The UN: Pay As You Like It?
Don Kraus
The Globalist
December 08, 2005
As promised, John Bolton is pulling no punches as U.S. Ambassador to the UN.
Don Kraus of Citizens for Global Solutions looks at the latest row over his
proposal to alter the UN budget process. In Mr. Boltons view, member states
would pay only for programs they support. Will that speed up reform or will it
further isolate the United States within the UN?
After promising less unilateralism and more international cooperation in its
second term, the Bush Administration is floating a radical pay-what-you-wish
scheme for the UN budget.
U.S. Ambassador John Bolton's proposal for UN member states to pick out the
items they will fund threatens to turn the UN budget into a chaotic bazaar, with
potentially crippling consequences for the world body's effectiveness.
The proposal comes just as diplomats from the UN's 191 member states are
negotiating over strengthening measures, many of which the Bush Administration
claims to favor. Unless Washington works more constructively to find workable
compromises, they will have missed a major opportunity to make the world body
more effective.
Ambassador Bolton debuted his UN financing scheme in an early October 2005
speech at Yale University, where he presented it as his own personal view
rather than official U.S. policy. However, by the time he testified in the U.S.
Senate just two weeks later, the Bush Administration had taken the significant
step of establishing an interagency working group to consider the idea.
A U.S. UN
Those proposing to let governments vote with their wallets for their favorite
UN line items would likely turn the premier forum for global cooperation into a
Darwinian jungle.
Under Bolton's plan, the offices of the UN's administration would compete
with each other, with only the fittest surviving. The losers in this popularity
contest would presumably wither away even those that performed vital, if
unsexy, functions.
Having to choose
That may be all well and good for the world's wealthiest nation. But such a
financing system would leave little room for the interests of smaller and less
wealthy nations.
And the message conveyed by Ambassador Bolton's proposal as well as his
threat to hold the UN's upcoming budget hostage will only reinforce fears that
the United States seeks to dominate the United Nations, rather than work
cooperatively with its other members.
Abandoning the UN's financing system of member state dues paid into the
general budget would be devastating to the world body. The UN is the only global
forum where 191 countries friend and foe, speaking in six official languages
can meet and work to resolve their problems.
A system under which nations pick and choose line items could raise some
draconian and strange choices.
Difficult choices
Should they fund the World Health Organization's bird flu preparations or
the investigation of former Lebanese leader Rafik Hariri's assassination? Which
is more important, feeding refugees from the genocide in Darfur or inspections
of nuclear facilities by the UN's atomic watchdog agency?
And should the UN's AIDS programs take priority or its assistance in
organizing Iraqi elections? Should countries only pay for language interpreters
for their own languages?
Cutting the fat?
These trade-offs undermine the fundamental organizing principle of the United
Nations members of the world community pooling their efforts and tackling the
full range of today's challenges, even though these problems have different
priority for different nations.
That isn't to say there aren't UN programs and offices that have outlived
their usefulness. I support the review of old mandates that was called for at
the September UN summit. But as with everything else at the UN, this will be
doomed if the United States pushes it too hard, rather than diligently building
support and addressing concerns.
While member states are the prime movers of the United Nations, the
organization's professional staff maintains and applies the various tools the UN
puts at the disposal of these governments.
The organization's central headquarters serve as the vital connective tissue
to transmit the political decisions made by member states and also to give
on-the-ground input for those decisions. These essential functions are
prerequisites to a working international system and cannot be funded on a
whim.
The fight in the U.S. Congress
Bolton's scheme would move much of the UN to a less secure source of funding.
But its real danger is the fodder it gives to those members of Congress who are
already looking for a means to distance the United States from the UN.
Legislation has now passed twice in the U.S. House of Representatives that
mandates withholding 50% of U.S. dues to the UN unless member states agree to
implement 39 demands. The Senate version of this legislation, introduced by
Senators Coleman and Lugar, would give the Bush Administration and Ambassador
Bolton discretionary authority to hold back dues payments.
Fuel for isolationists
Mr. Bolton's proposal holds appeal for isolationists in Congress as a way to
cut the UN's budget and gut its capacity to perform. It is a no-brainer for the
83 members of the House who voted to withhold all U.S. UN dues as a way of
forcing the United States to withdraw from the organization.
Many legislators not radical enough to seek a U.S. pullout will still embrace
"cut and gut" financing to score points with the Republican party's right-wing
core constituents. And Ambassador Bolton must know that his plan plays to base
instincts on Capitol Hill.
Sadly, Congress is not following the advice of eight former U.S. ambassadors
to the UN (including conservative icon Jeane Kirkpatrick). They said that
withholding funds once again and so soon after the United States already did so
in the 1990s would "create resentment, build animosity and actually strengthen
opponents of reform."
These former ambassadors understand the political price the United States
paid the last time it used funding to strong-arm the UN and are wise enough
not to want to do it again.
Making matters worse
Since Ambassador Bolton's recent statements have undoubtedly added to
international suspicion of the United States, the first step toward a more
constructive U.S. stance would be to withdraw the threat to hold the UN budget
hostage.
Ambassador Bolton has also been complaining that, as just one vote in the
191-member General Assembly, the United States lacks a voice commensurate with
its financial contribution. He seems to have a rather crude idea regarding the
relationship between financial contribution and political influence.
First of all, such a comment would sound strange from any of the five
permanent member countries with vetoes on the Security Council. But as a
description of the sole superpower's influence at the UN, it is patently
fanciful.
Cleaning up the mess
Ambassador Bolton's famous combative style drew a great deal of attention and
concern in the U.S. Senate debate over his confirmation. Although he has claimed
that the UN culture needs his blunt and provocative approach, thus far, it
hasn't won over new support from other nations for President Bush's stated goal
to update and strengthen the United Nations.
In fact, we have seen this movie before when Ambassador Bolton tried to
strike references to the universally accepted Millennium Development Goals weeks
before the September summit. As a result, President Bush himself had to reassure
the world of his commitment to development and poverty reduction.
There is a serious reexamination taking place within the UN, at the
instigation of the Secretary-General himself. The heart of that effort is to
make the UN more effective in tackling urgent world problems, like extreme
poverty, terrorism and the spread of weapons of mass destruction. But for this
to become a reality, the United States must play a constructive role.
The changes at the UN still under negotiation after the summit such as
management reform, a new Human Rights Council and Peacebuilding Commission are
controversial.
More U.S. engagement needed
To overcome skepticism and achieve agreement on these critical matters will
require not just the patient diplomacy of the U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations, but certainly also the capital-to-capital involvement of the U.S.
Secretary of State if not the President himself.
Don Kraus is the Executive Vice President at Citizens for Global Solutions
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