Apologise or we'll cut your funding, US envoy tells UN
From James Bone in New York and Richard Beeston
06/13/06 "The
Times" -- -- AMERICA’S bitter dispute with the
United Nations escalated last night when John Bolton, the US
envoy to the UN, threatened to withhold funding to the organisation unless it apologised for the remarks of a senior
British official.
Speaking at the Centre for Policy Studies in London, Mr Bolton
assailed Mark Malloch Brown, the British Deputy UN
Secretary-General, for the disparaging remarks he made about the
American public this week. “Mark Malloch Brown has a sentence in
his speech where he says the role of the UN is a mystery in
Middle America,” he said.
“Maybe it is fashionable in some circles to look down on Middle
America, to say they don’t get the complexities of the world and
they don’t have the benefit of continental education and they
are deficient in so many ways,” Mr Bolton added. “It is
illegitimate for an international civil servant to criticise
what he thinks are the inadequacies of citizens of a member
government.”
The tough-talking US envoy reiterated that the dispute could
harm important reforms to the international body. He also hinted
that the US Congress, which controls American government
spending, might reconsider US funding to the UN, which accounts
for 22 per cent of the organisation’s annual budget. “Congress
has the power of the purse and they feel quite strongly on a
bipartisan basis that America has a right to know how their tax
dollars are being spent, even people from Middle America,” he
said, with a note of sarcasm. “I don’t think we have seen the
end of it.” Before Mr Bolton arrived in London, Kofi Annan, the
UN chief, tried to play down the controversy. “I think the
message that was intended is that the US needs the UN, and the
UN needs the US, and we need to support each other,” Mr Annan
said. “I think the speech by my deputy should be read in the
right spirit and let’s put it behind us and move on.”
The public spat between Mr Malloch Brown and Mr Bolton
represents more than just a clash of outsized personalities. It
reflects the long-running battle of ideas over the role of
international institutions. Mr Bolton, a Republican
right-winger, has been a leading conservative critic of the UN
since serving as the Assistant Secretary of State for
International Organisations in the Administration of the first
President Bush.
Mr Malloch Brown, a former journalist who founded The Economist
Development Report and went on to work at a political
consultancy before joining the UN system, is a member of a
powerful network of internationalists. Their clash threatens to
undermine congressional support for the world body as it
confronts a looming budget crisis, caused by Washington’s
insistence that management reforms be put in place.
The row was sparked by a speech by Mr Malloch Brown on Tuesday.
Addressing prominent Democrats in New York, he criticised
Washington for allowing “too much unchecked UN-bashing and
stereotyping”. He singled out the conservative talk-show host
Rush Limbaugh and the Fox News cable channel, owned by News
Corp, the parent company of The Times.
“The prevailing practice of seeking to use the UN almost by
stealth as a diplomatic tool while failing to stand up for it
against its domestic critics is simply not sustainable,” Mr
Malloch Brown said. “You will lose the UN one way or another,”
he added.
America has a long tradition of isolationism, dating back to
even before the US refused to join the League of Nations. The UN
has been portrayed by far-right groups as a godless, communist
and corrupt “nest of spies” ready to invade America.
Relations began to improve during the presidency of the elder
George Bush, a former American Ambassador to the UN. The current
crisis stems from the split over the war in Iraq, when the
15-nation UN Security Council refused to give explicit approval
for the military action, and Kofi Annan, the UN
Secretary-General, dubbed the invasion “illegal”. The invasion
yielded evidence that UN officials or their families had
benefited from the Oil-for-Food programme, which was designed to
feed Iraqis during UN sanctions.
Mr Annan, under fire from Republicans, began a UN reform drive
and sought advice from his American friends, predominantly
Democrats. After a secret meeting at the home of the Clinton
Administration’s UN Ambassador, Richard Holbrooke, Mr Annan
named Mr Malloch Brown as his chief of staff in January last
year.
The appointment raised eyebrows when it was reported that Mr
Malloch Brown was renting a house on George Soros’s estate for
$2,500 a month less than the previous occupant. Even before Mr
Bolton was named US Ambassador, he seemed destined to clash with
Mr Malloch Brown. Mr Soros, Mr Malloch Brown’s landlord and old
friend, helped to fund the Stop Bolton campaign, aimed at
stopping him from getting the post.
Mr Malloch Brown has been criticised by dissident UN staff for
aligning the world body too closely with Democrats in US
domestic politics. They accuse him of allowing a UN staffer,
Justin Leites, to play a leading role in the 2004 presidential
campaign of John Kerry, violating staff rules. It is a charge
that he denies. “I don’t consider myself aligned with any
American political establishment,” he said. “I am British. I
have worked in the UN and in international jobs all of my life.”
Ed Luck, a Columbia University professor and author of Mixed
Messages: American Politics and International Organization:
1919-1999, said it was rare for a top UN official to criticise
the US so explicitly, but not unprecedented.
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