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Act of Creation by
Stephen Schlesinger
The
Founding of the United Nations: A Story of Superpowers, Secret
Agents, Wartime Allies and Enemies, and Their Quest for a
Peaceful World See
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Here.
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STEPHEN
SCHLESINGER is a MaximsNews Columnist and Senior Editor.
Bio.
STEPHEN
SCHLESINGER: THE PERILS OF U.N. REFORM (MaximsNews.com,
U.N.)
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UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com@
U.N./
- 05
October 2005 - All
the talk at the United Nations for the past year has been about reform at
September's World Summit.
The
campaign was ardently pushed by Secretary General Kofi Annan after the UN was
ignored by the United States in its 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Annan's
ambitious reform agenda, designed to make the UN more indispensable, centered
on the Security Council's role, genocide, nuclear threats, terrorism,
pre-emptive war, human rights abuses, economic needs and UN management
problems.
Unfortunately,
Annan's crusade came to a jolting halt at the recent gathering in New York.
The
unexpressed hope had been that the leading liberal democracies of the world,
drawing on Annan's proposals, would exchange their help in alleviating Third
World poverty for the developing world's acceptance of the security, human
rights and UN management changes they wanted.
This
would mean passing some or all of the following reforms: authorizing more
direct UN intervention to stop genocide, nuclear proliferation and terrorism;
restructuring the UN's lame Human Rights Commission; reorganizing the UN's
faulty internal management system; and expanding aid abroad.
But
all these ran up against barriers of one sort or another.
First,
the UN got waylaid by a fracas over the issue of expanding the Security
Council.
For
most of the past six months, the controversy converged on a subject peripheral
to the North-South deal but far more glamorous to the media.
One
group of nations--Japan, Germany, India and Brazil--made a joint effort to get
onto the Council.
However,
the African Union rejected the initiative, and China, one of the Council's
five veto-bearing countries, also objected to the quartet, especially to
Japan.
The
United States, another permanent member, had reservations about Germany.
If
Japan and Germany couldn't make it, it seemed unlikely that any other states
could gain permanent membership. And even if any did, would they also get the
veto? And would expansion impede the effectiveness of the Council?
Because
of these nagging questions, Annan eventually decided to put off the issue
until December. It is now unlikely that Security Council reform will happen at
all.
In the
meantime, UN diplomats were patiently stitching together a forty-page reform
package. As they made progress, though, George W. Bush suddenly appointed UN
antagonist John Bolton as UN ambassador in August.
The
notoriously combative Bolton, despite being a late entrant into the fray,
demanded more than 700 changes to the document, including elimination of all
mention of the Millennium Development Goals the United States backed in 2000
to eradicate global poverty--the very reason for this summit--as well as all
references to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the International Criminal
Court, global warming and enhancement of the General Assembly's powers.
Bolton's
deletions, reflecting the Bush Administration's continuing hostility to
multilateralism, reopened the debate over reforms.
The
smaller nations, resentful of Bolton's intrusion, now jumped in with their own
alterations. The unhappiness of those countries was especially acute over
security, human rights and management proposals.
The
call for the UN to intervene in cases where a government may be committing
massive human rights violations against its own people--the
"responsibility to protect" provision--upset many weaker countries,
who feared it might give the UN the right to meddle in their domestic affairs.
Some
smaller states were also troubled by a recommendation to replace the oversized
and flawed Human Rights Commission with a reduced Human Rights Council.
Systemic
violators treasured the old setup, and poorer states were irritated by the
fact that there would be fewer spots for them on the new council.
There
was also concern about a proposal to give the Secretary General more power
over UN management, taking such authority away from the General Assembly. This
could amplify the influence of big donors and diminish that of impoverished
states.
And
some Arab nations opposed a redefinition of terrorism that would outlaw
targeting civilians to intimidate governments, believing it would hamper
legitimate Palestinian self-defense.
In the
end, some reforms did survive--enough to give the patina of transfiguration
without its substance.
Limited
new powers were given to Annan to make personnel changes; the definition of
terrorism was partially expanded; some form of UN intervention, with
"ifs" attached, was permitted against genocide; a Peacebuilding
Commission and a Democracy Fund, two noncontroversial favorites of the Bush
Administration, were adopted; and rich Western lands now went on record
promising to aspire, on a voluntary basis, to give 0.7 percent of their annual
GNP to poorer nations.
But
most ideas were watered down, as in the Human Rights Council, or dropped
entirely, including several nonproliferation ventures.
The
most interesting sideline at the UN was Bolton's role. After his dramatic
appearance on the scene, bestriding the organization like a giant mustachioed
tormentor, in the end Bolton compromised.
The
ordeal of negotiations temporarily defanged him. He was not able to issue
threats or fire anybody or walk out.
And
the fact that he agreed to the modest deal thwarted the ambitions of his
right-wing constituency in Washington; his settlement undermined arguments for
legislation put forward by the reactionaries in Congress, primarily
Representative Henry Hyde, that would have cut US dues in half if the UN did
not pass thirty-two specific reforms by 2007.
What
was overlooked during this struggle is that the UN Charter has actually
changed a lot over the years without formal votes. This is most evident at the
Security Council, which has primary responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security.
Under
that rubric the Council has adopted all sorts of measures that were never
mentioned in the original charter: peacekeeping, peace enforcement,
cease-fires, election monitoring, constitution writing, nation-building,
preventive diplomacy, arms inspections, military training and so on.
Nonetheless,
there will now be a second stage for formal reform. Many UN members hope that
an infusion of political energy generated in recent months will carry into the
new General Assembly session.
Some
of the crucial alterations that remain include: fleshing out a Human Rights
Council with specifics on how many members there will be and how they are
chosen; enacting various nuclear nonproliferation measures; making obligatory
the largesse of richer nations to poorer ones; upgrading Annan's hiring and
firing authority; widening the definition of terrorism; and reconfiguring the
Security Council.
Pro-UN
activists must be prepared to argue that virtual nonsuccess at the September
summit does not make for a crippled or defunct body. After all, the UN now
maintains sixteen peacekeeping missions; it has led the efforts to recover
from the Asian tsunami; it has overseen elections in Iraq; and it is hunting
down the assassins of a Lebanese leader who opposed Syria.
It
also handles transnational issues like environmental degradation, sexual
trafficking, drug smuggling, nuclear proliferation and AIDS. It continues to
serve as a round-the-clock diplomatic forum to stave off conflicts.
But
even if all the reforms are enacted, this would not make the UN act
differently on catastrophes like Darfur. In such crises the organization's
effectiveness is dependent on the political will of the member states to
mobilize, equip and fund it.
For
those attempting to improve the UN, the key word should now be caution.
In the
past, UN reform has always been incremental. At a minimum, Americans should
feel some satisfaction that after sixty years there still exists a collective
security body that on so many occasions has fulfilled the mission of its
founders to eliminate conflict.
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
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