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International-UN-NGOs
It works well. Tweak it.
2005-11-07
Right-wing critics want to use reform as a club to beat the independence out of the world body.
Somebody has to.
By Stanley Meisler, Stanley Meisler, who covered the U.N. for the Los Angeles Times during the 1990s, is the author of "United Nations: The First Fifty Years." He is currently writing a biography of Kofi Annan.
Tom Clancy, call your office!
AMERICAN POLITICIANS have urged U.N. reform for decades. Lately, the cries have become so loud and incessant that it is hard to imagine what will satisfy the critics. Abolish the veto for all nations save the United States and elect John Bolton as secretary-general?

Strange as it seems, even those steps might not be enough — not for critics whose demands for reform mask a deeper goal. They will not be satisfied unless the U.N. submits to the will of the United States.
We'd prefer that it be worth our while.
I do not doubt that the U.N. needs reform — just look at the scandal in the U.N.'s oil-for-food program for Iraq.
Here comes the 'but', right on schedule ...
But let's put this into perspective. Many institutions and processes need reform. The electoral college needs reform. So does the U.S. system of casting and counting votes.
Casting and counting votes? Yep, we sure do, let's see, Seattle, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, East Saint Louis ... oh, those aren't the voting reforms you're seeking.
So do many American corporations and, according to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, the U.S. Senate. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld tells us that the U.S. military needs reform. And everyone seems to agree that American public schools need reform.

The clamor for U.N. reform is different. It is very loud and very suspicious. It has become political cant, sometimes as meaningless as waving the flag. President Bush cited reform as the crucial reason for choosing Bolton as ambassador to the U.N., explaining that "it makes sense to have somebody there who's willing to say to the United Nations: 'Why don't you reform?' "
Oh, so you think the UN doesn't need reform. That's the obvious conclusion to that paragraph, since you've buried the lede in non-sequitors.
This kind of talk is hardly restricted to Republicans. The Clinton administration vetoed Boutros Boutros-Ghali's bid for a second term as secretary-general in 1996 primarily because U.S. Ambassador Madeleine Albright concluded, in a memo to the president, that "he is not committed to, or capable of achieving, our urgent reform goals."
In other words, there's been a long-term need for reform.
The House passed a bill in June to withhold half of U.S. dues unless the U.N. fulfilled 46 demands for reform, including slashing its budget and creating a new office of ethics. Rep. Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.), author of the grandly named "Henry J. Hyde United Nations Reform Act of 2005," said "radical surgery" was needed because "sometimes that's the only way to save the patient."
Henry was being a moderate on this one, but please, continue ...
Some pleas for reform are far more well-meaning, ...
... "so excuse me while I scoff at them" ...
... such as the report in mid-June by a bipartisan task force headed by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell. Just as pertinent were similar proposals from a commission led by former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker that investigated the oil-for-food program.

Yet their good intentions are swept up into a general clamor that conjures images of the U.N. as corrupt, slovenly, wasteful and anti-American.
That pretty much sums up the talking points, doesn't it? Corrupt: yep, the Oil-for-Palaces scandal alone covers that. Slovenly? The inherent slackness in UN programs around the world makes slovenly a useful descriptor. Wasteful? Look at the money spent on administrative overhead, salaries and benes for the apparatchiks and 'wasteful' is rather kind. Anti-American? It's hard to conclude otherwise. So what part of our complaint about the UN is wrong?
These images are etched even more deeply by the recent, irresponsible demands for the resignation of Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

To shut out the clamor, we need to clear our minds of cant and talk plainly.

First, let's underscore one fact often ignored. The U.N. has been reforming itself for many years. At American insistence, the U.N. installed Joseph Connor, the former chairman of Price Waterhouse, as its undersecretary-general for management during the 1990s. The U.N. accepted almost every reform he suggested. He managed to cut the budget, reduce staff, streamline management and augment auditing.
He managed to re-arrange the deck chairs on the Titanic. A lot of people wouldn't mind -- much -- the waste and slovenly behavior of the UN if it were effective in the big things it had to do. If it had put a stop to the genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda, managed to get a decent peace between the Paleos and Israel, and managed to put a dent in world hunger, etc., not too many people would complain about the size of some Euro-apparatchik's office.
Another fact hardly ever mentioned by critics is that the wonderful diversity of the U.N. does not necessarily lend itself to efficiency. The U.N. has 191 member states and six official languages. Civil servants come from an incredible variety of cultures.
Most of those cultures turn a blind eye to corruption and graft, which is a big part of the problem. Having a bunch of Dickensonian Marley's and Scrouge's would go a ways towards cleaning the place up.
To avoid misunderstanding, they must show great sensitivity toward each other. Israelis and Egyptians, for example, work together to guard the secretary-general. French and Japanese struggle together to find the proper English wording of a press release. That may slow things up a bit, but it is one of the glories of the U.N.
Again, no one would complain about inefficency if the big things were covered. Fix the problem in Darfur and you can have all the press releases you want.
I am often astounded by how well the U.N. secretariat does work.
That's a compliment?
I have met scores of civil servants during 15 years of covering the U.N. as a Los Angeles Times correspondent and a freelance writer. I have sometimes encountered oafish bureaucrats — just as I have elsewhere in the world, including Washington. But I also have dealt with brilliant U.N. civil servants such as Undersecretary-General Shashi Tharoor, an Indian novelist; special advisor Lakhdar Brahimi, a former Algerian foreign minister; and Frederic Eckhard, an American who recently retired as the secretary-general's spokesman. All performed stellar work for countless hours. The U.N. bureaucracy has never struck me as woeful.
Which again causes us to ask why the UN doesn't work.
Nevertheless, I am sure that the Gingrich-Mitchell task force — set up by the U.S. Institute for Peace and mandated by Congress — is right about the need for changes. The task force recommended creating a new position of chief operating officer, revamping the personnel system, establishing new ethical standards, protecting whistle-blowers, setting up an independent oversight board for auditing and abolishing the embarrassing Human Rights Commission. These proposals deserve and will surely receive serious consideration. Annan's own proposals for reform are not much different.

But let's recognize most reformers for what they are. Reform is a convenient club.
It's a club with a nail in it.
Albright did not veto Boutros-Ghali because he was weak on reform. She could not abide Boutros-Ghali because of his independence, arrogance and stubbornness.
And, lest we forget, because he made things worse.
Bush nominated Bolton not to reform the U.N. but to show contempt for it. Hyde does not want to reform the U.N. as much as punish it.
We can only blow the 'reform' horn but so long. At some point we might decide that the UN isn't worth it.
The real failure of the U.N., in the eyes of its critics, has nothing to do with reform. Right-wing ideologues despise the U.N. as a threat to American sovereignty. Annan enraged the White House by daring to oppose the invasion of Iraq. Reform is not really on the minds of many reform mongers. No amount of U.N. reform will satisfy them.
Annan enraged the White House -- and a fair number of Americans -- by refusing to see Saddam for what he was. Saddam was exhibit #1A in the halls of tyranny, thuggery and murder at the start of the new century. Either you're serious about dealing with that or you're not. If the latter, get the hell out of the way. But if you're not serious, and you manage to get in the way, don't be surprised if you end up shoved to the pavement.
Posted by:Steve White

#13  Good question RC! I was thinking along the lines of a Group of [true] Democracies.

No Thugs or Dictators allowed.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2005-11-07 17:07  

#12  Why does it have to be replaced?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-11-07 15:44  

#11  He failed to mention the ongoing food-for-nookie programs in the Congo, Bosnia, and other places.
Not to mention its repeated denouncement of Israel defending itself while giving aid-and-comfort (in the form of weapon transports ambulances) to the terrorists who blow people up.

I lost all hope for the U.N. after watching the performance of its Vampire Vulture Elite at the Tsuami disaster earlier this year. After watching them take credit for everything eveyone else did I decided that the UN cannot be reformed - it has to be replaced.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2005-11-07 15:16  

#10  Another fact hardly ever mentioned by critics is that the wonderful diversity of the U.N. does not necessarily lend itself to efficiency.

Carefull mister...talk like that may upset the sensibilities of your Trans-National Progressive heros.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2005-11-07 14:43  

#9  It has become political cant, sometimes as meaningless as waving the flag.

Still means something to me you traitor.
Posted by: Secret Master   2005-11-07 14:20  

#8  Somebody should tell this guy that the oil for food money dried up long ago so there is no point sucking up to the UN now.
Posted by: rjschwarz (no T!)   2005-11-07 11:29  

#7  "It's dead, Jim."
Posted by: Whash Unick6318   2005-11-07 10:16  

#6  corrupt, slovenly, wasteful and anti-American
He forgot "incompetent".
Posted by: Spot   2005-11-07 09:36  

#5  NB: The guy's writing Kofi's hagiographybiography, which means he's more likely to take a dump in church as to point out that Kofi's Krowd is chin-deep in corruption. Also, his declaration that the electoral college needs reform marks him as a grade-A moonbat of the "Gore Won" crowd.

FWIW, I'd be glad to give the UN complete independence from the US. We'll just stop sending them any cash, and they won't depend on us any more.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-11-07 07:55  

#4  And no amount of fawning will satisfy you, Stanley. You're such a tool, lol, and a toady. Wotta load of foolishness and fear mongering. This should guarantee his spot on the cocktail circuit's 'B' list. You can take off your knee-pads now, Stanley.

Good call, bad, the recent article supposedly written by Kofi himself on the Internet power grab is another example of MSM pandering by publishing such obviously bloated and biased puffery.
Posted by: Regnad Kcin   2005-11-07 07:41  

#3  "...unless the UN submits to the will of the United States" - mean, besides the fact Amer contribution per annum is at minima 25%, and which most scholars and analysts agree is much more higher; or was it that PRIVATE Americans DONATE more to UN-sponsored international aid and humanitarian programs than the next many nations on the list. at least accor to FOREIGN AFFAIRS. Yes, the Cold War USSR had COMECON, etc. but that org was USSR/Russia-centric i.e. dem dat a'beenafits went predomin to the USSR/Russia, NOT FROM THE USSR/RUSSIA TO ANYONE ELSE - you know, International Socialism's being an Equal amongst Equals!
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2005-11-07 04:03  

#2  There is a rather large group called Americans who understands the UN is a corrupt ongoing criminal enterprise, and those organizations deserve only one fate: Dismantlement.

True ( X ) False (___)
Posted by: Besoeker   2005-11-07 01:23  

#1  Strange as it seems, even those steps might not be enough — not for critics whose demands for reform mask a deeper goal. They will not be satisfied unless the U.N. submits to the will of the United States.

Stan, those folks demanding reform are your friends.

There is a rather large group called Americans who understands the UN is a corrupt ongoing criminal enterprise, and those organizations deserve only one fate: Dismantlement.

But, we will allow Kofi and company to move the UN elsewhere. I hear Paris is nice this time of year.

I would like to know what kind of deal did Kofi, or your LA Times handlers make to get this article written. Threaten to cancel the book contract, offered a bribe, maybe a shot at a goat or a starving kid, maybe a bribe?
Posted by: badanov   2005-11-07 01:16  

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