By Mahdi Nazemroaya
The
calls at the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in Tehran for reforming the
United Nations and democratizing the Security Council were not exactly new.
These calls for UN reform were embodied by the conference’s dictum of “lasting
peace through joint global governance.” These demands have been made over and
over again by various countries and groups throughout the years.
Nor was everyone
present at the NAM gala in Tehran a friend of Iran or open to the Iranian
proposals for reforming the United Nations. The visibly shaken Jeffrey Feltman,
who was uncomfortably sitting with Iranian officials in Tehran alongside his
new boss Ban Ki-moon, can testify to all this. Feltman is a clear symbol of how
contaminated the United Nations has become by the imperialist interests of
Washington.
The manipulation of
the United Nations for imperialist interests, however, goes back a long way.
From its inception, the United Nations was meant to facilitate the global
influence of the US after the Second World War. The idea of the United Nations,
which gets its name from the military coalition (called the United Nations) of
the Allied countries that was formed against Germany and the Axis countries,
was based on an agreement drafted by the US and the UK during the Second World War.
This agreement, the Atlantic Charter, was written out while the US was
officially neutral, but secretly supported the British war effort against
Germany and its Axis allies by sending supplies to Britain through Canada. The
US would later use the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii as a
justification for entering the war and getting the other Allies to accept the
Anglo-American Atlantic Charter during the war and then at the San Francisco
Conference in 1945.
The United Nations Security
Council
The membership of
the UN grew from fifty-one to a hundred and fifty-nine members between 1945 and
1985, with most of the new member countries being former colonies. The UN was
used as a tool to control most these former Western European and American
colonies of the Third World. At first the US and its post-war allies maintained
their domination over the newly formed UN and the former colonies through their
numbers and then through a Western Bloc monopoly over the structures of the
United Nations. Hereto this monopoly includes control over the agencies and
permanent veto-wielding chairs of the fifteen-member Security Council of the
United Nations.
The Security Council
above all has been used by the US as a means of protecting its interests. The
purpose of the Security Council veto is to reject any international resolutions
and consensuses against the national interests (or more precisely the interests
of the ruling elites) of the US and the other major post-World War II powers.
Except for the rival Soviet Union, the US originally controlled or heavily
influenced the other three permanent veto-wielding members of the UN Security
Council. Britain and the US were essentially confederated and had integrated in
1941 with one another through the Anglo-American Atlantic Charter. France, as a
declining power like the UK, was heavily dependent on the United States. The
Chinese seat was also originally held by the Kuomintang (Chinese Nationalist
Party) which was a US client.
US General Albert C.
Wedemeyer was the chief of staff to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, the leader
of Kuomintang-ruled China before Kai-shek fled to Taiwan after the Communist
Party of China took over the mainland. The US even envisioned a role for the
Kuomintang in governing the former French colonies of Indo-China. Only in 1971
would Washington lose control over the Chinese seat at the UN Security Council
when the People’s Republic of China was recognized as the legitimate
representative of the Chinese people by the majority of the UN General Assembly
and therefore handed over Taiwan’s permanent seat at the UN Security Council.
While the Soviet
Union originally made the most vetoes at the UN Security Council, the situation
began to change towards the second half of the Cold War and in the post-Cold
War era when the US began to take the lead in making vetoes. Ironically, the US
and its allies are saying that the international system is failing now due to
the double vetoes of China and Russia preventing foreign intervention in Syria.
No similar complaints have been made about the numerous vetoes cast by
Washington in support of Israel.
Eventually the UN
Security Council went beyond the function of protecting US interests after the
collapse of the Soviet Union. It became a tool for projecting US interests
globally as Washington began to push for unipolar post-Cold War hegemony. The
Chinese and Russian double vetoes signal an end to both Pax Americana and the
use of the UN Security Council to project US power.
The Secretariat of the United
Nations
Besides the United
Nations Security Council, the Secretariat of the United Nations has been
predominately under the control of the US and its allies. At first this took
place because the US and the Western Bloc had numerical superiority at the
United Nations. Thus, the first two secretaries-general of the UN were from the
Western European kingdoms of Norway, and Sweden. Prior to this Baron Hubert
Gladwyn from the United Kingdom was the acting secretary-general of the UN.
Swedish diplomat Dag Hammarskjold would visibly serve US and Western Bloc
interests to the point that the Soviets and others would demand he be removed
from the UN Secretariat.
As the Western Bloc
began to lose its numerical advantage, control over the Secretariat would be
maintained through the Security Council. The UN Security Council does this by
filtering all the candidates for the top UN post in the Secretariat.
Secretaries-general of the UN are appointed by the UN General Assembly based on
the recommendation of the UN Security Council. Thus, the US and other permanent
members of the Security Council have vetoes that can eliminate any candidates
that would be hostile to their interests.
Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev’s condemnations about the Secretariat of the United Nations,
which helped remove nationalist leaders from power across Africa and the Third
World, have a resonating truth to them. After a long streak of
secretaries-general that were predominately favorable to the Western Bloc, the
Non-Aligned Movement would push a NAM candidate into the UN Secretariat. The
NAM’s position is the basis for the elevation of Egyptian diplomat Boutros
Boutros-Ghali’s to the post of UN secretary-general in 1992.
Bourtos-Ghali was
the closest thing to the last independent secretary-general of the United
Nations. The world, however, rapidly changed since the end of the Cold War and
Washington expected a far greater degree of subservience from the Secretariat
of the UN. After the Cold War UN secretaries-general were expected to act as
loyal US stewards. This would start with the Ghanaian UN career bureaucrat Kofi
Annan.
Kofi Annan: An Enabler of
“Responsibility to Protect”
To his credit Annan
is a shrewd diplomatic figure that knows how to sit on the fence, but he has
cunningly served the US while appearing circumvent. Aside from the public
reports about the involvement of Annan and his son Kojo in the UN’s Iraq
oil-for-food scandal, the former secretary-general has a history of
legitimizing US interventionism and the occupation of other UN members. Career
US diplomat Richard Holbrooke, who was one of the central figures involved in
the balkanization of Yugoslavia, praised Annan as one of the most supportive
figures for Washington’s foreign policy in the Balkans. This is why Boutros
Boutros-Ghali was pushed aside from the secretary-generalship of the UN by
Washington’s veto to make way for Annan.
Annan did
Washington’s bidding in the French-speaking Caribbean island-republic of Haiti.
He followed the script of George W. Bush Jr. and the neo-cons to a tee in Haiti
and legitimized the US-led coup involving Canada and France that removed
Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. He would criminally give Washington
the cover of the United Nations in the occupation of Haiti.
Kofi Annan was also
instrumental in helping to put together the “Responsibility to Protect” (R2P)
doctrine with Canadian diplomats to justify foreign military intervention. Two
years after the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq he would give his rubber stamp to
R2P in 2005, which would merely become a reinvented term replacing NATO’s
“humanitarian intervention.” Before Annan was appointed as the joint peace
envoy of the Arab League and United Nations to resolve the Syria crisis he
participated as a panelist in a discussion about R2P and interventionism on
November 4, 2011. The event is important, because it gives an idea of where
Annan stands.
The panel
(Responsibility to Protect – 10 Years On: Reflections on its Past, Present and
Future) was undeniably supportive of R2P and NATO. Annan’s comments were no
exception. The former secretary-general and soon-to-be peace envoy told the
audience that he held a sympathetic position towards military intervention by
the US and NATO. He specifically told the audience that he supported NATO’s
military intervention in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and he tacitly gave his
support to a similar scenario in Syria. Two of the figures involved in the
event, Allan Rock (president of the University of Ottawa and former Canadian
ambassador to the UN) and Lloyd Axworthy (president of the University of
Winnipeg and the former Canadian foreign minister), co-authored an article
about R2P praising the war in Libya as a victory for R2P a week earlier in
preparation for Annan’s arrival to Ottawa.
Ban Ki-moon: An Executioner of
“Responsibility to Protect”
The South Korean
diplomat Ban Ki-moon is even more of an Atlanticist steward than Annan. His
record has been very abysmal. One of the first things he did in 2007 was to
join the US in criticizing the nations of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva
for “singling out Israel” for its human rights violations.
In 2008, Ban Ki-moon
would secretly negotiate and sign a cooperation agreement with NATO. Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov would express shock and the Kremlin would be
angered by Ban Ki-moon’s conniving. R2P would be central to the cooperation
agreement between NATO and the UN Secretariat. NATO’s “humanitarian
intervention” was shifted to a worldwide level through the cover of potential military
intervention under the banner of the UN.
Moreover, this tool
of intervention could only be harnessed and authorized by the undemocratic UN
Security Council and its veto-wielding members. In parallel the under
secretary-general posts for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief were
handed over to British career diplomats, one of which is Valerie Amos who has
sinisterly tried to bypass the Syrian government in establishing ties with
Syrian non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
In 2011, Ban Ki-moon
took steps to personally lobby and pressure all the countries of the
Mediterranean Sea to support Israel and prevent any humanitarian aid from
reaching the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip by ship. Ban Ki-moon ignored Tel
Aviv’s illegal military blockade of Gaza and its violation of international
law. Instead in Orwellian terms he demanded for the enforcement of the illegal
Israeli blockade, which he called the “legal channels of the Israeli government
pertaining to the flow of goods and aid” to Gazans. In 2012, Ban Ki-moon also
refused to meet the representatives of the families of Palestinian victims and
captives inside Israel while he was visiting Gaza. Inversely, Ban Ki-moon made
personal efforts to secure the release of the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.
As a result of Ban Ki-moon’s bias many Palestinians hurled shoes and stones at
his UN convoy as it entered the Gaza Strip.
Every nuance in Ban
Ki-moon’s voice and every line in his statements serve Washington’s interests.
Before the secretary-general even left to Tehran for the NAM summit, his
spokesman Farhan Haq told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) that his
boss was going to Tehran as part of his responsibilities and that the visit
“does not confer legitimacy” on his Iranian hosts. Giving political evaluations
of this type about the legitimacy of any government is a breach of the mandate
of a UN secretary-general, who is supposed to be a neutral figure and moderator
representing all the members of the UN. Moreover, Ban Ki-moon would go out of
his way to defend Israel at the NAM summit. His speech would also be
coordinated with the politicized report of the UN’s International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), which was meant to tarnish Tehran’s image during the NAM summit.
In regards to both
Libya and Syria, Ban Ki-moon has followed the US and NATO script for R2P and
regime change. When a major propaganda effort was launched against Syria
following the Houla Massacre, Ban Ki-moon and other UN officials quickly
followed the US line and condemned Damascus at a special session of the UN
General Assembly in New York City. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s June 8
condemnation was made even though it was widely documented that anti-government
forces were responsible for the murders in Houla.
The top UN official
would say that every passing day was bringing “new additions to the grim
catalogue of atrocities: assaults against civilians, brutal human rights
violations, mass arrests, torture, execution-style killings of whole families”
in Syria. He would conclude that the Syrian government had “lost all
legitimacy” and had to step aside. Again this was another violation of the
neutral position that the secretary-general of the UN is mandated to espouse.
Jeffrey Feltman: The Real
Secretary-General of the United Nations?
Ban Ki-moon’s
appointment of the hollow and comical US career diplomat Jeffrey Feltman as the
UN under secretary-general for political affairs is just one of his latest
moves that serve US interests. Feltman, a shameless careerist who has done whatever
he could to promote himself, has been exclusively in the service of justifying
the unjustifiable and pretending to be an expert on the Middle East. As a top
US diplomat in the Middle East, unlike his counterparts from other countries he
failed to master any of the local languages in the region. Moreover, he was
complicit in the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon and a US attaché to two foreign
occupations.
Like Robert Gates,
Feltman is a carryover to the Obama Administration from the Bush Jr.
Administration. He was a special assistant to American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC) heavyweight Martin Indyk in Israel and a representative in
the US Consulate General in Jerusalem. Everything he knows about the Middle
East is shaped and spoon-fed to him by the biased views of AIPAC. He was the
representative of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Anglo-American
occupied Iraq and later a central force for promoting sectarian hate and
division in Lebanon as the US ambassador in Beirut before he was promoted to
the job of US assistant-secretary of state responsible for the Middle East. The
UN’s Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL), a political circus that Washington has
tried to use to indict and isolate first Syria and then later Hezbollah, is
widely known to be his pet project.
Before Feltman even
arrived in Tehran, one of the first things he did was to declare that Iran was
sending weapons to Syria. This was immediately picked up by his friends
(contacts) in the Israeli media who have favored him over the years as one of
Israel’s most ardent supporters. Among others, the Israeli media also slyly
tried to mention Feltman’s name as less as possible and instead attribute his
statement to the entire United Nations as a means of hiding the bias source of
the statements and giving his account further weight.
Feltman’s
appointment by Ban Ki-moon shows just how much control Washington has over the
UN Secretariat. His appointment as the individual responsible for “political
affairs” says a lot about the political perspective that the UN Secretariat
either has or will adopt. If Hillary Clinton had ordered US officials to spy on
Ban Ki-moon as was reported in 2010, there should also be no doubt that Jeffery
Feltman was monitoring Ban Ki-moon in Tehran for the US Department of State and
that Feltman will brief Washington about the NAM summit. In essence Feltman was
the informal representative of the US at the NAM summit. It is also a very
legitimate question to ask whether Feltman or Ban Ki-moon is in charge of the
UN Secretariat.
Iran had announced
that it intended to propose a peace plan, with the support of Russia and China,
to end the Syrian crisis on the sidelines of the NAM conference. America’s
emissaries were at the summit too. The invitation of the Turks to the NAM summit
and the presence of Feltman and the officials of the Arab countries that are
part of the siege against Damascus, such as Qatar’s Emir Hamad bin Khalifa
Al-Thani, are all very likely to have ties to negotiations over Syria. Same
goes for the presence of Egypt’s Morsi. The US and its clients have realized
that their plans in Syria have not gone through and this could secretly have
brought them to the table in Tehran or elsewhere in the future.
A New Alternative to the UN is
Needed
The “real”
international community slapped the Obama Administration in the face from
Tehran. The US and all the UN structures and agencies, including the IAEA,
under Washington’s control were retorted when all of the NAM’s one hundred and
twenty members unanimously supported the Iranian nuclear energy program and
declared their opposition to the unilateral sanctions against Iran in their
final communiqué. There is still, however, more that is needed. As long as the
United Nations is not reformed these very same countries will be walking in the
shadows of the US and its allies from NATOistan in the hallways of the United
Nations.
The problems go
beyond the Security Council. The Secretariat is also a part of the problem.
Washington will turn to the UN Secretariat more and more as the Russians and
Chinese begin to challenge the US and its allies at the Security Council.
The UN has become
even more contaminated by Atlanticist projects to use it to legitimize and
launch imperialist military campaigns to enforce a declining system of privilege
and unjust global governance that Washington heads. The motivations behind the
drafting and institutionalizing of R2P at the UN are aimed at helping to
prevent this decline. This is why that either reform or an alternative to the
United Nations is needed now more than ever.
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