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The
UN / THE US & REFORM
 
Would the UN be better off without a rogue superpower
in
its midst?
Ian Williams thinks not.
The
UN is like the speck of sand in the oyster, the irritant seed of a growing
pearl. One of the reasons it irritates the American Right so much is
that simply by existing it acts as a catalyst. The threat is not what
it does,
but what it stands for.
Apart from
the isolationists, the general American attitude to the UN is ambivalent – wanting
to be loved by the rest of the world but still reserving the right
to take unilateral action when deemed
necessary. So,
during the presidential election debates, Bush claimed that the invasion
of Iraq was in support of the UN, even as he was dismissive of it.
Kerry sent equally ambivalent messages.
Inside
the UN, during protracted negotiations over issues such as the Law
of the Sea, the Kyoto Protocol or the International Criminal Court,
the
rest of the world made every effort to meet any rational American
objection – and
to cope with many irrational ones. US negotiators often ended up playing
a good-cop/bad-cop routine, exacting concessions ostensibly intended to
stem objections from the less rational people back in Washington. In far
too many cases, after they had done their best to eviscerate a proposal,
the US then backed off or ‘unsigned’ treaties.
US Secretary
of State Colin Powell followed a similar pattern in the run-up to the
invasion of Iraq, persuading everyone to work with
him
so he had
something with which to counter the know-nothings in the Pentagon
and the White House. The rest of the world went as far as it could – and
arguably farther than it should – to accommodate him. It did not
work.
No takers
From one point of view, the failure to stop the invasion of Iraq was
a major defeat for the UN. In the face of ferocious American diplomatic
pressure, not one state – not even those who blustered at length
in an open meeting of the Security Council – had the temerity
to move a resolution condemning the invasion. Kofi Annan at least went
on the record – one year after the fact – saying that it
was ‘not in conformity with the UN Charter’ and ‘illegal’.
But when the President of the General Assembly, Jan Kavan, went to
the Non Aligned countries and told them he would convene an emergency
meeting if they asked for it, he found no takers.
A more
realistic view is that the refusal by a majority of members of the
Security Council to support the attack was in its own way an important
victory. Most UN member states sat down and refused to do what the
bullying
hyperpower told them to do. Indeed, while people may grumble that the
US got away unpunished, the Grimm fairy tales remind us that getting
what you wish is often punishment enough. Over 1,200 dead Americans,
$200 billion spent and no end in sight for a bloody entanglement; all
this vindicates the warnings from home and abroad that the US Administration
ignored.
Reality
also bit back at the millennarians in and around the Administration
in other ways. Just after the invasion, Richard Perle crowed: ‘The
UN is dead. Thank God!’ Within weeks the White House discovered
no-one would buy Iraqi oil that did not have a clear ownership title
from the Security Council. Even before then, the Bush Administration
found that countries would not come forward to help in Iraq because
of the absence of a UN resolution.
Has the
US learned its lesson – or is it a recidivist scofflaw?
In the stage version of Peter Pan children are exhorted to declare their
belief in fairies in order to revive the dying Tinkerbell. We could almost
say that the rest of the world’s collective belief in international
law revived the moribund willingness of the evil Captain Hook to
abide by it. Without admitting that it had broken the rules, the
US at least
signalled its acceptance that the rules exist.
This may
not be a just response. But reality is constraining the US, too – it will not rush to repeat the error. A year ago there was
a real chance that the ‘neo-conservatives’ in the Pentagon
would bring about an invasion of Syria at least, and possibly of Iran,
with North Korea another target. In June 2004 the Administration that
had marched into Iraq waving the Stars and Stripes was essentially trying
to negotiate a withdrawal under the shade of the UN’s blue flag.
Feather in the cap
Many at the UN would now prefer to forget about Iraq and carry on as
if it had not happened. But the experience has intensified debate about
reform. Superficially, there is an attraction in trying to cobble together
an alliance of Russia, China, Europe and Japan to oppose the grosser
manifestations of American arrogance. While it may be true that the
US is the biggest rogue state, it is far from being the only one. Moscow
and Beijing opposed intervention in Iraq – but they are also
opposing intervention in Sudan, just as they did in the Balkans, and
would have done in Rwanda if anyone had bothered to intervene there
in the first place. Such an alliance would vindicate the American Right
that always said the UN was an anti-American plot anyway.
In
the long run, wider representation would indeed enhance the
moral standing of the Council. Yet if the US veto is a major
problem, adding
five more vetoes is hardly an answer. Similarly, it has to be doubted
that increasing its size by ten members – five permanent, five
temporary – would enhance its effectiveness. The Economic and Social
Council has trebled in size since it was set up – its impact
has been in inverse proportion to its increasing size.
There
are no quick fixes. Insofar as the UN is a reflection of
the realities of world power, the key to reform is to change
those realities.
This
demands much more than mechanistic redrafting of the Charter or bean-counting
on the Security Council. The road to UN reform actually begins in
the political institutions of the US. An apocryphal dictionary
definition
of ‘War’ is ‘God’s way of teaching Americans
geography’. The Iraqi débâcle has certainly put foreign
policy on the agenda in the US – and, more particularly, the
failures of unilateralism.
However,
while we are waiting, there are some interim responses available.
Many of them begin in the General Assembly, which has let itself
be overshadowed by the Security Council. In recent years Council
members
elected from
the Assembly – such as Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Jamaica and Ireland – have
played a principled and effective role in ensuring that the Permanent
Five do not always get their own way. Electing more members like that
would go a long way towards reforming the Council. At present the members
are chosen on complicated rotations that, for example, put Rwanda on
the Council during the genocide, Morocco while occupying Western Sahara,
Indonesia after its annexation of East Timor.
Solution
The General Assembly could insist that prospective members of the Security
Council must prove that they deserve their seats. No candidacy for
the Council – whether for permanent seats in the future, or for
elected seats currently – should be considered unless the country
has a genuine, stable democracy that guarantees civil and political
liberties for its citizens and has a record of adherence to UN decisions
and international law.
It
is true that while Council members can block initiatives by
permanent members, they cannot overrule the veto. But even
here there is a solution
in the General Assembly. As soon as the Palestinian Authority rediscovered
the US invention of referring issues vetoed in the Security Council
to a Special Session of the General Assembly, the US expediently
declared
the procedure no longer valid. That view should be loudly and publicly
challenged by other members. It behoves them to remember that – whether
in Darfur, Rwanda, Kosovo or Bosnia – this procedure offers a
way to break the deadlock in the Security Council that otherwise allows
genocide
to continue untrammelled.
Americans
often claim that the US was the first country based not on
territory, ethnicity or language, but on an idea. The UN is
actually
most useful as an embodiment of the idea that global co-operation
is essential for solving our common problems. More than fixing
committees
we have to fix that big idea so that it becomes self-evident and,
where it is not self-evident, reluctant rogue states – of whatever size – are
persuaded of its force.
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Ian
Williams writes about the UN for The
Nation and is the
author of The UN For Beginners, Writers and Readers, New
York, 1995.
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Usha
John - teacher,
Faridabad, India
Usha
is optimistic about the UN. But that is mostly
because of the humanitarian work done by agencies
like UNICEF and UNESCO – in a country with
masses of impoverished, illiterate people.
Usha
feels that India made an historic blunder by not
getting itself a seat on the Security Council
when it was possible. ‘Look at them [Indian
leaders] talking so excitedly now about an expanded
Security Council when we all know it is not going
to come about so easily...
‘As
a teacher I know that but for UNICEF initiatives
in building awareness and interventions on such
burning issues as widespread childhood malnutrition,
discriminatory
practices against the girl child and vaccinations,
nothing would ever have
been done...
‘I
was particularly moved by the UNICEF reports on
the plight of infants and children in Iraq
between the two Gulf wars, at a time when that
country was
placed under crippling UN sanctions... We now
have problems teaching children in our schools
about what
the UN is all about – and surely the
UN has strayed a long way away from what is
written in the
civics textbooks.’
Interview
and photo by Ranjit Devraj
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