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Date:      Sun, 23 Mar 2003 05:56:53 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Daniel Flickinger <attila@hun.org>
To:        FreeBSD-CURRENT <current@freebsd.org>
Subject:   CNS: UN 'Dying a Slow Death,'
Message-ID:  <20030323055653.gJSP22019@hun.org>

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    23 Mar 2003 <br>
    CNSNews <br><b>
    UN 'Dying a Slow Death,' Policy Expert Alleges </b><br>

    The failure of the United Nations to take action against
    Iraq, combined with President Bush's strong condemnation
    of the Security Council, has left the international body
    with little authority and in need of reform, according
    to several policy experts. <p>

    Although some members of the Bush administration were
    suspicious of the United Nations even before taking
    their case against Iraq to the Security Council,
    relations are now likely to worsen, said Nile Gardiner,
    an Anglo-American policy expert at the conservative
    Heritage Foundation. <p>

    "The United Nations had a final shot of redemption on
    the Iraq question and they didn't take it," he said. "I
    believe we are going to see increasing disengagement
    from the U.N. process by the United States. The United
    Nations is dying a slow death as a political
    organization." <p>

    In his speech Monday night, Bush recognized the 17
    resolutions adopted by the United Nations on Iraqi
    disarmament. He also chided the Security Council, which
    never voted on an 18th resolution largely as a result of
    France's promise to veto it. <p>

    "The United Nations Security Council has not lived up to
    its responsibilities, so we will rise to ours," Bush
    told the nation. <p>

    Although France placed the blame on the United States
    and United Kingdom for failing to convince a majority of
    the 15-member Security Council of Iraq's threats, some
    observers said France's obstructionism was the root of
    the problem. <p>

    James Lindsay, deputy director and senior fellow at the
    liberal-leaning Brookings Institution, said France's
    terms for war remain unclear. Given those circumstances,
    he said, the Bush administration should not be blamed
    for failed diplomacy. <p>

    "I don't think the French have covered themselves in the
    glory on this issue," Lindsay said. "Was there ever a
    set of circumstances under which Paris would have gone
    to war? If the answer to that question is no, it really
    doesn't matter what kind of diplomatic effort the Bush
    administration made - it wasn't going to change the
    outcome." <p>

    France's refusal to go along with a U.S. plan to topple
    Saddam Hussein has created a divisive "trans-Atlantic
    rift" that is not likely to dissipate as long as Bush,
    French President Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor
    Gerhard Schroeder remain in power, Lindsay
    said. European and American businesses could suffer as a
    result, he added. <p>

    The rift could also signal dramatic changes for the
    United Nations, said Michael O'Hanlon, a Brookings
    Institution foreign policy expert. He suggested that
    discussions are likely to take place inside the Bush
    administration about reforming the Security Council. <p>

    Since its creation in 1946, the U.N. Security Council
    has included five permanent members and 10 non-permanent
    rotating countries. France, based on its global standing
    following World War II, became a permanent member and
    has veto power along with China, Russia, the United
    Kingdom and the United States. <p>

    O'Hanlon said France's membership on the Security
    Council has been a long-running debate in academia, but
    it could gain popularity given the deep divisions over
    Iraq. Some scholars have suggested India would be better
    suited for the role. <p>

    "I would not be surprised if this administration, maybe
    not right away, but early in a second term if it wins
    re-election, thinks of reforming the basic structure of
    the Security Council," O'Hanlon said. "The broader
    question of how you dilute the power of France, which
    has acted in an even more unilateralist way than the
    Bush administration, has to be one that Washington wants
    to consider." <p>

    The United Nations still has a role with Iraq, just not
    politically, Gardiner said. He would like to see the
    body help rebuild Iraq. But he said France, Germany,
    Russia, China or any other country that refused to
    support an Iraq war should be excluded. <p>

    "The French come out of this as the main villain,"
    Gardiner said. "They have effectively wounded the United
    Nations, endangered the future of NATO, they have
    created a major trans-Atlantic rift and the French have
    shamelessly appeased Saddam Hussein for the last two
    decades." <p>

    Charles Pena, director of defense policy studies at the
    libertarian Cato Institute, said he disagrees with
    Bush's approach to a war with Iraq, but he agrees with
    the president's decision to move forward without backing
    from the United Nations. He said if Bush has evidence
    that Iraq poses a security risk, the matter should have
    never gone to the Security Council. <p>

    As a result, the United Nations stands weaker today,
    which is not necessarily a bad thing, according to Pena. <p>

    "The United Nations is relevant when the United States
    or any other country wants it to be relevant for its own
    political purposes," he said. "It is irrelevant whenever
    it is convenient to ignore. That is how the United
    Nations is treated because no country is ever going to
    surrender its sovereignty to a super-national
    organization." <p>



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