UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com/ -
17 May 2006 -
"The
most impossible job
on earth" was how
Trygve Lie, United Nations' first secretary-general,
described his post to successor, Dag Hammarskjold, in
the year 1953.
Time
has not made the job any
easier.
The
framers of the UN Charter gave the
secretary general two distinct
functions: He or she is the
"chief administrative officer
of the Organization" and also
an independent official whom the
General Assembly and Security
Council can entrust with certain
unspecified (but implicitly political)
tasks.
Each
holder of the office must
demonstrate whether he or she is
more "secretary" than
"general."
Paradoxes
abound.
The
secretary general is expected to
enjoy the backing of governments,
especially the five permanent
members of the Security Council, but
also be above partiality to any of
them.
He
establishes his credentials by
bureaucratic or diplomatic service,
but, once elected, must transcend
his past and serve as a voice of the
world, even a "secular
Pope."
The
secretary general is entrusted with
assisting member states to make
sound and well-informed decisions,
which he is then obliged to execute,
but he is also authorized to
influence their work and even to
propose actions that they should
undertake.
He
administers a complex organization
and serves as head of the UN
agencies, but must exercise
this role within budgetary and
regulatory constraints imposed by
the member governments.
True,
the secretary general has an
unparalleled agenda-shaping
authority.
But
he does not have the power to
execute all his ideas, and he
articulates a vision that only
governments can fulfill. He moves
the world, but he cannot direct
it.
It
was Hammarskjold who, at the height
of the Cold War, first argued that
an impartial civil servant could be
"politically celibate"
without being "politically
virgin."
The
secretary general could play a
political role without losing his
impartiality, provided he hewed
faithfully to the Charter and to
international law.
With
the Cold War's end, Kofi Annan has
gone further than his predecessors
in using the "bully
pulpit" of his office.
He
has boldly raised the question of
the morality of intervention and the
duty of the individual to follow his
conscience, and he has challenged
member states to resolve the
tensions between state sovereignty
and their responsibility to protect
ordinary people.
Often,
a secretary general can raise an
awkward question but not dictate the
appropriate answer; Annan's historic
speech on intervention made before
the General Assembly in 1999 set a
thousand flowers blooming at think
tanks and among op-ed columnists,
but it has not led to a single
military intervention to protect the
oppressed.
The
UN is often seen embodying
international legitimacy, yet the
secretary general's pronouncements
often have less impact on the
conduct of member states than the
Pope's strictures on birth control.
The
secretary general knows that he can
accomplish little without the
support of members whose inaction on
one issue or another he might
otherwise want to denounce.
He
cannot afford to allow frustration
on any one issue to affect his
ability to elicit cooperation from
governments on a range of
others.
Annan
once made the point by citing an old
Ghanaian proverb: "Never hit a
man on the head when you have your
fingers between his teeth."
Today's
single-superpower world also means
that the secretary general must
manage a relationship
that is vital to the UN's survival
without mortgaging his own integrity
and independence.
The
insistent demands of some in the
United States that the UN prove its
utility to America - demands that
could not have been made in the same
terms during the Cold War - oblige a
secretary general to walk a
tightrope between heeding American
priorities and the preferences of
the membership as a whole.
Paradoxically,
he can be most useful to the
U.S.
when he demonstrates his
independence from it.
Member
states' increasing micro-management
of budgets
has also weakened the secretary
general's authority.
Both
Annan and his predecessor, Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, embarked on ambitious
administrative reforms, but were
unable to address the far greater
levels of procedural and regulatory
inertia in areas under the authority
of the member states.
No
secretary general has enjoyed real
independence from governments: The
UN operates without embassies or
intelligence services, and member
states resist any attempt to acquire
such capabilities.
A
secretary general's reach thus
cannot exceed his grasp, and his
grasp cannot extend across the
member states' frontiers - or their
pocketbooks.
Indeed,
today the secretary general commands
great diplomatic legitimacy, and
even greater media visibility, but
less political power than the
language of the UN Charter
suggests.
To
be effective, he must be skilled at
managing staff and budgets, gifted
at public diplomacy (and its
behind-the-scenes variant), and able
to engage the loyalties of a wide
array of external actors,
including non-governmental
organizations, business groups, and
journalists.
He
also must convince the nations of
the poor and conflict-ridden South
that their interests are uppermost
in his mind while ensuring that he
can work effectively with the
wealthy and powerful North.
He
must recognize the power and the
prerogatives of the Security
Council, especially its five
permanent members, while staying
attentive to the priorities and
passions of the General
Assembly.
And
he must present member states with
politically achievable proposals and
implement his mandates within the
means they provide him.
Above
all, the secretary general needs a
vision of the higher purpose of his
office and an awareness of its
potential and limitations.
In
other words, to be successful, he
must conceive and project a vision
of the UN as it should be, while
administering and defending the
organization as it is.
Truly
an impossible job.
ShashiTharoor@MaximsNews.com