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KOFI THE CONTEMPTIBLE
When it comes to people who lack the moral standing to lecture America on the war in Iraq or anything U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan surely heads the list. But does that stop him from offering his self-serving observations? Of course not.
In a direct slap to President Bush, Annan last week declared that "I cannot say the world is safer today . . . when you see what is going on in Iraq." In an interview on British TV, he also cited "the violence around us" and "the terrorist attacks around the world."
OK. We think he's wrong, but maybe it's a judgment call. So how sound is Annan's judgment? Well, he also pronounced it "inconceivable" that Saddam Hussein's multimillion-dollar payoffs under the U.N.'s hopelessly corrupt Oil-for-Food program could have eased international sanctions against Iraq. "I don't think the Russian or the French or the Chinese government[s] would allow [themselves] to be bought," he said. After all, "these are very serious and important governments. You are not dealing with banana republics."
"I dun' think that word means what you think it means!" | Who is he kidding? Frankly, if there were any justice in the world, Annan's son would be under indictment right now: Kojo Annan served as a "consultant" to a Swiss-based firm that was given a $5 million contract to inspect shipments of aid to Iraq. As for the secretary-general himself, if the United Nations was run with even a modicum of integrity, he'd be out on his ear for having supervised what is shaping up to be the most massive case of international corruption in recent memory. (Here's chutzpah for you: Annan's now complaining that all the news reports about the Oil-for-Food scandal have hurt the United Nations. Not the scandal itself, mind you just the reporting.)
Before he vouches too publicly for the honesty of his member states, Annan should give a close read to the recently released Duelfer report and the devastating picture it presents of the hopelessly shady operation under which Saddam was moving heaven and earth to get those sanctions lifted. Indeed, says the report, the Butcher of Baghdad was on the verge of success: Sanctions were "in a shambles" and on the verge of being lifted entirely, whereupon Saddam planned to resume his previously abandoned WMD-development programs. That scheme with the connivance of such "serious and important governments" would have been realized, had not President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair taken action. Today, Saddam sits in a prison cell and not on a Baghdad throne. And the world is yes a safer place. No thanks to Kofi Annan.
Posted by: Mark Espinola 2004-10-25 |
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=46896 |
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