In
Deep Trouble
Kofi Annan's idea of
"reform" is more of the same--and lots more money.
BY CLAUDIA ROSETT
Human Events
March 23, 2005
There he goes again.
"This hall has
heard enough high-sounding declarations to last us for some decades to
come," Secretary-General Kofi Annan told the U.N. General Assembly Monday.
"What is needed now is not more declarations and promises."
For announcing a
U.N. reform program, it was a good start. Had Mr. Annan then apologized for the
gross failure of his previous reforms, launched in 1997, and left the stage,
there might be a lot more reason to hope the U.N. will shape up.
Instead, Mr. Annan
went right on to deliver his latest plan for U.N. reform, by way of a 63-page
report stuffed with high-sounding declarations wrapped around dozens of
proposals to take most of what the U.N. does wrong, and do lots more of it,
with lots more taxpayer money. Mr. Annan took the title for his report from a
phrase in the U.N. charter, "In Larger Freedom." Truth in labeling
would more accurately read: "In Deep Trouble."
To be fair to Mr.
Annan, there are the germs of a few good ideas in this report. These include
recognizing terrorism as such in all cases, rather than excusing select
terrorists (i.e., as a U.N. rule of thumb, those attacking Israel) as
"freedom fighters." It's also worth reshaping the U.N. Commission on
Human Rights, which two years ago embarrassed even the U.N. by choosing as its
chairman the ambassador of Libyan tyrant Moammar Gadhafi. And there's no
question the Security Council needs reform, though given that the council's
basic failing has been lack of integrity, it's not clear why Mr. Annan thinks
the answer is to make it bigger.
From there, Mr.
Annan forges on to propose nothing less than reforming the entire known
universe, via the U.N., while he bangs the drum for a budget to match. He wants
to expand his own staff, change the world's climate, end organized crime,
eliminate all private weapons, and double U.N.-directed development aid to the
tune of at least $100 billion a year, "front-loaded," for his
detailed plan to end world poverty. This comes from a U.N. that only three
months ago was finally strong-armed by Congress into coughing up the secret
internal Oil for Food audits confirming that under Mr. Annan's stewardship the
U.N. was not even adequately auditing its own staff operations.
After a year in
which scandals have been erupting from every vent in the U.N.'s traditionally
cloistered corridors, assorted members of Congress have been wondering whether
Mr. Annan deserves even the budget he's got already. Some, such as Sen. Norm
Coleman, have called for Mr. Annan to resign. Now, in much the same way that
despots faced with popular unrest like to announce giant patriotic dam-building
projects involving the pouring of huge amounts of cement, Mr. Annan is
presenting his new improved save-the-world reform plan, conveniently timed to
serve as a distraction from the oil-for-fraud, sex-for-food, theft, waste,
abuse and incompetence stories that for the past two years have bubbling up
around the same U.N. he already reformed for us back in 1997.
Mr. Annan's new plan
comes just a week before the U.N.-authorized inquiry into the Oil for Food
scandal, led by former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, is due to submit an interim
report focused on Mr. Annan and his son, Kojo Annan, whose business dealings
during Mr. Annan's tenure have come awkwardly close to various U.N. players,
including a major U.N. Oil for Food contractor. One has to wonder if somewhere
in all this, Mr. Annan's ample agenda might include a plan to bury the U.N.'s
critics in an avalanche of U.N. reform reports.
That would be
welcome, were Mr. Annan proposing real reform. But the basic problem with the
U.N. is not that it doesn't have enough money, or enough Security Council
members, or enough commissions, offices, reports and reform proposals.
The grand failure of
the U.N. is that its system, its officials and most visibly its current
secretary-general are still stuck in the central-planning mindset that was the
hallmark of dictators and failed utopian dreams of the previous century. Mr.
Annan's plan takes little practical account of a modern world in which
competition, private enterprise and individual freedom are the principles of
progress. He has his own agenda, which he would like the rest of us to follow
and fund. The words sound lofty: "development, security, and human rights
for all." The devil is in the details, and because this is a blueprint for
the future of the entire earth, that means a lot of room for big trouble. This
report is not a benign document.
For example, the
long section on aid shoves right past the realities to rattle the cup for more
money flowing through the gullies of UN plans and bureaucracy, where so much
has already vanished, or been diverted into support of bad governments that
create precisely the conditions that inflict poverty. Someone needs to remind
Mr. Annan that every dollar taxed away from the citizens of the rich nations of
the world is a dollar less that's available for these same private citizens to
buy goods for which there is genuine market-driven demand--that being the real
engine of development.
Mr. Annan wants
every poor country to produce--get ready for the mouthful--a "Millennium
Development Goals-based" national strategy (meaning, in line with U.N. plans).
By September he wants donor countries to produce "timetables and
monitorable targets" to align aid delivery with all these strategies.
Then, the U.N. will baste this all together into a plan even bigger than Oil
for Food, which sounds like an unfortunate idea. Mr. Annan gets it partly right
about the need for free trade, but he urges such openness only for the richest
nations, not for the poorest--a vision that will make the rich richer, but do
far less for the poor. Meanwhile, he deplores a growing income gap between rich
and poor nations.
Some sections are
almost comic, such as Mr. Annan's chiding the Security Council and General
Assembly that when they assign tasks to the Secretariat, they must take care
"that they also provide resources adequate for the task." Yes, but as
Oil for Food illustrated, even $1.4 billion in administrative funding was not
enough to provide honesty and competence. The glitch was the abysmal, secretive
and conflict-of-interest-ridden management of Mr. Annan's Secretariat, not lack
of money. Mr. Annan notes that he wants more transparency and accountability,
but he suggests this come from more reshuffling inside the U.N. itself, not
from outside oversight. We have been here before.
In presenting his
grand soufflé of a reform plan, Mr. Annan promised to work hard. We now face
months of leaks about the latest in Mr. Annan's personal telephone diplomacy,
leading up to his reform jamboree this September in New York. While this goes
on, it would be useful to keep in mind that the real push for a better world on
Mr. Annan's watch has come not from the U.N. but from a Bush administration
that Mr. Annan has done plenty to thwart and revile. Mr. Annan includes
high-sounding words in his report about U.N. "support" for elections
in Iraq. They ring hollow when you consider that had Mr. Annan and the U.N.
prevailed instead of Mr. Bush, Iraqis would still be living under Saddam (and
the U.N. would still be running the rotten Oil for Food program).
How to reform the
U.N. is a big question, in need of real debate and workable proposals from some
quarter. What we got from Mr. Annan as he presented this latest menu for U.N.
improvement was his warning that no one should pick and choose among his
proposals "a la carte." Great. If he really wants all or nothing, the
next move is to toss this report, and start looking for a secretary-general who
can get it right.
Ms. Rosett is a
journalist-in-residence with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Her
column appears here and in The Wall Street Journal Europe on alternate
Wednesdays.
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