The
International Institute for Middle-East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES) from Ljubljana, Slovenia has been regularly analyzing the events in the Middle East and the Balkans. Dr. Jožef Kunič, a member of the
International Institute IFIMES and the president of the Slovenian Association
for the International Relations (SDMO) and Slovenian defense minister in shadows is in his article 'WHAT DIRECTION SHOULD UN REFORM TAKE?' analyzing the direction into which
the Organization of the United Nations should be reformed. The article is
published in full.
WHAT DIRECTION SHOULD UN REFORM TAKE?
INTRODUCTION
The debate on the UN reform, with particular emphasis on
the Security Council reform, has been on the agenda of the international
community for several years. The debate has intensified especially following
the failure of reaching an agreement within the Security Council on the attack
against Iraq. This led to a military intervention without an appropriate consent that
may only be given to such a decision by this authorised body. This was not the
only military intervention without prior approval of the Security Council. In
the recent time, such was NATO's intervention in Yugoslavia, and there have been many more. The ignoring of
resolutions adopted by this body, as well as the taking of military action
without approval clearly show that this body needs a thorough reform. The
greatest problem is the ignoring of decisions, which should be binding, without
any sanctions, as well as military actions without the approval of the Security
Council, the only body authorised to give such an approval. There are no
sanctions for failure to acquire an appropriate mandate and such de jure unlawful actions are de facto considered post festum as lawful. The "Coalition of the Willing"
was formed which took part in the military action in Iraq. An important motive for cooperation was the promotion
of certain common values. A coalition of states was formed, the security forces
of which have been deployed in Afghanistan, where they are acting in the name of certain common
values. There is another group of countries, the security forces of which have
been deployed in the Balkans. Certain common values are involved here as well,
and we could continue enumerating. If we waited for a formal legalisation
required according to the procedure currently applicable within the UN, many of
such actions would not take place at all. The world situation would certainly
seem to be much worse. It is not a good practice that a formally authorised
organisation is loosening the Gordian Knot, correctly from the legally formal
aspect, yet so slowly that someone who has enough courage simply has to cut it.
There are other areas of activity which would also
require reform. Many people on our planet are living below the poverty
threshold, a growing number of people is suffering from AIDS, there is lack of
respect for human rights in the countries with totalitarian regimes and gender
inequality all this shows the need to reform the system and make it more
effective in facing numerous challenges. The decision-making system concerning
the settlement of political crises and particularly military interventions
requires change. The decision-making process is too slow, economically powerful
states that contribute most funds to the UN system, Germany, Japan, Brazil, India, Italy feel themselves pushed away, while permanent members
who have the possibility of veto insist on privileges gained in the past.
THE UN AND
TODAY'S WORLD
In its 60-year history, the United Nations has
accomplished a great deal. It has decisively contributed to the neutralisation
of conflicts, prevention of armed conflicts and to a better life of thousands
of people on our planet. The Organisation is still successful in the field of
humanitarian activity and the world needs it.
It has however more difficulties in the field of
political activity. In some crucial moments for the whole world, the Security
Council was practically trapped in endless debates, in which ideas,
counter-ideas, various arguments and counter-arguments were intertwined,
gradually forming a singular Gordian Knot. It was cut and not only once by
a unilateral resolute action of a state. Such an example is the intervention in
Iraq. In the aftermath of this action, politicians' voices
were heard from states, who did not agree with cutting the knot, people raised
their voices as well, but in a year or two, practically everyone considered
such an action which had no legal support in the Security Council just as
if it had had the support. The international community did not legalise it de jure, but it did de facto. Legal experts maintain that such actions are still
unlawful, but politicians with power over the execution of potential sanctions
act in such a way as if such actions had been legalised by the UN Security
Council. It proved that, apart from some turbulent diplomatic encounters and
ill will voiced in public, it was practically irrelevant whether legalisation
by the UN Security Council was correctly and justifiably made or not.
The world has changed considerably since the United
Nations Organisation was founded. Moreover, it has not only changed; it is
still changing relatively quickly. If the UN is reorganised now, at this
moment, in such a way as to suit today's requirements, its organisation at
least as far as providing global security is concerned - will soon become
outdated. Some states or communities of states will become more powerful and
some economically powerful states may lag behind. It is difficult to say which,
but we may affirm with certainty that the dynamics of change is intense. The
organisational scheme or rules of action should not merely be changed, but set
in such a way that the rules will follow the changes in today's world. A system
of changing or adaptable rules should be worked out.
Many changes have occurred since the end of World War II
that affect the UN's functioning and efficiency. The ratio of power of states,
permanent members of the Security Council, has changed significantly in
relation to other states. The Russian Federation is relatively weaker, the United Kingdom and France considerably weaker, while China's power is increasing. These changes, however, are not
so crucial that they alone would require the UN reform. The United Kingdom continues to have great impact on the states of the
Commonwealth, and France on the states of the Francophonia. Immense progress
was made in the communications and transport sector, but this should facilitate
the work of the UN and raise its significance due to the flow of information,
quick access to information and to ensuring physical presence of everyone
anywhere in the world more easily. Yet this is not so. Many other circumstances
have of course changed as well, but two of them are crucial: unique power of
only one superpower and a more pronounced advocacy of values.
The fact is that the USA as by far the most influential state in the domain of
security issues dominates, which renders impossible dialogue between the five
permanent Security Council members on an equal footing, confronting them
occasionally with accomplished facts. "The first global capital has de
facto emerged. That capital city, however, is not New York, the place where General Assembly of all nation-states
periodically convenes. New York might have become the capital if the world.s new order had emerged on
the basis of comprehensive collaboration among nation-states, based on the
legal friction of equal sovereignty. But such a world did not come to pass, and
indeed the very notion has become an anachronism given the new realities of
transnational globalization and of the historically unique scope of sovereign
American power. And yet a global capital did emerge, not between the Hudson and east River but on the banks of the Potomac, Washington, D.C." (Brzezinski, 2004; p. 132). The relation of the USA to the UN.s role is clearly evident from the interview
given by M. Albright on the topic of the activity in Iraq and other foreign policy issues. In replying to the
question of what she would propose to the UN, she did not mention any political
issues, but advised that the Organisation should above all help the victims of
tsunami. She saw the role of the UN within the humanitarian rather than
political framework. (Albright, 2005; p. 3).
Another important circumstance that has gained in importance following
the fall of the Berlin Wall is the significance of values. "An
international politics based on interests may not be perfect, but it has the
advantage that conflicts can be kept limited, differences can be negotiated,
and compromises may be found. In contrast, an international politics based on
conflicts over social, economic, or religious matters means that conflicts
become unlimited and non-negotiable as one society and its values must
eventually triumph over the other." (Gilpin, 1990; p. 137). "Today the
Westphalian order is in systemic crisis. Its principles are being challenged,
though an agreed alternative has yet to emerge. Noninterference in the domestic
affairs of other states has been abandoned in favour of a concept of universal
humanitarian intervention or universal jurisdiction, not only by the United States but by many West European countries." (Kissinger
2001; p. 21.) "Once undesired, or even prohibited, interference in the
domestic affairs of other states has today been accepted as the basis for the
activity of many international institutions." (Jazbec, 2005; p. 4). The
intensity of global interactions has been unprecedented in history. The result
of global interactions is: considerably reduced significance of state borders;
non-consideration of the so-called "domestic affairs" of individual
states; and the emphasis on "generally applicable" values.
Some even believe that the world must return to the Westphalian system
since there is no other system on the horizon. "Those who have argued for a "twighlight of
sovereignty" -whether they are proponents of free markets on the right or
committed multilateralists on the left - have to explain what will replace the
power of sovereign nation-states in the contemporary world....In the absence of
a clear answer, we have no choice but to turn back to the sovereign nation
state and to try to understand once again how to make it strong and
effective." (Fukuyama, 2004; p. 163). It seems unfortunate that this is
merely a piece of wishful thinking. The world will not return to the old
tracks. It will follow the new ones and we have to accept this rather
unpleasant fact, examine it in detail, and adapt to it as much as possible.
The contemporary politics has of course not removed the national interest
from its agenda. Referring to values is not new either since the USA has continually intervened in the world in the name of
the so-called values, e.g. following the Monroe Doctrine. The reason for
activities or interventions has shifted from interests to values. "We should not simply regard, in other words, the
humanitarian and universalistic rhetoric of U.S. diplomacy and military action as facades designed to
mask the fundamental logic of national interests. Instead we should recognize
them both as equally real: two competing logics that run through one single
military-political apparatus. In some conflicts, such as Kosovo, the imperial
humanitarian logic may be dominant, and in others, such as Afghanistan, the national, imperialist logic appears primary, while
in still others, such as Iraq, the two are mixed almost indistinguishably. Both
logics, in any case, in different doses and guises, run throughout all of these
conflicts." (Hardt, Negri, 2004; p. 60). The contemporary politics
does practically no longer refer to national interests which are of course
present but, to a great extent, to values. These are not values in the narrow
sense of the word, such as the good, the desired or the worthy. Neither are
these values in the broader sense, such as goodness, beauty, justice, truth,
virtue and sanctity. These are values in the broadest sense, such as morality,
religion, art, science, economy, politics, law and customs. (Krašovec,
2003; p. 95). Politics most often refers to values such as democracy,
non-terrorism, freedom, and universality of human rights. All these values
which may have many different appearances are defined in a manner that suits it
most. The resolute advocacy of these values in a way that suits best the
leading powers in the world at a given moment has led some persons to a
somewhat exaggerated assertion that the fundamentalism of values was at stake
(Tariq, 2002; p. 285). It is certain that the global enforcement of these
values which, however, are not shared by all environments in the form
understood and defended by the leading powers, and which such environments are
reluctant to accept, has caused a reaction.
The reason, however, for an ever more pronounced referring to values lies
not only in politics. It is evident that following the period of technical innovations
which were particularly intense in the 20th century, and the increased pursuit
of material goods, most humanity needs value-support. Values played a major
role in the Iranian revolution, they are an important factor in terrorist
recruiting and operating. The fact that people in the developed Christian world
attach great importance to values was massively confirmed by crowds of people
gathered on the occasion of the largest funeral of all times, the funeral of
Pope John Paul II.
"Many politicians, activists, and scholars invoke
morality and values today as the basis of legitimate violence outside the
question of legality or, rather, as the basis of a new legal structure:
violence is legitimate if its basis is moral and just, but illegitimate if its
basis is immoral and unjust." (Hardt, Negri, 2004; p. 27). This "new legal structure" is
neither compatible with the logic of the UN functioning nor with its
organisation.
The UN system cannot be defined on the basis of currently applicable
values subjectively assessed by superpowers. It has clear rules suitable for
negotiations on the basis of interests. In a body functioning according to the
current concept, the basis for decisions made cannot be arguments, such as
referring to a particular state as being "a rogue state" or "a
member of the axis of evil", or that "it most certainly has weapons
of mass destruction because it cannot persuade the others that it has no such
weapons", or that "it most certainly hides terrorists, for it
provides no proof that it does not". Yet such and similar arguments were
of key importance in taking decisions that had a decisive impact on the whole
world, which the majority understood and knew that they had to be taken
although they were not legal from the formal aspect. This shifted the UN
Security Council from the position of a central decision-making body to a
marginal position where it can post
festum legalise the action; if it does not, however, everything is right as
well.
REORGANISATION: PROPOSED
DIRECTION
Those responsible within the UN have long insisted on organisation that
proved to be outdated. The principle of UN's organisation is that of a world
government with a kind of "parliament" in which all member states are
represented that were admitted to the organisation and the Security Council as
a decision-making body (if we leave aside the humanitarian field of activity),
which reminds us of a Central Committee in non-democratic and rigid communist
systems, that had a final say (and still has it in some states). Certain UN
members are so important that they have the honour to sit on the Security
Council similarly as in a communist system where some important members had the
honour to sit on the Central Committee. Some UN members are even so important
that they sit on the Security Council on a permanent basis and, due to their
past merits, have the right of veto. This again reminds us of a Central
Committee on which members with a life-long mandate sat and whose negative
opinion had the weight of a veto. It is more than evident that such a scheme is
not viable in the contemporary, postmodern era. The dynamics of the reform also
reminds us of the outdated communist system. Similarly as in the rigid system
directed by the Central Committee, it was impossible to agree upon key reforms
within an acceptable period of time, a debate on the reform has years been
underway in different UN bodies, although the reform should have been carried
through at least ten years ago.
An attempt at reorganising the UN presented to the public by the
High-level Panel (United Nations, 2004) and subsequently by the UN
Secretary-General (United Nations, 2005) should (in addition to the proposal
that the Commission on Human Rights be replaced by the Human Rights Council and
some other, less significant changes) change the Security Council's structure,
enlarge it, add some new members, but the basic principle of organisation
remains intact. It proposes that the number of Security Council members be
increased to 24, whereby, according to one variant, there would be 6 new
permanent members, while the number of non-permanent members should be
increased to 13. According to another variant, there would be 8 new permanent
members and 11 non-permanent members. Thus the aspirations of large and
economically powerful states to gain more influence in this body would be
satisfied; the system of veto remains with the same privileged states as to
date. A parallel could again be drawn with the communist states before their
collapse when new members were admitted to central committees, the composition
of which was thus reinvigorated, yet
major members with a life-long mandate remained, although they could no longer
make a useful contribution to a new, very different world.
Multilateral diplomacy in the postmodern era, however, does not yield the
desired results. Organisations resorting to terrorism as a method of action are
organised neither as independent entities not as multilateral entities. The
activities of both bilateral and multilateral diplomacy as mechanisms of
defence against such organisations bring about little success. These
organisations, as e.g. Al Qaida, operate on the principle of a network. This
network includes any operating points having such tasks as they themselves
choose and such an intensity of mutual links as they may deem necessary at a
certain point. The network has a joint basic aim of operation, and values
needed to attain this aim, while all other elements of its organisational
structure are extremely flexible. "The necessity of the network form of power thus makes moot the debates
over unilaterism and multilaterism, since the network cannot be controlled from
any single, unitary point of command." (Hardt, Negri, 2004; p. 61). In the postmodern era, it would be
reasonable to adapt the organisation of UN activity to such needs. Appropriate
networks should be set up for each action. These may be referred to as "ad
hoc coalitions", whereby the intensity of an individual member's activity
is not determined in advance, and with mutual links that easily adapt to the
needs. Such a network set up on a case-by-case basis would operate rapidly,
efficiently and would have no difficulties with members which have an
unfavourable attitude towards the common goal. Those who are "in favour" participate in such a way and with such
intensity as suits them best. No strictly formal preliminary criteria are
required for participation in such a network and a candidate which considers
that the values of such a network are incompatible with its own values, ceases to
be a candidate for joining such a network without any sanctions on the part of
the UN. The underlying principle of UN organisation should no longer be one
that resembles the organisation of a state according to the res publica principle; it should adapt to the new reality and
approach the res communis principle.
If there were a body within the UN with a task and position of a
coordinator, a position of a distinguished organiser of coalitions or
appropriate networks, a coordinator of repute who has acquired authority based
on such repute and the power of word, the UN could play a much more important
role than it has played so far. The organisation method and the modalities
of participation between the network or
coalition members would be gradually adjusted by members themselves, while the
operation of the network would be substantively supervised by a body which
would propose appropriate change, if required. The UN activity would yet remain
topical and necessary and would not find itself in a situation in which it
would become so inflexible due to its own rules and organisation that it
would need to be circumvented. In coordination activity, the body would respect
internal rules taking into account relevant facts. It would have the role of a
coordinator of flexible and voluntary coalitions and would assist in their
formation, operation and dissolution. There would be no need for a formally
correct world government that lacks sufficient authority in key moments and may
be overlooked both by the large and powerful and by the small. This
coordinating body would not need any members with the right of veto, since it
would not make decisions "from above" (according to the res publica principle), but together
with those interested (according to the res
communis principle). As it would not be a government but a coordinator, it
would not have executive powers but would act on the basis of repute and
authority acquired through serious and reasonable proposals to the network
participants. A body in which no member has the right of veto functions as a
coordinator and not as a ruler. The body should be composed of a roughly dozen
eminent personalities who would at the same time represent states playing a key
role in making decisions relevant for the world at large. It should also have a
possibility if the majority of members participating in the work of the body
so decides to invite other members (representatives of other states) to join
them in addressing a particular issue on an equal footing. The body supplemented
in such a way to address a particular issue would have a much better insight
into the situation in problematic areas and would be also thanks to the
repute of provisionally invited members - much more reputable and effective.
Non-respect for a formally authorised body is in most cultures excused if the
majority of people think that its decision has not been wise or has even been
harmful. Non-respect for a reputable and wise body is in most world cultures
considered as a dishonourable act. The authority exercised by a reputable body
is often much greater than that exercised by an authorised body.
The proposed solution may seem naïve and idealistic at first glance.
The proposed reform of the UN demonstrates that such a body could function.
Such a proposal could not be formulated within the formally existing bodies. It
could, however, be formulated by a panel of eminent persons: without a system
of veto, without formal authorisation, but with great repute.
The existing Security Council structure, or as it may be the numerically
altered one, could remain in place. It would suffice to set up the proposed
body, providing it with all assistance required for its functioning. It would
become an important supplement to the Security Council and a powerful tool whenever
the Security Council system might actually fail, either due to the possibility
of veto or rigid procedures.
CONCLUSION
The UN reform is certainly necessary. The world has changed substantially
since the organisation was founded. Mere cosmetic corrections without modifying
the very foundation of the concept of coordination and operation, especially at
the time of crisis will not yield results. Instead of a "quasi-global
government" which has no power to make key decisions and no power to either
prevent or encourage appropriate action, it would be useful to set up a body, a
panel of eminent persons of great personal repute, representing states which de facto govern the world. These eminent
persons should, without the right of veto and without the required consensus of
all, give their opinions or proposals which will have great political weight
due to their repute or substantial arguments. These proposals should not be
directives to one or two states, but recommendations to a network, i.e. the
coalition of the interested, that wish to attain a common objective and uphold
common values. Such a method of work should be eventually underpinned by an
appropriate regulatory framework, thus acquiring a new legal basis. This would
be continually upgraded, according to the experience gained. Such a system
would function much better than the one in place now, when a superpower finds
no other solution than to trigger appropriate action for the sake of its own
security and that of the world at large without obtaining consent of all those
privileged, with a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, or without the
required number of votes of those less privileged, with a non-permanent seat on
the UN Security Council.
REFERENCES
Albright
Madeleine; "George Bush doit travailler avec les alliés"; Le Monde,
Paris; 19.1.2005.
Brzezinski Zbigniew; The Choice: Global Domination or Global Leadership;
Basic Books, New
York; 2004.
Fukuyama Francis; State Building; Profile Books, London; 2004.
Gilpin Robert; The Global Political System; Order and Violence,
pp.112-139; Clarendon Press, Oxford; 1990.
Hardt Michael, Negri Antonio; Multitude; The Penguin Press, New York; 2004.
Kissinger Henry; Does America Need a Foreign Policy?; Simon&Shuster, London; 2001.
Krašovec Jože;
Vrednote na osebni in družbeni ravni; Drugi pogovor o vrednotah; Urad
predsednika Republike; 2004.
Tariq Ali; Spopad fundamentalizmov; Znanstveno in publicistično
središče, zbirka Alternative; Ljubljana; 2002.
Združeni narodi; Varnejši svet: naša skupna odgovornost;
(United Nations; A more secure world: our shared responsibility) A/59/565;
2004.
Združeni narodi; Poročilo generalnega sekretarja; (United
Nations; Report of the Secretary-General) A/59/2005; 2005.
Ljubljana, July
25, 2005
International
Institute for Middle-East
and
Balkan Studies (IFIMES) - Ljubljana
Архив материалов