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thedrifter
12-12-04, 08:20 AM
Oliver North: Just Scrap It & Start Over

December 9, 2004

Washington, D.C. - In wine, the experts say, vintage is everything. If that's the case, 2004 has turned out to be a very bad year for the United Nations. But the UN's vinegar may yet prove to be a very good thing for the rest of us - particularly if the decision is made to break open the casks, pour out the putrid contents and start over.

For adherents of "internationalism" and "collective security" at the UN, 2004 has been a tough year. The "Oil-for-Food" scandal, a story that first broke on Fox News, now has "legs" of its own - and investigators are honing in on those closest to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. To make matters worse for the egocentric Mr. Annan, George W. Bush, the man who challenged the UN to live up to its own stated resolutions and responsibilities - and was castigated for doing so - got himself re-elected. And now, just as Mr. Annan is planning to put the arm on American citizens for a multi-billion-dollar makeover for his palace in Turtle Bay, along comes his hand-picked "High Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Changes" with a report that indicts the UN for its ineffectiveness. It all points to a remarkable opportunity for the world's democracies to clean up the festering mess that the UN has become - and create something more suited to the 21st century's new world disorder.

Though the multi-billion-dollar Oil-for-Food scam has yet to rise to the level of importance in the U.S. media as the Scott Peterson trial, the international press corps - usually sympathetic to the UN - has started snooping around in France, Germany, Russia, China and the half-dozen other countries where officials may be implicated. In the U.S. Congress, there are calls for Mr. Annan's resignation and measures to hold corrupt UN officials - now immune from prosecution - accountable for crimes they commit "while on duty." In Baghdad, FBI investigators, working with Iraqi and U.S. Justice Department prosecutors preparing the case against Saddam Hussein and other high-level officials of his regime, are weighing how they can learn more about how UN-administered funds were siphoned off to buy weapons, enrich Saddam and line the pockets of mendacious foreign officials and UN bureaucrats. And at the UN headquarters, Paul Volker, perhaps prodded by tenacious investigative journalism by Fox News correspondents Eric Shawn and Jonathan Hunt, is promising a "full and fair" report that will expose who got what, even if it goes "to the top" of the UN pyramid.

None of this is good news for the long-tenured Mr. Annan who is scheduled to remain in office until 2006. But Kofi is fighting back, collecting billions of dollars to refurbish the 58-year-old UN headquarters building in New York - and build a new 35-story complex next door for an even bigger world-governing bureaucracy. He dismisses his troubles as the consequence of a "conservative, anti-UN rabble" - just trying to make trouble for an international institution that they never liked anyway.

But what no one should ignore is the scathing internal critique proffered by the UN's own "high level" panel on UN reform. Though the committee's findings fall short - ignoring for example, the Security Council's anti-Israeli bias, the Human Rights Commission's embrace of dictators or the Refugee Organization's unwillingness to keep terrorists from overtly using UN-administered camps in the Middle East as recruiting centers - they are telling nonetheless. The UN's failures in Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Congo are as inescapable as the well-documented collapse of the Iraqi disarmament program in the 1990s that led to the current U.S.-led war in Iraq.

Unfortunately, because the authors of the report are UN bureaucrats and the UN is their sinecure, the committee is unwilling to suggest the unthinkable: doing away with the Security Council as irrelevant to the realities of the 21st century. Yet that is the inescapable conclusion for the democracies bearing the burden of an increasingly expensive, moribund bureaucracy that has proven itself inadequate to the task for which it was founded. The anemic prescription for improvement - a recognition that pre-emptive military action is legitimate - as long as it passes a UN-test for approval - is ludicrous. So too is their proposal to expand the Security Council from 15 to 24 members. Courage, once Dan Rather's favorite word, demanded a more realistic proposal: keep the General Assembly open as a place to debate how many blankets are needed to help assuage a humanitarian disaster like an earthquake - and replace the Security Council with a new Democratic Alliance.

Such a proposal will, of course, create great angst from those who believe that the UN - an entity that has up till now found itself unable or unwilling to even define "terrorism" or "democracy" - can somehow resurrect itself. That should not deter those democracies - who know well who they are - from creating an organization that is capable of bringing multi-lateral action to bear against adversaries like Al Qaeda, or its ilk. To do less in this window of opportunity invites anarchists like Usama bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and rogue leaders like those in Pyongyang and Tehran, to further adventures. This is the time to scrap the UN as we know it today - and start over so that our children have a better tomorrow.


Ellie

Sparrowhawk
12-12-04, 08:55 AM
The 9-11 terrorist should have targeted e UN building instead, then perhaps these world leaders might understand the terrorist message a bit clearer.

TRLewis
12-12-04, 09:10 AM
Lets cut our funding for the UN. And see how easy it is to get Kofi to resign. He's a piece of ****. I could tell it the first time I saw him speak.

Hang him, the UN doesnt need a new building. Lets pull out and watch the UN fail like the League of Nations.