by Caroline Glick
US  Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the chairwoman of the House Foreign  Affairs Committee, kicked up a political storm this week. On Tuesday,  Ros-Lehtinen introduced the United Nations Transparency, Accountability  and Reform Act. If passed into law it would place stringent restrictions  on US funding of the UN's budget.
The US  currently funds 22 percent of the UN's general budget. That budget is  passed by the General Assembly with no oversight by the US. America's  22% share of the budget is nonvoluntary, meaning the US may exert no  influence over how its taxpayers' funds are spent.
If  Ros-Lehtinen's act is passed into law, the UN will have two years to  enact budgetary reforms that would render a minimum of 80% of its budget  financing voluntary. If the UN does not make the required reforms, the  US government will be enjoined to withhold 50% of its nonvoluntary UN  budget allocations.
Beyond this overarching  demand for UN budgetary reform, the act contains several specific  actions that are directed against UN institutions that advance  anti-American and anti-Israel agendas.
Ros-Lehtinen's  act would defund the UN Human Rights Committee until such time as it  repeals its permanent anti-Israel resolution, and prohibits countries  that support terror and are under UN Security Council sanctions from  serving as its members. It would also prohibit the US from serving as a  member of the UNHRC until such reforms are enacted.
Ros-Lehtinen's  bill defunds all UN activities related to the libelous Goldstone  Report, and the anti-Semitic Durban process. It vastly curtails and  conditions US funding of UNRWA, the Palestinian refugee agency permeated  by members of terrorist organizations. UNRWA's facilities are routinely  used to plan, execute and incite terrorism against Israel and to  indoctrinate Palestinians to seek Israel's destruction.
The  bill pays special attention to the Palestinian Authority's plan to have  the UN Security Council and General Assembly vote in favor of  Palestinian statehood later this month. The bill would cut off US  funding to any UN agency or organization that upgrades the Palestinian  mission to the UN in any way in the aftermath of a General Assembly vote  in favor of such an upgrade in representation.
Ros-Lehtinen's  bill, which has 57 co-sponsors, provides detailed explanations for how  the targeted UN agencies and activities harm US interests. It notes that  the US's membership since 2009 in the UN Human Rights Council has had  no impact whatsoever on the UNHRC's anti-Israel and anti-American  agenda. The US has been unable to temper in any way the UNHRC's actions  and resolutions, including its decisions to form the Goldstone  Commission and to endorse the findings of the Goldstone Report, and its  continued support and organization of the anti-Semitic Durban  conferences in which Israel is attacked and libeled as an illegitimate,  racist state.
The bill notes that despite US  efforts to extend oversight over UNRWA's hiring process, UNRWA continues  to hire members of terrorist organizations. The bill provides a long  list of UNRWA employees who have perpetrated terrorist attacks.
Ignoring  its fact-based assessment of UN failings, the Obama administration has  rejected the Ros-Lehtinen bill out of hand. Speaking to Politico,  an administration source panned the bill, claiming, "This draft  legislation is dated, tired and frankly unresponsive to the positive  role being played by the UN."
State Department  spokeswoman Victoria Nuland attacked the bill, saying it would  "seriously undermine our international standing and dangerously weaken  the UN as an instrument to advance US national security goals."
Since  taking office, Barack Obama has taken concerted steps to place  cooperation with the UN at the top of his foreign policy agenda. Through  word and deed, Obama has shown that he believes that the US should  minimize the extent to which it operates independently of the UN on the  global stage.
Obama and his advisers give four  arguments to support their view that the UN should effectively replace  the US as the global leader. First, they say that the US cannot operate  unilaterally on the global stage.
Second, they insinuate that operations undertaken outside the UN umbrella are somehow illegitimate.
To  support this contention, they intimate that the reason the US was  bogged down in Iraq following its 2003 invasion was because it did not  receive specific Security Council permission to invade. In contrast,  they point to the current Security Council-sanctioned military operation  in Libya and the 1991 Security Council-sanctioned Persian Gulf War as  success stories. And they attribute those missions' successes to their  conduct under the UN aegis.
The third argument,  which comes across clearly in Nuland's statement, is that to have  credibility in global affairs, the US must not throw its weight around  at the UN. If it objects too strenuously to the way things are done, or  makes its support for the UN conditional on UN actions, then all the  other UN members will be offended and refuse to cooperate with the US.
The final argument they make is reflected in the statement the unnamed administration source gave to Politico.  Quite simply, in their view, trying to hold the UN accountable for its  actions is old fashioned. In today's world, accountability is out. And  anyone who doesn't understand that is simply out of touch, "dated,  tired."
All of these arguments are false. In  the first instance, it is simply untrue that the US is incapable of  operating unilaterally. Aside from Saudi Arabia in 1991 and Kuwait in  2003, the US did not need its partners in Iraq. Of all the non-American  participants in the US military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, only  Britain made an impact on fighting. And frankly, the US would have  secured Saudi, Kuwaiti and British cooperation without ever involving  the UN.
Indeed, under both Democrat and  Republican administrations, the US has frequently acted successfully  outside the UN framework. In 1998 the Clinton administration could not  get UN Security Council agreement to fight in Kosovo, and so it ignored  the UN and fought alongside its NATO allies.
The  US had 21 allied militaries fighting alongside its forces in Iraq,  despite the fact that the operation was conducted outside the UN  Security Council umbrella.
The US-initiated  Proliferation Security Initiative founded in 2003 is arguably the US's  most successful multilateral effort to stem the proliferation of weapons  of mass destruction. Operating completely outside the UN framework, the  PSI has 98 members.
As for the two major US  military operations that have been carried out in recent memory by force  of UN Security Council resolutions, the jury is still out on both. Due  to the Security Council's restrictions on the mission of the 1991  Persian Gulf War, the US permitted Saddam Hussein to remain in power  after removing his invasion forces from Kuwait.
In  the 12 years between that war and the 2003 Iraq war, Saddam killed  hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who - at US urging - tried to overthrow  him. He exploited the Security Council sanctions to starve his people  for propaganda purposes while he and his cronies enriched themselves  through corrupt UN oil-for-food contracts.
Had  Saddam been overthrown in 1991, his replacement by a pro-Western  successor regime could have been enacted more smoothly and at far  smaller cost to the US and the Iraqi people.
As  for Libya, reports from Tripoli indicate that critics of the UN mission  were correct. In overthrowing Muammar Gaddafi, the US has apparently  enabled a situation in which any successor regime will likely be  dominated by al-Qaida-aligned political and military forces allied with  Iran.
The claim that the US will lose influence  in international affairs if it is perceived as bossy by its fellow UN  nation states is similarly groundless. The hard truth is that no one  goes along with the UN simply because it is the UN. States are  reasonably and consistently opportunistic in their cooperation with the  UN. They support the UN when it supports their interests and they ignore  the UN when it opposes their interests.
States  do not oppose the US at the UN because they consider it bossy. They  oppose the US at the UN because they believe it serves their national  interests to oppose the US and its interests. It is due to clashing  interests, not the comportment of US representatives, that the Obama  administration has failed to exert any influence over the UNHRC's agenda  despite its commitment to "engagement."
Clashing  national interests are the reason the Obama administration has failed  to secure Security Council support for anything approaching effective  measures against Iran's nuclear weapons program.
The  final administration argument - that it is déclassé to demand that the  UN stop advancing the causes of America's enemies - is not simply  peevish and insulting. It is indicative of the culture that motivates  the administration to cling to its UN-centered agenda despite its  obvious and repeated failure.
As the easy  refutation of all the administration's arguments makes clear, the agenda  is not a product of rational thought. It is the product of the  groupthink that is endemic at the universities from whence Obama and his  advisers have emerged. This groupthink is directed by unquestioned  clichés that are passed off as sophisticated reasoning. These include  such pearls of wisdom as "global governance," "Twitter revolution,"  "multilateralism" and "interdependence."
These  clichés have become articles of faith that are impermeable to fact and  reality. As a consequence, those who adhere to them will never  acknowledge their failure to deliver on their utopian promises. Instead  they attack anyone who points out their failure as "dated," and as  "tired" old fogies who are too unsophisticated to understand the world.
We  see this attitude at work in all aspects of Obama's foreign policy. For  instance, Obama came into office with the view that the reason all  efforts to date to successfully complete a peace deal between Israel and  the Palestinians failed because the Palestinians didn't trust the US to  "deliver" Israel. To remedy this perceived problem, Obama has  consistently sought to "put daylight" between the US and Israel. This  policy has failed abysmally, as the PA's current UN statehood bid shows.  And yet the administration continues to cling to it, because  acknowledging its failure would involve renouncing a cliché.
So,  too, the administration's policy of engaging Iran has brought the  mullocracy to the brink of a nuclear arsenal, empowered it to violently  repress pro-American democracy protesters, expand its influence in Iraq  and Afghanistan, take over Lebanon, and make inroads in Egypt, Libya and  beyond. And yet, despite all of this, the administration refuses to  admit its policy is wrong and adopt a more effective one, because doing  so would involve acknowledging that "engagement" is not the panacea it  was cracked up to be.
Ros-Lehtinen's bill is  expected to be blocked in the Democrat-controlled Senate before Obama  has the opportunity to veto it. This is a pity not simply because the  bill would advance US interests and the cause of freedom. It is a pity  because it shows that the foreign policy debate in the US is now a fight  between those who trust facts and those who trust clichés.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/09/cliche-based-foreign-policy.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

 
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