He will compile a lengthy report to be published next year, but
which will no doubt have more leaks than a French aircraft carrier
in the first Gulf War. It is hard not to conclude that the U.N. is
up to mischief in commissioning a major investigation during a
presidential-election year. The United Nations has a habit of
interfering in U.S. elections, as it showed in 2004, when the
New York Times published an "October surprise" a week
ahead of the election revealing that 380 tons of powerful
explosives had gone missing from the al-Qaqaa former military
complex in Baghdad. The article, which sparked a political storm,
was based on information which was likely leaked by the U.N.'s
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) headed by
Mohammed El Baradei, and which prompted Senator John Kerry to
accuse President Bush of "incredible incompetence" in his handling
of security in Iraq.
Doudou Diene has a track record of focusing his attention
on freedom-loving democratic societies, with damning reports on
alleged institutionalized racism in countries such as Japan,
Canada, Denmark, and Switzerland. His reports are highly
controversial and are usually rejected out of hand by the Western
governments he is targeting. Like most other U.N. "Special
Rapporteurs" Diene is unaccountable as well as unqualified for the
position he holds. The United Nations doesn't even bother to post
his biography online, though his career details can be found on the website of the Organization of
American States. His entire career has been spent as a U.N.
bureaucrat, with absolutely no real world experience. Even by the
dismally low standards of the United Nations, Diene is a
spectacular non-entity.
With the rare exception of Russia, Diene has chosen to
ignore real human-rights violations in most dictatorial states,
especially in Africa, Asia, or the Middle East. He has barely said
a word about Chinese oppression in Tibet for example, and has been
largely silent about the genocide in Darfur. Nor has he ever
condemned the rampant anti-Semitism which runs deep through the
Human Rights Council.
The Council includes some of the world's worst
human-rights violators, such as China, Russia, Cuba, Saudi Arabia,
and Egypt, and is even worse than the old U.N. Commission on Human
Rights, an institution that had sunk to such depths that even
then-secretary-general Kofi Annan mustered the courage to call it a
disgrace. It has just appointed as investigators Richard Falk
(special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian
territories), a Princeton emeritus professor who compares Israel to
Nazi Germany and defends Ward Churchill, and Jean Ziegler (special
rapporteur on the Right to Food), co-founder of the intriguingly
named "Muammar Gaddafi Human Rights Prize." Needless to say, around
three quarters of the Council's resolutions involve the
condemnation of Israel.
The Bush administration has wisely decided to boycott the HRC, but
it is impossible to prevent U.S. funds from flowing to it through
the U.N.'s general budget. At a price tag of more than $5 billion a
year, the American taxpayer doesn't get a great deal of value from
the United Nations as a whole, a bloated world body that devotes
much of its energy to shielding dictatorial regimes, constraining
U.S. power, and bullying the Israelis. Despite the United States
contributing 22 percent of the U.N.'s budget, its myriad organs
continue to delight in throwing mud at the world's only superpower,
maintaining a steady flow of anti-American enmity.
Diene's visit to the United States will be merely the latest
episode in the pathetic recent history of the United Nations, a
supranational institution that continues its relentless and
probably terminal decline. When it is eventually published, the
U.S, should reject what will certainly be a preposterous
anti-American polemic, and call on the United Nations to live up to
its own Universal Declaration of Human Rights, instead of lecturing
free societies on how to manage their own affairs.
It is hard to take the U.N. seriously when its peacekeepers are
actively engaged in raping refugees in the Congo and even arming
rebel groups, or when it turns a blind eye to the man-made
starvation of millions in southern Africa. In the arena of human
rights, the United Nations has become an emperor with no clothes, a
morally bankrupt institution that wallows in its double standards
and appeasement of evil. Doudou Diene's investigation of the United
States should be seen for what it is: a desperate piece of
political theater that underscores the U.N.'s growing
irrelevance.
Nile Gardiner is the Director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in National Review Online