Posted on 04/24/2003 6:44:07 AM PDT by Pokey78
Mark Steyn says he is disgusted by what he sees as The Spectators ill-judged and idle defence of the UN
The UN should be appointed overseer of the peace not because that organisation possesses planning skills which America does not, but because to shut it out will cause resentment in the Arab world. However irritating are many of the do-gooders among its ranks, the UN has the advantage of being seen as an antidote to alleged Western imperialism.After reading those words in The Spectators leading article of 12 April, I hurled the magazine across the room and typed up my letter of resignation. A nervous dependant pointed out it might be wiser to line up alternative employment first. It quickly emerged that no other British publication would have me, and the only alternative employment was casual construction work. So let me try to explain instead why the heart sinks at finding a paragraph like that in what purports to be a conservative magazine.
Got that? Last month, the Russians were opposed to war on the grounds that there was no proof Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. This month, the Russians are opposed to lifting sanctions on the grounds that theres no proof Iraq doesnt have weapons of mass destruction.
There are a few striped-pants masochists in the State Department who enjoy this sort of thing and have spent the last four weeks pining for M. Chirac to walk all over them in steel-tipped stilettos one more time. But most Americans, given a choice between being locked in Security Council negotiations with the Russians, French and Germans or being fed feet-first into one of Saddams industrial shredders, would find it a tough call.
In the week before The Spectators demand that Kofi and co. be put back in the limelight, Id devoted this space to suggesting why the UN was not the answer for postwar Iraq. While one is not so foolish as to believe the scales will be falling from Dominique de Villepins eyes, one hopes ones argument might as least circulate as far as the magazines editors. After all, that was also the column in which I opined on the progress of the war. Were still on Cakewalk Time, I wrote. If Baghdad falls within the next seven to ten days, thats a quickstep cakewalk.
Well, I was wrong. It was six days. But that still put me ahead of that issues leader (Now that coalition forces are digging in around Baghdad waiting for reinforcements...), not to mention Julian Manyon (We now know that The Plan General Frankss plan, as Donald Rumsfeld has effortlessly started calling it was based on a number of arrogant assumptions. It completely disregarded a key lesson of modern history that invasions ignite nationalism, and that even the worst of tyrants may be preferred by many of his people to occupation by a foreign army.... Meanwhile, Saddam appears to be plotting an Arab Stalingrad). In an issue brimming with an unintentional hilarity not seen since Alexander Chancellors Falklands coverage, I was happy to do my bit to help maintain a few shreds of The Spectators reputation.
A thank-you note and a box of chocolates would have been nice; a large raise and comprehensive medical coverage would have been better. But at the very least, instead of rushing on to their UN bromides, The Specs editors might have thought, Hmm. Steyn was right on the war; maybe hes right on the postwar, too.
You dont have to be a genius to see that, since 11 September, we have entered a transitional phase in world affairs. John Pilger can keep boring on about Vietnam until hes driven away every last Mirror reader, but to any sentient columnist the analogy is irrelevant: indeed, a canny newspaper would design a software programme that crashed a columnists computer every time he typed in the word.
The Spectator is not motivated by anti-American animus, of course, and, unlike certain anti-war contributors to these pages, it was not on Saddams payroll. But its as prone as anyone to a slyer temptation: the seductive power of inertia in human affairs. The wish not to have to update ones Rolodex burns fiercely in the political breast. Brent Scowcroft, George Bush Srs national security adviser, wanted to stick with the Soviet Union even after the Politburo had given up on it. The European Union was committed to the preservation of Yugoslavia even when there had ceased to be a Yugoslavia to preserve. Indeed, as Tim Congdon pointed out last week, Britains own membership of the EU now defies any rational justification other than force of habit which is a mighty potent force. As Polly Toynbee wrote to Peter Cuthbertsons Conservative Commentary website a couple of months back, War without the UN is unthinkable. But it happened anyway. Imagine that.
Clinging to the status quo even as its melting and dripping on to your shoes is one reason why the Middle East is now a problem. Youll recall G.W. Hunts famous 19th-century music-hall song, the one that gave us a new word for the kind of militant patriotism most distasteful to the enlightened soul:
We dont want to fight, but by Jingo if we do,Whats often overlooked is what all this flag-waving was in aid of:
Weve got the ships, weve got the men, weve got the money too....
Weve fought the Bear before, and while Britons shall be trueWhy? Because the British coveted it? Not at all. Her Majestys Government was interested in cherrypicking the odd isle and emirate Cyprus here, Oman there but, other than that, they were committed to maintaining the Ottoman empire: all that jingoistic rabble-rousing not for British glory but just to keep some other fellows simpleton sultan on his throne. The Middle East is in its present condition in part because the European powers kept propping up the Turkish empire decades after it had ceased to be prop-up-able. It would have been much better for all concerned if Britain had got its hands on Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Arabia in the 1870s rather than four decades later. But, even in the later stages of the Great War, after the British had comprehensively sliced and diced Turkey from top to toe, Londons official position was that somehow the Ottoman empire should be glued back together and propped up till the next war.
The Russians shall not have Constantinople.
Says nearly everything that needs to be said about post-war Iraq.
Now another Middle Eastern war has come and gone, and the bien-pensants are anxious that once again an obsolescent institution be glued back together and propped in position. This time its the UN. The Spectator has it exactly backwards: its not the irritating do-gooders among its ranks, but the do-badders. The oil-for-palaces programme (as Tommy Franks calls it) is a classic UN boondoggle: it was good for bureaucrats, good for Saddams European bankers, good for George Galloway (allegedly), but bad for the Iraqi people. A humanitarian operation meant to help a dictators beleaguered subjects has instead enriched the UN by more than $1 billion (officially) in administrative costs. Theres no oversight, no auditing, nothing most businesses would recognise as a legitimate invoice, and, although non-essential items can be approved only by the secretary-general himself, Kofi Annan has personally signed off on practically anything Saddam requested, including boats, from France. The UN, France, Germany and Russia are desperate to keep the oil-for-palaces programme going, and they figure they can bully the Americans into going along.To Kofi Annan with love,
Bart
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