Last week, yet another group of Eminent
Persons reported to the U.N. secretary general on cleaning out the
Augean stables of the United Nations. Such reports come around
periodically, usually when the secretary general in question starts
contemplating his historic legacy. Meanwhile, huge international
expectations build up around the much-anticipated pronouncements of
the group.
Here is a bet that those over hyped expectations will be defeated
yet again, and that "A more secure world: Our shared responsibility
- Report of the Secretary General's High-Level Panel on Threats,
Challenges and Change" will lead to little more than international
recriminations and blame-shifting.
The endeavor grew out of Secretary Kofi Annan's deep frustration
over the way the run-up to the Iraq war was handled in the United
Nations, and his disapproval, oft expressed, of the U.S. decision
to go to war.
Accordingly, the document attempts to "put forward a new vision of
collective security, one that addresses all the major threats to
international peace and security felt around the world" in the
words of panel chairman and former Thai prime minister Anand
Panyarachun. It's a tall order, and not surprisingly, strong
reservations about the U.S. action are implied in much of the
document.
Now, you even don't have to be an "eminent person" to recognize
that the United Nations stands greatly in need of change. It is a
major weakness of this report, unfortunately, that no mention
whatsoever is made of the festering sore of corruption manifesting
itself in the Iraq Oil-for-Food scandal. Failure to recognize the
damage done will certainly undermine the authority of Mr. Annan,
whose resignation is now being widely called for, including by Sen.
Norm Coleman and a number of members of Congress.
Given that the panel was able to stretch the definition of
"security" to include issues such as the environment and public
health, HIV/AIDS, etc., one would have thought that administrative
reform to make the United Nations a more accountable and credible
organization would also have been in order. But no.
"Our job was to look at the state of the world today on peace and
security, compared with 1945," says panel members and former
national security advisor Brent Scowcroft. Back then, the United
Nations had 51 founding members. Today, 191 members sit in the
General Assembly. In 1945, as the world came out of World War II,
preventing conflict between states was the overriding
motivation.
It is certainly true, as Mr. Scowcroft argues, that today, states
are interdependent as never before, and our borders far more
porous. Globalization has brought us growing trade, but also
problems like international terrorism, transnational crime,
smuggling, and more intangible and intractable threats.
Among the major recommendations of the 101 on the to-do list are:
No actual change to U. N. Charter Article 51, which relates to
national security, thankfully. This had been advocated by France
and Germany to narrow the definition of self-defense. The panel
instead does recognize a need for "preventive action," even in the
absence of an "imminent" threat. This action, though, is
recommended only with Security Council approval.
Also recommended is a Peacebuilding Commission to study the
prevention of genocide and humanitarian disasters, like the one
currently unfolding in Dafur, Sudan. With the deplorable track
record of the United Nations in Sudan, Kosovo and Rwanda, it is
clear new thinking is needed, and this may be a good first
step.
On the 800-pound gorilla of U.N. reform, enlargement of the U.N.
Security Council, the report punts. It recommends enlargement to 24
seats, though with no increase in the veto-carrying seats, and it
includes two models. One provides for six new permanent members;
the other proposes eight four-year renewable seats. Candidates are
already lining up, among them Germany, Japan, India, and Brazil.
Considering the political sensitivity of enlargement, it could --
and maybe should -- be that that no change will ever actually be
feasible.
There is currently no leader or government inside the United
Nations either possessing or willing to spend the huge amounts of
political capital necessary to achieve real reform.
Mr. Annan is sorely wounded and may have to step down, and real
pressure will only be applied through the U.S. Congress, which
holds the purse strings of 22 percent of the U.N. budget.
We here in Washington cannot even manage to agree to cut the
federal workforce, no matter how great the dedication of the
occupant in the White House to principles of smaller government.
And that is just a question of domestic politics and local
interests within the United States. Imagine the towering challenge
for reformers where national interests, global fiefdoms and
diplomatic pork are involved. In other words, don't hold your
breath.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at the
Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected]
.
First appeared in The Washington Times