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The
UN / HISTORY
Early signs
In the 16th century the ‘known’ world came to be dominated
by violent, seagoing and increasingly nationalist European empires: Spain,
Portugal, France, Britain and the Netherlands in particular. They attempted
to carve up the planet into colonies that would replicate the rivalries
and fuel the wealth of European rulers. The idea of a supranational ‘plurality’ of
sovereign (European) nation-states that might prevent constant wars between
them was first set out at the Peace of Westphalia in 1648. It was developed
by a ‘Holy Alliance’ following the final demise of Napoleon’s
imperial ambitions in 1815.
First steps
The lethal results of industrialized weaponry led to the foundation
of the Red Cross at a conference of 16 countries in Geneva in
1863 – the
first Geneva Convention of 1864 sought to protect the sick and wounded
in time of war. As international trade and communications grew, commercial
interests led to the foundation of the International Telegraph Union
in 1865 and the Universal Postal Union in 1874 (both survive today as ‘specialized
agencies’ of the UN). In 1899 an International Peace Conference
was held in The Hague. It adopted a Convention for the Pacific Settlement
of International Disputes and established the Permanent Court of Arbitration,
which began work in 1902. War means peace
Nonetheless, in 1914 the Great War – ‘to end all wars’ – began
in Europe. Once the carnage was complete in 1918, the Treaty of Versailles
was imposed on Germany by the victors, including Britain, France and
the US. The Treaty brought the League of Nations into being on 10 January
1920 ‘to promote international co-operation and to achieve peace
and security’. Though US President Woodrow Wilson had been an architect
of the Treaty, Congress refused to ratify it, on the grounds that it
would intrude on its own power, and as a result the US did not join the
League. Defeated Germany was excluded and so was revolutionary Russia.
Britain and France, still with their colonies in tow, were the only ‘Great
Powers’ left.
Rogue states
In 1921 the League successfully brokered an accord – which is still
in force today – between Finland and Sweden on the disputed Åland
Islands. But in 1923 it failed to prevent France from invading the Ruhr
region of Germany in search of unpaid war reparations. Work had begun
on the vast Palais des Nations in Geneva (now occupied by the UN) in
1929 when the economic Great Depression struck worldwide. It was exacerbated
by ‘beggar-thy-neighbour’ national trading policies. A long-delayed
World Disarmament Conference failed almost as soon as it began in 1932.
The League again proved impotent when Japan invaded Chinese Manchuria
in 1931, and when Italy invaded Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935. In 1933
Hitler came to power in Germany and in 1938 invaded Czechoslovakia. The
League’s doctrine of ‘collective security’ between
sovereign nation-states translated into the appeasement of expansionist
fascism in Italy, Germany and Japan. No concerted attempt was made to
forestall the impending Nazi genocide of the Jews in Europe.
Peace means war
A Second World War began in Europe in 1939 when Germany went on to invade
Poland. As early as August 1941 – even before the US had joined
the war – US President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill
met on a warship ‘somewhere at sea’ to sign the Atlantic
Charter. It proposed a set of principles that became the basis for
all future discussions. On 1 January 1942, 26 nations – in fact,
the Allies – met in Washington DC to sign the ‘Declaration
by United Nations’. The first blueprint of the UN was prepared
at a conference organized by the US at the Dumbarton Oaks mansion in
Washington DC in 1944. It was attended by Britain, the Soviet Union
(which had lost upwards of 20 million people in the war) and China – the ‘four
horsemen’ who would later be joined by liberated France in declaring
themselves the Permanent Five members of the Security Council.
We, the rulers
Delegates of the 50 nations that had declared war on the fascist Axis
were invited to San Francisco on 25 April 1945. The UN logo incorporated
a map of the world reputedly designed to obscure Argentina, which had
not declared war on the Axis but was invited nonetheless. On 28 April
Mussolini was shot while attempting to flee Italy, and on 30 April
Hitler shot himself in Berlin. The UN Charter, substantially unchanged
from Dumbarton Oaks, was adopted on 25 June in the San Francisco Opera
House. On 6 August the US detonated one atomic bomb over Hiroshima
and on 9 August another over Nagasaki, Japan, bringing the war in the
Pacific to a devastating end. The UN was officially founded on 24 October,
when its Charter was ratified by the five permanent members of the
Security Council and the majority of other signatories. The document – which
began: ‘We the Peoples of the United Nations...’ – was
flown to Washington DC in a fireproof strongbox with its own parachute.
Control
The League of Nations finally expired at a requiem Assembly on 18 April
1946. Unlike the League, the UN would be controlled by the Permanent
Five of the Security Council. The Soviet Union conceded US pre-eminence – and
the location of UN headquarters in New York – in exchange for
Soviet dominance over Eastern Europe and veto rights for the Permanent
Five. However, after the revolutionary People’s Republic of China
was declared in 1949, the Republic of China (Taiwan today) continued
to occupy the ‘China’ seat until 1971 – so one of
the Permanent Five was effectively absent. Another, the Soviet Union,
was ‘diplomatically’ absent in 1950 when the Security Council
endorsed the invasion of Korea by US troops – at least two million
people died in the three-year ‘forgotten conflict’ that
followed.
Cold war
An undeclared Cold War had already broken out between the two post-war ‘superpowers’,
the US and the Soviet Union. It was to cripple the UN for the next 40
years, even though many UN members, mostly in the South, formed a ‘Non
Aligned’ group. The superpowers pursued the Cold War primarily
through a nuclear arms race and by proxy in a plethora of conflicts elsewhere
in the world. Only on rare occasions, such as the Berlin airlift in 1948
and the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, were they in any real danger of
direct military confrontation with each other.
Impotent assembly
Although every UN member had an equal vote at the General Assembly, it
was left powerless. It adopted its first resolution on 24 January 1946,
focussing on the elimination of weapons of mass destruction. But, unlike
the Security Council, its resolutions were not binding on all UN members
and had no legal force. It had limited membership and scope. Japan
did not join until 1956; the two halves of divided Germany until 1973.
Large parts of Africa and Asia (and thus of the world’s population)
were still colonies. The economic and financial institutions thought
necessary for post-war reconstruction, and to prevent a recurrence
of the Depression, were hived off to the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT). Here the US held an exclusive financial veto of its own – the
Soviet Union and China did not participate. These institutions became
economic weapons in the Cold War.
A third world
At the start of 1948 India became independent from Britain – and
at the end of the same year the General Assembly adopted the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. These two events helped to reshape the dynamics
of the UN. Decolonization became a priority. Newly independent countries
eventually formed a ‘third world’ majority at the General
Assembly. Hopes were high that a ‘new world economic order’ would
bring prosperity and respect to impoverished former colonies. In 1964
the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) was set up, largely
at the behest of these countries. UNICEF (children), UNESCO (education),
UNHCR (refugees) and the World Health Organization (WHO) became more
active – though they were reliant on voluntary contributions for
funds. Concerted action prompted by the UN began to prove effective,
such as in the fight against smallpox which the WHO eventually declared
eradicated in 1980.
What peace to keep?
The first UN ‘observer mission’ was established in Palestine
in June 1948. In 1956 the first UN peacekeeping force was formed following
a disastrous attempt by Britain, France and Israel to occupy the Suez
Canal. In 1961 UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld was killed
in an airplane crash while on a peacekeeping mission to the Congo. In
1964 a peacekeeping force was dispatched to Cyprus. Without troops of
its own, the UN was required to ‘keep’ rather than ‘make’ peace;
a distinction that proved difficult to draw on the ground. The superpowers
accelerated their nuclear arms race. A lucrative trade in conventional
weapons was promoted by the Permanent Five themselves. No sustained attempt
was made to act on Article 11 of the Charter, which gives the General
Assembly powers to consider ‘the principles governing disarmament
and the regulation of armaments’.
Lost decades
The emphasis shifted towards conferences and declarations. The first
UN Environment Conference was held in Stockholm in 1972; the first
conference on women in Mexico City in 1975. Some practical advances
were made, like the Treaty on the Protection of the Ozone Layer – the ‘Montreal
Protocol’ – in 1987 and the Comprehensive Nuclear Test
Ban Treaty in 1996. The UN became a skilful facilitator of elections,
as in Cambodia in 1993 and South Africa in 1994. But hopes for greater
parity between people and nations evaporated in a cloud of debt and
economic orthodoxy. The ‘peace dividend’ anticipated with
the end of the Cold War in 1989 was quickly spent by the US-led (and
UN-endorsed) war against Iraq in 1991, followed by savage UN sanctions.
Although the membership of the Security Council had been increased
from 11 to 15 in 1965, any further attempt at significant reform foundered
on the veto of the Permanent Five.
War without end
In 1995 world leaders gathered for the 50th anniversary of the UN under
the slogan: ‘We the peoples of the United Nations... United for
a Better World.’ The US had emerged as the world’s only ‘hyperpower’.
Cracks in the theoretical inviolability of national sovereignty were
opened up by moves to establish an International Criminal Court, partly
in response to genocidal conflicts within rather than between nation-states,
as in Rwanda and the Balkans.
After 9/11,
the US (and UN-endorsed) invasion of Afghanistan was followed by the
illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003. An apt slogan for the 60th anniversary
of the UN in October 2005 will be hard to find.
Sources: Ian Williams, The
UN for Beginners, Writers and Readers, New
York, 1995. Danilo Zolo, Cosmopolis, Polity Press, Cambridge, 1997. Stephen
Schlesinger, Act of Creation, Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado, 2003.
Thomas G Weiss et al, The United Nations and Changing
World Politics,
Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado, 2004. www.un.org
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