The United Nations has recently come under fire,
especially from Americans, many of whom think it is
irrelevant and corrupt. Efforts to reform the United
Nations have been brought to the forefront by its
backers. To rejuvenate this world body, critics as
well as supporters of the United Nations have, at
times, been divided. Whether it is multilateralist
or unilateralist such as American or European, they
all would agree that yes indeed this world body is
in crisis.
An effort toward reformation kicked off this week
with a panel commissioned by the world body’s
secretary-general, Kofi Annan. A report was released
on what to do about this crisis. The twisting and
turning at the United Nations came to light as a result
of the Iraq war. War advocates were furious with the
UN following decade of Security Council resolutions,
particularly the last Resolution 1441 that threatened
serious consequences” if Iraq did not
prove its disarmament, the UN could not agree to act.
At the same time, those against the war were also
frustrated that the world body did not do enough to
stop the war.
Was Iraq the UN problem? Not certainly so. When it
comes to humanitarian disasters, for instance, like
the one in Sudan, the UN has been slow to fully act.
Another instance is the UN’s weak effort to
stop Iran and North Korea clandestine pursuit of nuclear
weapons. The danger of UN irrelevance caught the attention
of Mr. Annan. Last year Mr. Annan called together
former government ministers and heads of government
to brainstorm on what exactly to do, as a suggestion
to bring changes to the organization. The 16-member
panel proposed changes were mainly focused on two
areas: Institutional and cultural.
Institutional changes in the structure of the Security
Council as well as changes in working practices. It
is a known fact by many that the Security Council
is unrepresentative. For example, the total of its
15 seats, five are occupied by permanent members with
enormous veto power. Those veto-wielding members are
America, Russia, China, Britain and France, the other
ten without veto power rotate every two years on the
Security Council. Since the end of the World War II,
this structural component of the world body has not
changed. Japan and Germany are of the belief that
they have the right to permanent seats since they
are second and third biggest contributors to the UN
budget. India, the world’s most populous country,
Brazil, Latin America’s biggest country believe
they are entitled to permanent seats on the UN Security
Council. Despite numerous efforts to make their case
about permanent seating on the UN Security Council,
Africans want two seats on the Council to represent
the continent.
With striving efforts to press their case, each of
these countries has opponents. For example, China
mistrusts Japan. Italy opposes a permanent seat for
Germany, which would make Italy the only biggish European
power without one. It instead proposes a single seat
for the European Union, this would require Britain
and France to give up theirs. This proposal is not
possible under the current UN Charter, as regional
institutions cannot be UN members. On the other hand,
Spanish-speaking Mexico and Argentina do not think
Portuguese-speaking Brazil should represent the entire
Latin America while Pakistan strongly opposes its
rival India. To compound the problem, Egypt claims
one seat as representative of the Muslim and Arab
world as part of the two African seats. What’s
about Nigeria, the continent’s most populous
country as well as South Africa, a richer and stable
democratic model?
However, there is a proposal by the panel with two
alternatives. The first would give six countries,
perhaps Germany, Japan, India, Brazil and two African
countries permanent seats without a veto, and create
three extra non-permanent seats, bringing the total
number of council members to 24. The second, which
would expand the council by the same number of seats,
creates a new middle tier of members who would serve
for four years and could be immediately re-elected,
above the current lower tier of two-year members,
who cannot be re-elected. The rivals to the would-be
permanent members favor this option.
In addition, attention is on the current UN Charter
particularly Article 51 that allows force in a clear
case of self-defense, and Chapter VII that permits
use of force when the Security Council agrees. The
UN Charter was written to govern war between countries.
The panel also says any decision to use force must
pass five tests: the threat must be grave; the primary
purpose must be to avert the threat; force must be
a last resort; means must be proportional; and there
must be a reasonable chance that force will succeed
without calamitous consequences. This then raises
the quality of debate about any decision to go to
war. In the midst of all this is the fight against
terrorism.
The report by the panel urges the UN to make better
use of its assets in the fight against terrorism.
The main argument is that UN members inability to
agree on a definition of terrorism. Arab nations may
continue to press for exemptions in the case of foreign
occupation. Moreover, the panel’s report calls
for incentives for countries to stop enriching uranium
to build nuclear weapons.
OIL-FOR-FOOD SCANDAL
The UN has been dogged by accusations of corruption
in the Iraq operation. Before American invasion, the
UN spearheaded a $62 billion oil-for-food program
that allowed Iraq to sell oil to pay for humanitarian
goods. Documents surfaced show that Saddam Hussein
embezzled tens of billions of dollars. Money siphoned
by Saddam, as rumored, bought political support from
well-connected people in western governments and the
UN itself.
Appearing on the list are Benon Sevan, former head
of the oil-for-food program and Kojo Annan, the UN
secretary-general’s son who worked for a Swiss
firm, Cotecna. This Swiss firm inspects goods at border-crossings.
Kojo left the firm in December 1998, just before the
firm got a contract to work for the oil-for-food program.
It was reported last week in the New York Sun that
Kojo Annan had continued to receive payments from
Cotecna, the Swiss firm. The UN secretary-general’s
office has repeatedly characterized this latest report
as part of a standard non-compete agreement. But the
duration of the payments was kept hidden from investigators
in the American Congress. Mr Kofi Annan, the UN secretary-general
claims he did not know the payments had gone on so
long, and that his son’s lukewarm delay in disclosing
the matter has created a perception problem.
Earlier this year, Mr. Kofi Annan commissioned an
investigation into oil-for-food, headed by Paul Voker,
a former head of America’s Federal Reserve.
In this environment, Conservative commentators and
critics of the UN are calling for Mr. Annan to resign.
It seems though that the prospects for UN reform are
clouded. With America’s fouled perception and
mood toward the UN, one would wonder why bother reforming
something that is hopelessly ineffective and even
corrupt? The case for reform is an uphill struggle.
About the author: Alex Redd is a former
Liberian broadcast journalist. Currently, he's a Fellow
in counseling psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.