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Subverting the UN
PressInfo #
165
October
29, 2002
By
Richard Falk
and
David Krieger
As a healthy response to the Bush
Administration's war policies, the number of people taking to the
streets in protest is increasing with each step toward war. These
protesters realize that they do not want the United States to
initiate a pre-emptive and illegal war, but perhaps they do not
yet realize that they are also fighting to retain an international
order based on multilateralism, the rule of law and the United
Nations itself.
To save the UN from the Administration's
destructive and radical unilateralism, other key nations will have
to stand up to its bullying. France, Russia and China, because of
their veto power in the Security Council, could withhold legal
authority for America to proceed to war. Whether they will
exercise this power, given the pressure they're under from the
Administration, remains to be seen. But if one or more of them
does so, the Administration would be faced with acting in direct
contravention of the Security Council, with a probable serious
erosion of Congressional and public support. If it were to go
ahead with war, it could deliver a death knell not only to Iraq
but also to the UN itself. It is emblematic of US global
waywardness that it is necessary to hope for a veto to uphold the
legitimacy and effectiveness of the UN as a force for peace but to
also be concerned that Administration threats of unilateral
military action could render the veto ineffective and thereby the
role of the Security Council largely meaningless.
The United States was instrumental in forming
the UN and was a strong supporter of the organization until the
Reagan presidency, when that Administration's hostility toward the
UN became pronounced. Reagan's indictment of it as dominated by
Third World concerns was largely rhetorical and symbolic but
included calls for budgetary downsizing and withdrawal from UNESCO
because of its alleged corruption and anti-American bias. In the
Bush I presidency this antipathy was connected with US global
economic interests; the Administration used American muscle to
close down the Center on Transnational Corporations as a favor to
multinationals. This confrontational approach was briefly reversed
by Bush Senior's use of the UN to mandate war against Iraq in 1991
to oust it from Kuwait. At the time, Bush surprised the world by
sounding briefly like a second coming of Woodrow Wilson with his
call for "a new world order" centered upon reliance on the
collective security mechanisms of the UN Security Council to meet
the challenges of aggression. When the dust settled at the end of
the Gulf War, however, the White House realized that it did not
want such global responsibilities or to build such expectations
about an enhanced UN role. The language of a new world order was
deliberately, as one high-level official then expressed it, "put
back on the shelf."
Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign
seemed to offer prospects for enhanced recourse to the UN to
address humanitarian challenges of the sort that were arising in
the Balkans and sub-Saharan Africa. But as President, Clinton
contributed to the post-cold war decline of the UN by abruptly
reversing course on Somalia in 1993 after eighteen Americans were
killed in the Black Hawk Down incident. Rather than accept
responsibility for that debacle, the Clinton Administration blamed
the UN. That Administration also turned its back on UN pleas for a
commitment to stop genocide in Rwanda a year later, when a small
contingent of UN troops could have prevented the mass murders
there. The Clinton security team further sabotaged a Rwanda
intervention by threatening to halt US funding for UN peacekeeping
operations if the UN took on new peacekeeping commitments.
The Clinton White House expressed only lukewarm
support for the UN role in Bosnia, while undermining support for
UN action by providing arms to the Croats and Muslims. In Iraq,
the Administration undermined and corrupted the UN inspection
process by using US inspectors to conduct espionage. Clinton
disappointingly celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the UN by
delivering an uninspired speech notable for its Wall Street calls
for "downsizing" and "doing more with less," and by turning
increasingly to NATO to carry out what it deemed humanitarian
interventions, culminating in the NATO war in Kosovo and Serbia in
1999. This war on behalf of the Kosovars was notable for the
absence of any UN authorization for the use of force and a
deliberate US decision to circumvent the UN in anticipation of
Russian and Chinese vetoes.
But while the Clinton Administration did
serious damage to the UN, the Bush presidency-with its repudiation
of even minimal multilateralism, its hostility to existing arms
control treaties, its rejection of the Kyoto Protocol on global
warming and its efforts to undermine the International Criminal
Court-created a pattern of anti-UN diplomacy never before seen in
Washington. It represents a view that American power and resources
should serve exclusively national strategic interests.
Since September 11, the Bush team has
selectively used the UN to build a united front against global
terrorism, specifically against Al Qaeda. Such an initiative led
to a degree of formal multilateralism in the war in Afghanistan
but has run into resistance since. In the months after Bush's 2002
State of the Union address-which first outlined the "axis of evil"
approach to the post-Afghanistan challenge and which made no
reference whatsoever to the UN-Bush, in speech after speech, gave
the impression that "regime change" in Baghdad was a matter of
White House discretion. It was then that establishment realists,
most prominently Brent Scowcroft and James Baker, sounded the
alarm. The Bush war planners seemed quickly to realize that this
time they had pushed unilateralism too far even for their
Republican constituency, let alone their overseas allies. Congress
and the UN were brought into the act, with obvious ambivalence,
and the Administration shifted its overt call from "regime change"
to "disarmament" via "coercive inspection." Both Congress and the
UN Security Council are being asked to underwrite this approach,
and Congress has already capitulated.
There are two main ways to ruin the UN: to
ignore its relevance in war/peace situations, or to turn it into a
rubber stamp for geopolitical operations of dubious status under
international law or the UN Charter. Before September 11, Bush
pursued the former approach; since then-by calling on the UN to
provide the world's remaining superpower with its blessings for an
unwarranted war-the latter.
Also damaging are the evident double standards
and hypocrisy of the US call for enforcement of UN resolutions
against Iraq, given consistent US unwillingness to do anything to
implement the stream of Security Council resolutions directing
Israel to withdraw from occupied Palestinian territories, to
dismantle illegal settlements and to apply the Geneva Conventions
governing military occupation. Ironically, Security Council
Resolution 687, cited by Bush in his justification for war against
Iraq, also recalls the objective of establishing a nuclear
weapons-free zone in the Middle East and of working toward making
the region free of all weapons of mass destruction. While these
are clearly worthwhile objectives, no mention is made by the Bush
Administration of Israel's longstanding possession of nuclear
weapons.
While the United States engages in such
hypocrisy, it is attempting to use UN resolutions improperly to
justify an illegal pre-emptive war against Iraq. Resolution 687,
which welcomed the restoration of Kuwaiti sovereignty and set
forth peace terms after the Gulf War, says nothing about the
conditions under which additional force could be used against
Iraq. Rather, it concludes by stating that the Security Council "decides
to remain seized of the matter and to take such further steps as
may be required for the implementation of the present resolution
and to secure peace and security in the region." Thus, any
unilateral US enforcement action without Security Council approval
would be illegal. If the Bush Administration pushes a resolution
authorizing force through the UN Security Council, it will
demonstrate only that it has succeeded in bending the organization
to its will-in effect subverting the UN the same way it subverted
the integrity of the US Congress. It is doubly ruining the UN by
its domineering posture and through its repeated assertion that if
the UN resists, it will act unilaterally. The worst aspect of the
Bush II legacy may be its vicious undermining of multilateralism
and international law in general, and of the United Nations in
particular.
Published in
The Nation, November 4, 2002
© TFF 2002
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