Preamble, Charter of the United Nations, 1945
A
core principle of the United Nations Charter is One Member One Vote. This
is not an explicit statement within the Charter. Significantly, the
Charter goes even further. The Charter states that the UN was established
to secure “the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and
small.” It places the rights of individual men and women before the
rights of states. That’s you and me and seven billion-plus others. The
rights of individuals are co-equal with and precede the rights of states.
What a glorious (and yet to be realized) ideal. But this ideal will not
become reality unless We the People do something about the UN Security
Council. The question is -- What? Dump it, change it or grow it?
As
events over decades have shown, The United Nations system as a whole, and
the Security Council in particular have become dangerously obsolete,
representing the whim, greed and political fundamentalism of one
hyperpower, or the superpowers acting in collusion to further their own
narrow interests at the expense of social, political and economic justice
for all member-states. Small-scale tinkering will not undo this behemoth,
now busily rubberstamping the US-UK led policy of invasion, occupation and
multinational profit. The greater common good is not the explicit mandate
of the Security Council. It must become that.
In
the past three years the United Nations has earned a new and disturbing
sobriquet -- it has become a member of something that the US newspapers
and networks, frequently call The Quartet. The Quartet, according to these
various sources, The New York Times, The Washington Post and the major
networks, is comprised of four entities – The US, The EU, The Russian
Federation and the UN. The UN, which used to represent all the
member states and indeed was set up to represent all the member
states, has now become a Bloc. It even refers to itself in its own press
pages on its official website, as a member of the Quartet. Therefore it
has accepted the rules of the power game orchestrated by the members of
the Security Council ,and consented to an arrangement in which the General
Assembly is pitted against the Security Council. The dominance of one
hyperpower, the breakup of the former Soviet Union, and the formation of
the EU, have combined to fracture the United Nations system, enfeebling
it to the extent that it is now the weakest link in the so-called
Quartet. An overwhelming General Assembly vote counts for practically
nothing, because the 5-member veto-wielding Security Council holds sway.
This was most recently illustrated when the United States was joined only
by Israel, the Marshall Islands and The Islands of Micronesia in its “No”
vote in the General Assembly on Israel’s declared policy to deport or kill
the Palestinian leader, Yasir Arafat.
Let me
offer a telling instance of why the United Nations, and in particular the
Security Council needs a major overhaul so that it does not violate it own
Charter (as quoted above) every day. On March 10, at a press conference
at UN headquarters, a million-plus petitions signed by people from all
over the world were presented to the Security Council. The petitions had
been generated through a massive online campaign by anti-war groups,
protesting the US govt.’s decision to go to war against the people of
Iraq. What did the UN do? Not a peep about it from Kofi Annan, not even in
his generally timid “off the cuff” statements featured daily on the UN
website. No prior announcement about the event was made by the UN
Secretariat, though they were aware that the petitions would be delivered
in 12 boxes to Security Council members. It was as if the event never
occurred. The United Nations bureaucrats in the Secretariat, the high
ranking Under Secretary General (s), those Brown Sahibs, eager to serve
their erstwhile White Masters, rendered the event invisible. Fact is,
Kofi Annan and his underlings, with their post-colonial mindsets, could
not hold their jobs or get promoted, without the explicit support of the
reigning military superpower. Look what happened to Boutrous Boutrous
Ghali, when he was ousted by the US.
So,
now the vital question is, Is the UN Charter just a piece of paper to be
stored on a musty shelf, or is it supposed to safeguard the “rights of men
and women and of nations, large and small” to discursive, negotiated
settlement of disputes and equality of all member states? Talk is cheap,
it’s better to talk, it’s cheaper than war.
Unequal Membership:
All member states of the 191-member body are stated to be equal. Each
member state supposedly has one vote and one vote only. The Security
operates on the non-principle of One Member Two Votes. The stated
principle of equality of membership is breached and flouted by the
structure, processes and exclusive (not to mention, exclusionary)
membership of the United Nations Security Council. The UN Security Council
is the only UN body that has permanent members (Article
23). All other UN bodies have general or rotating
memberships.
The
Security Council is the only body that can “adopt its own rules of
procedure,” (Article 30) unfettered by The UN General Assembly. Under the
United Nations Charter, therefore, inequality of membership is guaranteed,
implemented and enforced by the Security Council. In Orwellian terms, all
member states are equal but some member states are more equal than others.
But, hey, it’s not 1984 anymore, it’s 2003. Time for a change? Time for a
change that will guarantee the equality of all member states. While the
media and the policy wonks in the dominant states are concerned about the
lack of unity at this time in the Security Council, others are questioning
whether the Security Council should be taken apart and retired. Are We
the People more secure because of the Security Council? Or have we become
more insecure, because of the Security Council?
PostColonial Membership Structure:
So the question du jour that subservient member-states (and that
includes every member who is not permanently on the Security Council)
should be asking is Should the United Nations Security Council be
dismantled and repaired? Or scrapped and dumped? Subservient member states
include large global players like India as well as underserved small
island states and previous colonial dependencies such as Mauritius,
AIDS-ravaged new democracies like
South Africa,
poor landlocked states dependent on the goodwill of their neighbors like
Nepal, or dominated regions with little hope of religious freedom,
statehood and membership, like Tibet.
India
is the world’s largest democracy. It is a democracy that has struggled
out of colonialism and painful subservience to colonial interests.
Therefore it has a perspective that is diametrically opposite to that of
the colonizing and neo-imperial powers. Perhaps
India
should not be seeking expansion of the Security Council, as
it is doing now, so that it too can become a member. India’s membership,
if it happens, will make Pakistan and other South Asian nations feel more
insecure. That will not be a good thing. Building bonds between
blood-related neighbors and historically enmeshed partners is more
important than Security Council membership. Dismantling the Security
Council is certain to strengthen the General Assembly. Maybe India, in
the spirit of 21st century understanding of the paramount
importance of human rights, post-capitalist democracy, freedom and
equality of participation should not be seeking expansion of the
Security Council but dissolution of the Security Council. Maybe it
is almost time to dismantle the Security Council as a dangerously
obsolete, ineffectual, humiliating emblem of nineteenth and twentieth
century dominant power relations. Maybe India, Norway, Pakistan,
Mauritius, Sweden, Iran, Brazil, Sri Lanka and historically diverse others
can help move the UN into the 21st century with political
equality of all member states, at every level of operation of the
UN. Article 109 can be invoked to amend the UN Charter. However, all five
permanent members of the Security Council would have to agree. Talk about
double jeopardy “for the equal rights of men and women, and of nations
large and small.”
Members of the Security Council, (the only ones that really matter are the
five permanent members), the Big Five, exercise more political and
economic power than any other body within the United Nations. This cannot
be claimed to be a natural outcome of the historical development of the
Security Council, but the explicit intent of the original superpowers.
Inequality of membership was the demand of the original framers of the
United Nations Charter, all of them colonial powers and one emerging power
of that time, the US. However, the US was a worthy candidate for dominant
and exclusionary membership. The US had already practiced slavery for
100-plus years and was therefore well equipped to develop its capability
to become a neo-imperial power, exerting dominance over new member states
which included those from which it had previously drawn free labor. It is
comfortable with sharing power with the colonizing powers, all white and
all European.
China’s
later inclusion in 1949, (with
India,
under Nehru, deferring its own claim of membership, to China), merely
underlines the importance of size and potential economic power as a basis
for strengthening the inequality of membership. Again, the fragmenting of
the USSR and the collapse of the Soviet Bloc in 1989, has not knocked
Russia out of contention for continued membership. The politics of
dominance is therefore key to membership in the Security Council. Not
equality of membership but dominance in membership.
Acquiescence to the non-principle of inequality of membership was
demonstrated by those colonized member states including India who were
founding co-signers of the United Nations Charter. The postcolonial
states, recently independent in the 1940’s, 50’s and 60’s, accepted the
non-principle of inequality of membership, carrying on the colonial
tradition of political subservience to their previous masters, now sitting
as permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.
To
borrow from sociologists Max Weber and C. Wright Mills, the collusion of
elites characterizes many bureaucratic institutions. In the case of the UN
we have a collusion of male-dominant, wealthy national elites. And the UN
Security Council represents the crème de la crème of the elites of each of
the five permanent member states, joining in mutual recognition of their
shared elite power, status and privilege.
The
United Nations is of course a global, inter-govermental bureaucracy, with
salient and classic features of hierarchical, top-down authority,
bottom-up accountability, written rules, written communications and
written records (most recently, Resolution 1441), continual expansion,
division and departmentalization of tasks within agencies and committee
structures. The Security Council is in fact explicitly constituted to
exercise unequal global power, status and privilege, through its
Charter-guaranteed position at the apex of the UN bureaucracy. The
Security Council is the elite of global elites. It is the problem not the
solution. It compromises the one-state-one-vote power of the UN General
Assembly.
Are
We Secure With The Security Council?
What
has the Security Council accomplished? Has the Security Council
accomplished security for the world at large? The Security Council has a
sorry record of lack of accomplishment. It established the State of
Israel in 1948, in violation of its own Preamble and unleashed
seventy-five years of disenfranchisement of the indigenous Palestinian
people. The US continues to arm Israel and the Security Council can’t do a
thing about it. The Security Council proved unable to overturn apartheid
in
South Africa.
It failed to prevent the expulsion of Indians from Uganda by Idi Amin. It
was unwilling to prevent Britain from going to war to claim the
Falklands
Islands.
The UN Security Council was unable (unwilling?) to anticipate, prevent or
intercede in the bloody ethnic strife between Hutu and Tutsi in Rwanda,
and in the continuing genocide in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia was emptied of its indigenous
population, the Ilios, who were shunted off to neighboring Mauritius, so
that the island could serve as a military base for joint use by the
Britain and the US. Diego Garcia is currently serving the strategic
interests of the US and the UK as a naval base for operations against
states in the
Middle East,
Afghanistan and South Asia. And now it has failed to avert war by a
hyper-dominant member state against the people of Iraq. In each of these
instances, the individual and combined interests of the five member states
outweighed the interests of the 191-strong UN community of member states.
The universal and greater common good is not, and cannot be expected to be
the prime consideration of a small elite of states holding dominant power
in the Security Council. That power has become even more concentrated with
the US becoming the dominant member of the UN Security Council, supported
by the post-imperial politics of the erstwhile dominant world power, the
UK. This blatant concentration of power to the exclusion of all others,
makes the active pursuit of a universal and greater common good by
the UN, and particularly the Security Council virtually impossible.
Apparently WE the People must act to transform the UN, and particularly
its Security Council.
When
will the Security Council act to guarantee the guarantee the “equal rights
of men and men and of nations, large and small.?” Never? The UN appears
too cumbersome, too compromised and too preoccupied with its own survival
as a burgeoning bureaucracy to undertake its own reform on behalf of We
the People. It will again be up to those million-plus petitioners, who
swamped the UN with signatures asking the Security Council to act on
behalf of a negotiated peace that would spare Iraqi lives. That request
was futile this time. It fell on the deaf ears of the special-interest
Security Council. Better luck next time.
Chithra KarunaKaran
New
York, NY, USA