Posted on 03/11/2003 7:26:37 AM PST by Valin
The global body slouches towards irrelevance.
As he so often does, President George W. Bush cut to the heart of the matter during his news conference last Thursday night. Figuratively pointing to the members of the U.N. Security Council, he explained, It's time for them to show their cards and let the world know where they stand.
To extend the presidents poker-game metaphor, lets stipulate that France, Russia and Germany arent bluffing and fully intend to block the latest resolution on Iraqs disarmament. Lets stipulate that the United States and Britain arent bluffing either and fully intend to enforce the existing 16 resolutions on Iraqs disarmament, with or without the approval of Moscow, Berlin and Paris. (Given the heavy words swirling around Washington and heavy weapons gathering around Iraq, it is obvious that Bush at least is not bluffing.) And so the first casualty of the second Gulf War wont be Saddams dictatorship, but rather the United Nations itself.
The organization is not going to disappear overnight or cease to exist in name, of course. But there is every indication that if someone in Paris, London, Moscow or Washington doesnt blink, the organization will soon cease to exist in practice.
For Bush, the challenge facing the U.N. is simple and profound: Will its words mean anything?" Bush made a similar case last September, and the U.N. responded to Washingtons wakeup call, albeit after eight weeks of haggling and cajoling. What the Council came up with was Resolution 1441, which took the grave step of asking Iraq to comply with existing resolutions. All 15 members agreed that Iraq was in noncompliance with a slew of previous resolutions, had failed to provide accurate and full disclosure of its nuclear, chemical and biological programs, had repeatedly obstructed unconditional and unrestricted access to weapons sites, was in material breach of U.N. disarmament demands and, in Secretary of State Colin Powell's words, had "one last chance to come clean and disarm."
Using his weak hand to play a rather effective game of divide and conquer, Saddam Hussein squandered that chanceand the U.N. squandered perhaps its last chance at relevance in the 21st century. Indeed, 1441 is a metaphor for the U.N.: From the American and British perspective, 1441--like the U.N.--was the means to an end. Both were a way the Council could live up to its primary responsibility, which, according to the U.N. Charter, is the maintenance of international peace and security." But according to the French, the Germans and the rest of the U.N. class, 1441--like the U.N.--was an end in and of itself.
Hence, we now arrive at the very same crossroads we bypassed last fall, when the Council decided to paper over these divergent views of the world. This is not a moment of truth for the U.N.. That moment has already past. Because so many of its members allowed their distaste for the United States to infect and compromise their ability to think strategically, the U.N.s most important body is on its deathbed.
Consider the dilemma it now faces, a dilemma of its own making: By vetoing a resolution that demands nothing more of Iraq or the Council than the observance and enforcement of existing resolutions, the veto-wielders will expose the U.N. and its fractured community as a farce. For twelve years, the Council has been eager to talk about the threat posed by Iraq but unwilling to do anything of substance to eliminate the threat. For twelve years, Iraq has ignored the U.N.s words and tested the limits of the organizations power. Only when the United States pushed and prodded and pulled during the decade past did the U.N. act, and even then its action was limited to a collective nod or shrug. Perhaps its fitting that after failing to keep the peace for most of its existence, the Council is failing this final test as it limps off into oblivion.
In addition, by vetoing a resolution that two permanent Security Council members are determined to enforce, the Council would point a loaded gun at itself. The US-UK-led coalition of some two dozen nations will not be deterred by Frances non anymore than Saddam Hussein has been deterred by twelve years of feckless resolutions. War is inevitable not because bloodthirsty men rule America or Britain, but because appeasers rule the U.N. Security Counciland it has always been that way. The emerging Moscow-Berlin-Paris bloc will lay the blame at Washingtons feet, but in every way this is a self-inflicted mortal wound.
However, the U.N. is in a Catch-22. Even if the appeasers back away from their bluster and approve or abstain, the last seven months have confirmed what the Bush administration and many Americans have always suspected: At its best, the U.N. is a tool of US power. At its worst, it is a tool of those who seek to limit US power and delay US action. And at this juncture in history, America hasnt the luxury or patience to allow the Lilliputians to tie it down. Last summer, Washington was excoriated for contemplating military action against Iraq without further U.N. approval. Yet when Bush went to the U.N. for approval, he was excoriated for daring to ask the Council to act on that approval.
Simply put, it seems unlikely that this administration will try to use the U.N. as a tool of US power in the future, at least not on issues of such grave importance. Beyond Baghdad lie Iran and North Korea, and other patrons and partners of terror. With a quarter-million Americans taking up long-term residence on Irans western border (in Iraq) and thousands more stationed on Irans eastern border (in Afghanistan), Bush will not be turning to Paris or Berlin for advice on how to wage the cold war that promises to dominate Americas relationship with an Iran ruled by terrorists. And given their record and rhetoric on Iraq, the members of the Security Council seem more concerned about containing the United States than containing a nuclear-armed Kim Jong-Il.
But there is a silver lining here. When the World Trade Towers fell from the sky, the scales fell from Americas eyes, and America finally saw the world the way it was. It is not hopeless or beyond repair. However, nor is it the seamless network of economic partnerships, good neighbors and enlightened actors we pretended it to be in the 1990s. As before, it is a world where force defines behavior, where freedom and civilization must be defended with weapons, not words. As we have witnessed in the diplomatic spectacle surrounding Iraq, this reality bothers the U.N. class. However, those who dare expose this reality bother the U.N. class even moreand this is precisely what America has done over the past seven months.
Perhaps most important of all, this marathon poker game has erased the misguided notion that the U.N. is the sole source of legitimacy for US military action. An offspring of World War II, this notion undermined the Constitution, shaped and ultimately deformed the first Gulf War, and led us inevitably to where we are now. Awakened by September 11, the American people are remembering that it is their elected representatives in Congress and the White House who validate and sanction US military actionnot the unelected bureaucrats who roam the U.N.. As Bush soberly reminded the world, When it comes to our security, we don't need anybody's permission.
Alan W. Dowd is a writer and assistant vice president at Hudson Institute.
The American Enterprise Online: www.taemag.com
You conveniently forget Holland, Romania, Bulgaria, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Israel, Japan, Britain, Australia, Tonga ... and I'm sure that there are others here that I have forgotten.
I'm hoping that he was sneaky enough to go to the UN about this because he knew that it would cause its downfall, but I don't really believe that even he was machiavellian enough for this.
VARMINT CONG ALERT!!!
We can only hope and pray for this moment.
"Don't hurt those that cannot hurt you." -- Nicolo Machiavelli
Well stated.
During the Clinton years, the UN turned into a corporation whos continued existance and prosperity depends upon the number of dictators bent on committing heineous crimes against humanity. Is the UN out of Bosnia, Macedonia or Albania yet? No, and it doesn't look like the situation will improve anytime soon...thus unsuring UN presence and UN jobs.
Was the Clintoon/Karter/UN Agreed Framework with North Korea a success? No. Despite Karter's 'peace prize', and a continuing UN food aid program, the people are still starving, Kim is still testing missiles and threatening war, and Blixe failed there as miserably as he is in Iraq.
Has the UN disarmed Iraq, 12 years and 17 resolutions after Saddam conceded defeat in the Gulf War? Obviously not. Since the UN administered Oil for Food program started, only about half the food and medicine sent was confirmed to have reached the Iraqi people who need it.
The only constants in all three of these cases is that human rights violations are still occurring, UN aid workers are still necessary, and they all happened during the height of power of Clinton's Third Way Movement.
The UN has no REASON to succeed. Without those dictators and human rights violations, what reason would we have for the UN....and where would they all then find jobs??? They plan on being the ruler of the one world socialist government.
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