FOREIGN AFFAIRS
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER
2003

Why America Still Needs the United Nations
Shashi
Tharoor
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VOLUME
82-NUMBER 5
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Why America Still Needs the United Nations
Shashi Tharoor
THE
POWER OF LEGITIMACY
IN SEPTEMBER 2002,a radical new document declared that "no
nation can build a safer, better world alone." These words came
not from some utopian internationalist or ivory-tower academic, but
from the new National Security Strategy of the United States. For all
its underpinnings in realpolitik, the strategy committed the United
States to multilateralism.
This statement should not have been surprising, for multilateralism,
of course, is not only a means but an end. And for good reason: in international
affairs, the choice of method can serve to advertise a country's good
faith or disinterestedness. Most states act both unilaterally and multilaterally
at times: the former in defense of their national security or in their
immediate backyard, the latter in pursuit of global causes. The larger
a country's backyard, however, the greater the temptation to act unilaterally
across it-a problem most acute in the case of the United States. But
the more far-reaching the issue and the greater the number of countries
affected, the less sufficient unilateralism proves, and the less viable
it becomes. Hence the ongoing need for multilateralism-which the U.S.
National Security Strategy seemed to recognize.
The United Nations is the preeminent institution of multilateralism.
It provides a forum where sovereign states can come together to share
burdens, address common problems, and seize common opportunities.
The UN helps establish the norms that
many countries-including the United States-would like everyone to live
by. Throughout its history, the United States has seen the advantages
of living in a world organized according to laws, values, and principles;
in fact, the republic was not yet 30 years old when it first went to war in defense of
international law (attacking the Barbary pirates in 1804), and it has
done so multiple times since, including in the first Gulf War. The UN, for all
its imperfections-real and perceived-reflects this American preference
for an ordered world.
That Washington has often used force
on behalf of such principles makes good political sense. After all,
acting in the name of international law is always preferable to acting
in the name of national security. Everyone has a stake in the former,
and so couching U.S. action in terms of international law universalizes
American interests and comforts potential allies. When American actions
seem driven by U.S. national security imperatives alone, partners can
prove hard to find-as became clear when, in marked contrast to the first
Gulf War, only a small "coalition of the willing" joined Washington
the second time around in Iraq. Working within the UN allows the United States to maximize what Joseph Nye
calls its "soft power"-the ability to attract and persuade
others to adopt the American agenda-rather than relying purely on the
dissuasive or coercive "hard power" of military force.
Global challenges also require global
solutions, and few indeed are the situations in which the United States
or any other country can act completely alone. This truism is currently
being confirmed in Iraq, where Washington is discovering that it is
better at winning wars than constructing peace. The limitations of military
strength in nation building are readily apparent; as Talleyrand pointed
out, the one thing you cannot do with a bayonet is to sit on it.
Equally important, however, is the
need for legitimacy, and here again the UN has proven invaluable. The organization's
role in legitimizing state action has been both its most cherished function
and, in the United States, its most controversial. As the world's preeminent
international organization, the UN embodies world opinion, or at
least the opinion of the world's legally constituted states. When the UN Security
Council passes a resolution, it is seen as speaking for (and in the
interests of) humanity as a whole, and in so doing it confers a legitimacy that is respected by the world's governments,
and usually by their publics. When the resolution in question is passed
under Chapter VII of the charter-that document's enforcement provisions-it
becomes legally binding on all member states.
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CORBIS |
True-blue: UN peackeepers, Macedonia,
1995 |
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The composition of the council that
passes a particular resolution is no more relevant to its legitimacy
than that of a national parliament that passes a law; congressional
legislation, by the same logic, is not less binding on Americans if
the majority that votes for it comes overwhelmingly from small states.
The legitimacy of the UN inheres
in its universality and not in its structural details, which have long
been subject to the clamor for reform. Some Americans have scorned
the status and conduct of many of the Security Council members that
failed to Support the United States on Iraq. But this unseemly sneering
over the right of Angola, Cameroon, or Guinea to pass judgment in the
council overlooks the valuable contribution their presence makes. The
election of Small countries to the council bolsters its legitimacy by
enhancing its role as a repository of world opinion.
Universality of membership also allows the world to view
the UN as something more than
the sum of its parts, as an entity that transcends the interests of any one member State. The UN guards the vital principles entrenched in
its charter, notably the sovereign equality of states and the inadmissibility
of interference in their internal affairs. It is precisely because the
UN is the chief guardian of both these sacrosanct
principles that it alone is allowed to approve derogations from them.
Thus when the UN, in particular
the Security Council, legislates an intervention in a sovereign state,
it is still seen as upholding the basic principles even while approving
a departure from them. When an individual state acts in defiance of
the UN, on the other hand, it merely violates these
principles.
This is why so
many countries, including the most powerful ones, take care to embed
their actions within the framework of the principles and purposes of
the UN Charter. For examples of this, one need
only peruse a random selection of speeches by countries explaining their
votes on the Security Council, especially those concerning military
action. The value of internationally recognized principles resonates
across the globe and has been reified through 58 years of repetition--
including last March, when the council debated Iraq.
SHOWDOWN IN NEW YORK
TO SUGGEST-as did
some critics of the UN during
the Iraq crisisthat the organization has become irrelevant overlooks
the message President George W. Bush himself sent when he appeared before
the General Assembly in September 2002.
In calling on the Security Council to take action, Bush framed
the problem of Iraq as a question not of what the United States (unilaterally)
wanted, but of how to implement Security Council resolutions. Indeed,
these resolutions were at the heart of the U.S. case. Had the Security
Council been able to agree that force was warranted, it would have provided
unique (and incontestable) legitimacy for U.S. military action. The
fact that the council did not ultimately agree, however, strengthens,
rather than dilutes, the rationale for approaching it in such situations.
The council's refusal to serve as a rubber stamp for Washington will
give any future support it lends to the United States greater credibility.
Council resolutions do not serve only to codify the acceptable
in the eyes of the world; they also, quite directly, lay down the law.
In fact, several countries, from Norway to India, do not or cannot (as
a matter of politics, policy, or constitutional law) commit forces overseas
without the council's explicit authorization. Such a practice ensures
that these countries will not be drawn into military adventures at the
behest of one or a handful of powerful states. They send troops only
when the Security Council, speaking in the name of the world as a whole,
blesses an enterprise.
| When the Security Council passes a resolution, it seen
as speaking for humanity as a whole |
Nonetheless, since the Iraq crisis, Some critics have
suggested that "coalitions of the willing" will eventually
eliminate the need for formal structures such as the UN. "Multilateralism
á la carte," the thinking goes, will replace "multilateralism
á la charte." But even ad hoc coalitions require structure: many
states, when asked by Washington to contribute troops for Iraq, have
hesitated to do so without the sanction of a UN resolution or a UN-authorized
command structure. International institutions give the United States'
potential partners a framework within which they can feel empowered
on (at least notionally) equal terms-and without which they are not
willing to participate.
Put another way, the difference between a UN operation, in which everyone wears a blue
helmet, and a "coalition of the willing" led by one big power
is similar to that between a police squad and a posse. Posses are more
difficult to find and to fund than are police. Similarly, developing
countries in any coalition need financing in order to play their part,
and such financing is more easily provided through the UN's
agreed cost-sharing formula. Unilateralism is always more expensive
than its alternative, and in today's tight world economy, the costs
of international unilateralism may no longer be sustainable.
Even when a Security Council resolution is not legally
required for an action, the UN's imprimatur
can still prove extremely useful for the United States. A council decision
does not just spread expense and political risk, by diluting Washington's
responsibility for a course of action that might provoke resentment
or hostility. It is also easier for many governments to sell a policy
to their publics if they can describe it as a response to a UN resolution, instead of to an American request. The United States
has already learned this lesson: for example, when it has tried to prompt
countries to revise and update their domestic security procedures or
laws on terrorism, it has discovered that governments are often happier
to receive the same American expert as a UN
adviser than as a U.S. one.
In fact, part of the value of the UN (including for Washington) is the respect
in which its members hold the body. Such respect has permitted the United
States, on numerous occasions, to advance its specific interests under
the cover of international law. For example, UN
sanctions on Libya helped the United States achieve a settlement
over the Lockerbie bombing. And after the attacks of September 11,
2001, the Security Council's two subsequent resolutions provided
an international framework for the global battle against terrorism.
Resolution 1373 required nations to interdict arms flows and financial
transfers to suspected terrorist groups, report on terrorists' movements,
and update national legislation to fight them. Without the legal authority
of a binding Security Council resolution, Washington would have been
hard-pressed to obtain such cooperation "retail" from 191
individual states, and it would have taken decades to negotiate and
ratify separate treaties and conventions imposing the same standards
on all countries.
As such examples demonstrate, it is clearly not in the
U.S. interest to discredit the UN
or the Security Council. For every rare occasion when the council
thwarts Washington, there are a dozen more when it acts in accordance
with U.S. wishes and compels other countries to do the same. To marginalize
the council, then, would be to blunt a vital arrow in the U.S. diplomatic
quiver.
BEYOND LIMITS
WHAT ABOUT
the Security Council's structural deficiencies? For all the carping
about its outdated composition-which, by common consensus, reflects
the geopolitical realities of 1945 rather than 2003
-- no other body has acquired the kind of legitimacy it brings to bear
on world affairs. The council may need reform, therefore, but until
member states agree on how to go about making changes, it remains the
only global body with responsibility for maintaining international peace
and security.
Suggestions that the UN
should be replaced-by a coalition of democracies, for example-overlook
the fact that during the Iraq debate, the most vigorous resistance to
the United States in the council came from other democracies. Nor is
NATO a feasible alternative to the council,
because its legitimacy is geographically limited, as is that of other
regional organizations. NATO authorization might have been deemed sufficient
for the Kosovo campaign. But in that war, the target was another European
state, Yugoslavia. NATO's imprimatur would not have been enough to justify
military action in Iraq, which is why the United States and the United
Kingdom tried so hard to get the Security Council's benediction for
that action.
In any case, the council's final vote (or lack thereof)
on Iraq was not the only gauge of its relevance to that situation. Just
four years ago, when NATO bombed
Yugoslavia without even referring to the council (let alone securing
its approval), many critics similarly argued that the UN had become irrelevant. But the Kosovo question soon came up again
at the Security Council, first when an unsuccessful attempt was made
to condemn the bombing, and then when arrangements had to be made to
administer the province after the war. Only the Security Council could
have approved the arrangements so as to confer on them international
legitimacy and encourage all nations to extend their support and resources.
And only one body was trusted enough to run the civilian administration
of Kosovo: the United Nations.
The same pattern was not followed precisely in the case
of Iraq, but the events were similar. Resolution 1483, adopted unanimously
on May 22, granted the UN a
significant role in postwar Iraq. That the United States chose to give
the UN such a prominent position reflects not just British pressure but also Washington's own
recognition that it needs the world body. Indeed, the very fact that
the United States submitted the resolution to the Security Council was
an acknowledgment by Washington that there is, in Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's words, no substitute for the unique legitimacy provided
by the UN. The
body might have been written off during the war. But as with Kosovo,
it was quickly found to be essential to the ensuing peace.
Of course, peace can be kept in
many ways, and Kosovo, East Timor, Afghanistan, and now Iraq offer four
different models for how the UN can engage in postconflict situations. But peacekeeping
(which includes mediation, monitoring, and disarmament) remains exactly
the kind of mission where using the UN has advantages for Washington
that greatly outweigh the negatives. First, there is the obvious attraction
of burden-sharing: >UN peacekeeping allows other countries to help shoulder
the United States' responsibility for maintaining peace around the world.
The UN was not created to take humanity to heaven but
to save it from it hell |
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Second, despite some well-publicized
failures,UN peacekeeping works. The UN's "blue
helmets" won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1988; since then, they have brought peace
and democracy to Namibia, Cambodia, El Salvador, Mozambique, and East
Timor; helped ease the U.S. burden after regime changes in Haiti and
Afghanistan; and policed largely bloodless stalemates from Cyprus to
the Golan Heights to Western Sahara.
Third, UN peacekeeping
is highly cost-effective. The UN is used to running operations on a shoestring, and
it spends less per year on peacekeeping worldwide than is spent on the
budgets of the New York City Fire and Police Departments. UN peacekeeping
is also far cheaper than the alternative, which is war. Two days of
Operation Desert Storm in 1991 cost more than the entire peacekeeping
budget that year, and one week of Operation Iraqi Freedom would amply
pay for all UN peacekeeping for 2003. The UN operation that ended the Iran-Iraq War cost less
annually than the crude oil carried in two supertankers. Considering
how many supertankers were placed at risk during that ruinous conflict,
this makes peacekeeping an extraordinary bargain.
None of this is to deny that the
Security Council's record has been mixed. The body has acted unwisely
at times and failed to act altogether at others: one need only think
of the fate of the "safe areas" in Bosnia and the genocide
in Rwanda for instances of each. The council has also sometimes been
too divided to succeed, as was the case in early 2003 over Iraq. And all too often, member states have
passed resolutions they had no intention of implementing. But the UN, at its
best, is only a mirror of the world: it reflects divisions and disagreements
as well as hopes and convictions. Sometimes it only muddles through.
As Dag Hammarskjöld, the UN's second secretary-general,
put it, the UN was not created to take humanity to heaven but to save it from hell.
And this it has done innumerable
times, especially during the Cold War, when it prevented regional or
local conflicts from igniting a superpower conflagration. To suggest,
on the basis of the disagreement over Iraq, that the Security Council
has become dysfunctional or irrelevant is to greatly distort the record
by viewing it through the prism of just one issue. Even while disagreeing
on Iraq, the members of the Security Council unanimously agreed on a
host of other vital issues, from Congo to Cóte d'Ivoire, from Cyprus
to Afghanistan. Indeed, the Security Council remains on the whole a
remarkably harmonious body. Authorizing wars has never been among its
principal responsibilities-only twice in its 58 years of existence has the
council explicitly done so-and it seems unduly harsh to condemn it solely
over its handling of so rare a challenge. In any case, it would be folly
to discredit an entire institution for a disagreement among its members.
One would not close down the Senate (or even the Texas legislature)
because its members failed to agree on one bill. The UN's record of success and failure is no worse than that
of most representative national institutions, yet its detractors seem
to expect the UN to succeed (or at least to agree with the United
States) all the time.
Too often, the UN's critics seem
to miss another fundamental characteristic of the world body: the way it functions both as a stage and as an actor. On
the one hand, the UN is a stage on which its member states declaim their
differences and their convergences. Yet the UN is also
an actor (particularly in the person of the secretary-general, his staff,
agencies, and operations) that executes the policies made on its stage.
The general public usually fails to see this distinction and views the
UN as a shapeless aggregation. Sins (of omission or commission) committed
by individual governments on the UN stage are thus routinely blamed
on the organization itself. Sometimes member states deliberately contribute
to this confusion, as when American officials blamed the UN for not
preventing genocide in Rwanda-despite the fact that Washington itself
had blocked the Security Council from taking action in that crisis.
Indeed, one of the more unpleasant, if convenient, uses
to which the UN has regularly been put has been to serve as a pliant
scapegoat for the failures of its member states. Former Secretary-General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali ruefully noted this point when alleged UN deficiencies
were blamed for the purely American-made disaster in Mogadishu in October
1993. And Annan has often joked that the abbreviation by which he is
known inside the organization-"SG"-stands for "scapegoat,"
not "secretary-general." There is, sadly, considerable utility
in having an institution that, by embodying the collective will (or
lack thereof) of 191 member states, can safely be blamed for the errors
that no individual state could politically afford to admit. But those
who need a whipping boy must be careful not to flog him to death.
IN IT TOGETHER
THE UN'S RELEVANCE does not stand or fall on its conduct
on any one issue. When the crisis has passed, the world will still be
left with, to use Annan's phrase, innumerable "problems without
passports" threats such as the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction (WMD), the degradation of our common environment, contagious
disease and chronic starvation, human rights and human wrongs, mass
illiteracy and massive displacement. These are problems that no one
country, however powerful, can solve alone. The problems are the shared
responsibility of humankind and cry out for solutions that, like the
problems themselves, also cross frontiers. The UN exists to find these
solutions through the common endeavor of all states. It is the indispensable
global organization for a globalizing world.
Large portions of the world's population require the
UN's assistance to surmount problems they cannot overcome on their own.
As these words are written, civil war rages in Congo and Liberia and
sputters in Cóte d'Ivoire, while long-running conflicts may be close
to permanent solution in Cyprus and Sierra Leone. The arduous task of
nation building proceeds fitfully in Afghanistan, the Balkans, East
Timor, and Iraq. Twenty million refugees and displaced persons, from
Palestine to Liberia and beyond, depend on the UN for shelter and succor.
Decades of development in Africa are being wiped out by the scourge
of HIVAIDS (and its deadly interaction with famine and drought), and
the Millennium Development Goals-agreed on with much fanfare in September
2000, at the UN's Millennium
Summit, the largest gathering of heads of government in human history--remain
unfulfilled. Too many countries still lack the wherewithal to eliminate
poverty, educate girls, safeguard health, and provide their people with
clean drinking water. If the UN did not exist to help tackle these problems,
they would undoubtedly end up on the doorstep of the world's only superpower.
The UN is also essential to Americans' pursuit of their
own prosperity. Today, whether one is from Tashkent or Tallahassee,
it is simply not realistic to think only in terms of one's own country.
Global forces press in from every conceivable direction; people, goods,
and ideas cross borders and cover vast distances with ever greater frequency,
speed, and ease. The Internet is emblematic of an era in which what
happens in Southeast Asia or southern Africa-from democratic advances
to deforestation to the fight against AIDS-can affect Americans. As
has been observed about water pollution, we all live downstream now.
Thus U.S. foreign policy today has become as much a matter
of managing global issues as managing bilateral ones. At the same time,
the concept of the nation-state as self-sufficient has also weakened;
although the state remains the primary political unit, most citizens
now instinctively understand that it cannot do everything on its own.
To function in the world, people increasingly have to deal with institutions
and individuals beyond their country's borders. American jobs depend
not only on local firms and factories, but also on faraway markets,
grants of licenses and access from foreign governments, international
trade rules that ensure the free movement of goods and persons, and
international financial institutions that ensure stability. There are
thus few unilateralists in the American business community. Americans'
safety, meanwhile, depends not only on local police forces, but also
on guarding against the global spread of pollution, disease, terror,
illegal drugs, and WMD. As
the World Health Organization's successful battle against the dreaded
SARs epidemic has demonstrated, "problems without passports"
are those that only international action can solve.
Fortunately, the UN
and its broad family of agencies have, in nearly six decades
of life, built a remarkable record of expertise and achievement on these
issues. The UN has brought humanitarian relief to millions
in need and helped people rebuild their countries from the ruins of
war. It has challenged poverty, fought apartheid, protected the rights
of children, promoted decolonization and democracy, and placed environmental
and gender issues at the top of the world's agenda. These are no small
achievements, and represent issues the United States cannot afford to
neglect.
The United Nations is a valuable antidote to the tendency
to disregard the problems of the periphery-the kinds of problems Americans
may prefer not to deal with but that are impossible to ignore. Handling
them multilaterally is the obvious way to ensure they are tackled; it
is also the only way. Americans will be safer in a world improved by
the UN's efforts, which will be needed long after
Iraq has passed from the headlines.
KEEPING GULLIVER ON BOARD
THE EXERCISE of American power
may well be the central issue in world politics today, but that power
is only enhanced if its use is perceived as legitimate. Ironically,
although many in Washington distrust the world body, many abroad think
the Security Council is too much in thrall to its most powerful member.
The debates over Iraq proved that that is not always the case; but even
if it were, it is far better to have a world organization that is anchored
in geopolitical reality than one that is too detached from the verities
of global power to be effective. A UN that provides a vital political and diplomatic
framework for the actions of its most powerful member, while casting
them in the context of international law and legitimacy (and bringing
to bear on them the perspectives and concerns of its universal membership)
is a UN that remains essential to the world in which
we live.
The goals of the charter, however, cannot be met without
embracing the fundamental premise that President Harry Truman enunciated
in 1945:
| We all have to recognize that no matter how great our
strength, we must deny ourselves the license to do always as we
please. No one nation... can or should expect any special privilege
which harms any other nation. ... Unless we are all willing to pay
that price, no organization for world peace can accomplish its purpose.
And what a reasonable price that is! |
The UN, from
the start, assumed the willingness of its members to accept restraints
on their own short-term goals and policies by subordinating their actions
to internationally agreed rules and procedures, in the broader long-term
interests of world order. This was an explicit alternative to the model
of past centuries, when strong states developed their military power
to enforce their politics, and weak states took refuge in alliances
with stronger ones. This formula guaranteed largescale warfare; as
Franklin Roosevelt put it to both houses of Congress after the Allied
conference at Yalta, the UN would replace the arms races, military alliances,
balance-of-power politics, and "all the arrangements that had led
to war" so often in the past. The UN
was meant to help create a world in which its member states would
overcome their vulnerabilities by embedding themselves in international
institutions, where the use of force would be subjected to the constraints
of international law. Power politics would not disappear from the face
of the earth but would be practiced with due regard for universally
upheld rules and norms. Such a system also offered the United States-then,
as now, the world's unchallenged superpower-the assurance that other
countries would not feel the need to develop coalitions to balance its
power. Instead, the UN provided a framework for them to work in
partnership with the United States.
This is the system to which the world must now rededicate
itself. Votaries of the UN have
long argued that if the world body did not exist, we would have to invent
it. Sadly, it is hard to believe that today's leaders could manage such
a feat. Hammarskjöld once described the UN
as an adventure-a Santa Maria battling its way through storms
and uncharted oceans to a new world, only to find that the people on
shore blamed the storms on the ship itself. Five decades later, Hammarskjöld's
metaphor still holds true: the UN continues to sail in turbulent waters
and is still blamed for the squalls that assail it.
This brings to mind another metaphor: if international
institutions serve principally as ropes that tie Gulliver down, then
Gulliver will have every interest in snapping the ropes and breaking
free of the constraints imposed on him. If, however, these institutions
constitute a vessel sturdy enough for Gulliver to sail, and the Lilliputians
cheerfully help him man the bridge and hoist the mainsail because they
want to travel to the same destination, then Gulliver is unlikely to
jump ship and try to swim on alone. So the world should similarly hold
fast to its determination to live by shared values and common rules
and to steer together the multilateral institutions that the enlightened
leaders of the last century bequeathed to us. Only by doing so will
our ship best the storm-with Gulliver still on board.
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Copyright 2003, Foreign Affairs SHASHI
THAROOR is UN Undersecretary-General for Communications and Public
Information and the author of eight books, including the forthcoming
Nehru: The Invention of India. These are his personal views. |
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