White House, he and his key global aides
denounced most international treaties and scorned the UN as ineffective.
But
then Bush, in order to rally the world against the Ben Ladin terrorists, got the
backing of the UN for an assault on the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan
following the 9/11 attacks.
Just
as suddenly, in 2003, he derided the UN for not backing his invasion of Iraq.
Then,
in yet another abrupt shift of gears, after finding himself isolated in Iraq, he
asked for a UN resolution legitimizing America's occupation of Iraq, for UN
supervision of three elections, and for the UN's assistance in writing Iraq's
constitution.
In
2005, he turned around again and appointed a well-known extreme critic of the UN
as Washington's new envoy to the UN, John Bolton.
Bolton
promptly slowed down the reform movement, opposed the creation of the Human
Rights Council, thwarted US monies for a new UN building, and is currently
threatening to cut off US dues on June 30th if management reforms are not
enacted.
Yet
the US at the same time has asked the UN to handle the Asian tsunami relief
effort and the Pakistani earthquake recovery, help resolve the Darfur dispute,
oversee numerous 18 peacekeeping mission, negotiate the Iranian nuclear
situation, expel Syrian troops from Lebanon and pursue Washington's reform
agenda.
Admittedly
all American presidents have at times exhibited ambivalent feelings about the UN
in the past, despite the fact that both Republicans and Democrats together
invented the body at the 1945 San Francisco Conference.
President
Harry Truman warned Americans in his speech to the closing session of the
conference that "we all have to recognize that, no matter how great our
strength, that we must deny ourselves the license to do always as we
please."
The
tension he cited between the desire for complete freedom to act in international
affairs versus one's need for allies has never gone away in US life. Even a
sympathetic internationalist like Bill Clinton never took the time to barnstorm
the country on behalf of the UN.
But
most leaders in the White House soon have come to realize that the UN helps
advance, not diminish, US national security interests -- even, as noted earlier,
a unilateralist like George W. Bush.
But
working with the UN in secrecy and displaying irregular commitment to the body,
as the Bushites have done, represent the real problems.
Both
approaches only feed the suspicions of UN-haters -- especially those in Congress
-- who believe that the organization is a useless, corrupt, bloated organ that
fundamentally weakens America.
Mark
Malloch Brown is rightly pleading with the US to return to its first ideals as a
nation -- those very values that impelled the nation to propose a UN in the
first place and which convinced the American Senate to ratify the treaty 89-2 in
July 1945.
Ours
was a country then that, after all, even at the zenith of its planetary
authority, preferred to share the benefits of global stability with all nations
rather than to hoard all the power to itself.
It
was one of the finest hours of our nationhood.
Mr.
Brown is to be commended now for asking us to once again show pride in -- as
well as reassert our strong stewardship in -- the assembly that was "made
in America."
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
~~~~~
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