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Mark Steyn: Blame the UN cheerleaders
The Australian ^ | July 26, 2004 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 07/25/2004 4:13:29 PM PDT by aculeus

I SEE the next decade's "Never again" story is here.

Just as we all agreed the 1994 Rwandan genocide should never be allowed to happen again, so - in a year or two - we'll all be agreed that another 2004 Sudanese genocide should never be allowed to happen again.

But right now it is happening, and you can't help wondering where all the great humanitarians are. Alas, Sudan doesn't seem to have much appeal to them, lacking as it does the crucial Bush angle and affording little opportunity for use of words such as "neocons" and "Halliburton".

In the Fairfax press, Robert Manne is still too busy fighting the last war - "Iraq is the greatest disaster in the recent history of US foreign policy. Nothing is more important than to try to understand how this catastrophe occurred." And if that means rehashing the same old column backwards and sideways for another two years - WMD, Andrew Wilkie, neocons, Cheney - he's prepared to do it.

There's an old, cynical formula for the prominence accorded different disasters by American editors. It runs something like: one dead American equals 10 dead Israelis equals 100 dead Russians equals 1000 dead Africans. But, to the average progressive columnist in the Western world, what matters is who killed you. 30,000 dead Sudanese don't equal one Iraqi prisoner being led around Abu Ghraib on a dog collar. But the minute the Yanks go in and accidentally blow up a schoolhouse, injuring an eight-year-old girl, the Mannes of the world will discover a sudden interest in Africa.

Manne's big gripe about Iraq seems to be that it was an "unnecessary, unlawful and unjust war". Each to his own. The Steyn Doctrine, such as it is, is that there's never a bad reason to take out a thug regime. Unfortunately for the beleaguered villagers of Darfur, the Americans so far are playing by Manne's rules. The USAF could target and bomb the Janjaweed as effectively as they did the Taliban.

But then the Not In Our Name crowd would get their knickers in a twist and everyone would complain that it's unlawful unless it's authorised by the UN. The problem is, by the time you've gone through the UN, everyone's dead.

The UN system is broken beyond repair. The Security Council was unable to agree even on a resolution merely expressing some criticism of the Sudanese Government - China, Pakistan and Algeria scuppered that. In May, even as its proxies were getting stuck into their ethnic cleansing in Darfur, Sudan was elected to a three-year term on the UN Human Rights Commission. This isn't an aberration: Zimbabwe is also a member. The very structure of the UN, under which countries vote in regional blocs, encourages such affronts to decency. The Sudanese representative immediately professed himself concerned by human rights abuses at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib.

As the Canadian columnist George Jonas put it, the UN enables dictators to punch above their weight. All Elfatih Mohammed Ahmed Erwa, the Sudanese Government's man in New York, has to do is string things out long enough to bog down the US call for sanctions in the Gauloise-filled rooms. "Let's not be hasty", Erwa told The Los Angeles Times. And, fortunately, not being hasty is something the UN's happy to do in its own leisurely way until everyone's in the mass grave and the point is moot.

A few days ago, the Australian Red Cross announced that three nurses from NSW were among those trying to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Darfur. Good for them. But, if we were really serious about alleviating it, we'd stop using that pathetically evasive word "humanitarian". "Humanitarian crisis" is fine for a hurricane or a drought, but not a genocide.

The death and dislocation in Sudan is a political crisis, worsened by political decisions every step up the chain - from the blood-drenched militia to their patrons in Khartoum to their buddies in the African Union to the schemers and cynics at the UN. It's "multilateralism" that magnifies some nickel and dime murder gangs into a global player. As for the West, if it's only "lawful" when it's sanctioned by the UN, then the almost inevitable "failure to get agreement in the Security Council" is the perfect cover for governments who would rather sit things out.

HERE'S another line for "multilateralists" to ponder, from a report by W.F. Deedes from Darfur in Britain's Daily Telegraph: "Aid agencies have found it difficult to get visas."

The UN confers on its most dysfunctional members a surreal, postmodern sovereignty: a state that claims it can't do anything about groups committing genocide across huge tracts of its territory nevertheless expects the world to respect its immigration paperwork as inviolable. Why should the West's ability to help Darfur be dependent on the visa section of the Sudanese embassy? The world would be a better place if the UN, or the democratic members thereof, declared that thug states forfeit the automatic deference to sovereignty. But, since that won't happen, it would be preferable if free nations had a forum of their own in which decisions could be reached before every last peasant has been hacked to death. The "coalition of the willing" has a nice ring to it.

One day historians will wonder why the most militarily advanced nations could do nothing to halt men with machetes and a few rusting rifles. Just over a century ago, after Kitchener's victory over the dervishes at Omdurman, Belloc wrote:

"Whatever happens

We have got

The Maxim gun

And they have not."

We've tossed out the Maxim gun for Daisycutters and Cruise missiles. In Darfur, meanwhile, the Janjaweed on their horses are no better armed than the dervishes were. But we're powerless against them because we have fetishised the poseur-multilateralism of the UN as the only legitimate form of intervention. And, because of it, in Sudan as in Rwanda, hundreds of thousands will die.

Mark Steyn is a columnist for Britain's Telegraph Group and the Chicago Sun-Times.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: marksteyn; marksteynlist; sudan
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1 posted on 07/25/2004 4:13:30 PM PDT by aculeus
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To: Pokey78

****


2 posted on 07/25/2004 4:20:15 PM PDT by aculeus
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To: aculeus

At this juncture, there's not much left to say except "Farg the U.N!"


3 posted on 07/25/2004 4:27:58 PM PDT by headsonpikes (Spirit of '76 bttt!)
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To: aculeus; Forgiven_Sinner; Constitution Day; Pokey78; Eurotwit; free me; Tolik; Slings and Arrows; ..
Steyn

FMCDH(BITS)

4 posted on 07/25/2004 5:16:09 PM PDT by nothingnew (KERRY: "If at first you don't deceive, lie, lie again!")
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To: aculeus
Sudan was elected to a three-year term on the UN Human Rights Commission. This isn't an aberration: Zimbabwe is also a member.

Time to get out

5 posted on 07/25/2004 5:41:23 PM PDT by secretagent
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To: aculeus; Howlin; riley1992; Miss Marple; deport; Dane; sinkspur; steve; kattracks; JohnHuang2; ...
Thanks aculeus!


6 posted on 07/25/2004 5:55:42 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: aculeus

UN is USeless


7 posted on 07/25/2004 6:18:36 PM PDT by xzins (Retired Army and Supporting Bush/Cheney 2004!)
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To: aculeus

This hits me as one of his best columns. Difficult judgment to make, I know. Thank God for Mark's work.


8 posted on 07/25/2004 7:36:38 PM PDT by Paul_B
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To: Pokey78

Thanks for the ping.


9 posted on 07/25/2004 9:24:04 PM PDT by GOPJ
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To: aculeus; knighthawk
Ping!
10 posted on 07/25/2004 9:37:42 PM PDT by Hat-Trick (Do you trust a government that cannot trust you with guns?)
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To: aculeus
There's an old, cynical formula for the prominence accorded different disasters by American editors. It runs something like: one dead American equals 10 dead Israelis equals 100 dead Russians equals 1000 dead Africans. But, to the average progressive columnist in the Western world, what matters is who killed you. 30,000 dead Sudanese don't equal one Iraqi prisoner being led around Abu Ghraib on a dog collar

Reminds me of the NAACP.

11 posted on 07/25/2004 9:45:19 PM PDT by foreshadowed at waco
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To: Paul_B
This hits me as one of his best columns. Difficult judgment to make, I know. Thank God for Mark's work.

It's difficult to discriminate among relative expressions of genius. What Mark does so well here is trash bogus intentions for their lack of results. You would have liked to have saved that small child from the fire - but somebody else was willing to go in and you stopped him. Your merit should be zero or negative and that is what Mark is telling me.

12 posted on 07/25/2004 9:46:06 PM PDT by jimfree (Never did no wanderin' after all.)
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To: aculeus

Dean on the money.


13 posted on 07/25/2004 10:12:49 PM PDT by Ruth A.
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To: nothingnew

Thanks for the ping to a full Steyn of cheer.


14 posted on 07/25/2004 10:19:45 PM PDT by Defiant (What's in a name? How would John Kohn fare in this election?)
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To: headsonpikes

bttt


15 posted on 07/26/2004 2:24:15 AM PDT by metesky ("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: aculeus
Zimbabwe and Sudan on the U.N. Human Rights Commission? Joining Libya to lecture us all?

Just add Castro and Kim Il Crazy-Nukes and the Muslims and you'll have a perfect mockery of any meaningful notion of human rights.

And we actually spend money on this thing?
16 posted on 07/26/2004 6:24:03 AM PDT by George W. Bush (It's the Congress, stupid.)
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To: aculeus
The genocide in the Sudan has already happened.

It , too, was on Clinton's watch.

Upwards of one million (some say two million) Black Christian/Animist Sudanese were killed during the 90s.

Once again, the world only pays attention if the dying is done by non-Christians. In this case, it is Muslims killing Muslims, only their color is different.

Where are the calls in the Muslim world to stop this atrocity ?

17 posted on 07/26/2004 6:29:14 AM PDT by happygrl
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To: aculeus
American Heritage interviews Ralph Peters: You’ve argued that nineteenth-century concepts of international relations may be outmoded. In fact, aren’t you pretty skeptical about national sovereignty, international organizations, and international law?

The idea of absolute state sovereignty is relatively new, and it derives from agreements among kings, emperors, kaisers, and czars for their mutual benefit. What we’re left with from the state making of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe is a legacy that tells us we cannot intervene in states as they slaughter their own citizens because they’re sovereign. By that logic, Hitler would have been perfectly legitimate as long as he killed only German Jews. It’s patently flawed logic. Any state that benefits only a dictatorship, oligarchy, or clique, that oppresses, brutalizes, and even massacres elements of its own citizenry, has no legitimate claim on sovereignty—period. Sovereignty is fine for contemporary Japan, the European states, or, for that matter, India. Mexico is now coming along and trying very hard. But states like Iraq, Milosevi«c’s Yugoslavia, and a number of African thugocracies have no legitimate claim on sovereignty.

http://www.americanheritage.com/xml/2003/1/2003_1_feat_0.xml

18 posted on 07/26/2004 6:56:14 AM PDT by happygrl
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To: happygrl

bump.


19 posted on 07/26/2004 7:00:56 AM PDT by headsonpikes (Spirit of '76 bttt!)
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To: aculeus

20 posted on 07/26/2004 8:10:00 AM PDT by Akira (Dyin' ain't much of a livin')
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