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PULL THE PLUG ON THE
U.N.
By Henry Lamb
June 28, 2004
The United States created the United Nations; now, the
United States should kill it. The bloated bureaucracy
has become moribund, corrupt, and is a hot-bed of
anti-American propaganda. The United States should pull
the financial plug, and let the institution pass
peacefully into history.
Not only has the U.N. failed to realize its original
peacekeeping vision, it has recast its original vision
and now sees its role to be the administrator of global
governance. The creation of the International Criminal
Court in 1998, and the unending efforts to establish
global taxing authority, are the last remaining elements
needed to empower the U.N. to enforce sovereign equality
over all nations - including the U.S.
Had the Democrats won the 2000 presidential election,
both of these elements would likely be in place. George
Bush, however, withdrew the U.S. signature from the
International Criminal Court Charter, and he blocked the
advance of global taxing authority at the U.N.'s
Monterrey Conference on Financing Development.
Democrats, the U.N., and much of the world severely
criticized the Bush administration for what they called
"unilateral cowboy" action.
The International Criminal Court claims authority over
all nations - including the U.S. - even though the U.S.
is not a party to it. To protect U.S. soldiers from
political harassment, the Bush administration negotiated
an exemption resolution by the U.N. Security Council,
two years ago. That exemption expires on June 30.
Kofi Annan opposed any renewal of the exemption.
According to the New York Times, Annan said:
"I think in this circumstance it would be unwise to
press for an exemption, and it would be even more unwise
on the part of the Security Council to grant it. It
would discredit the Council and the United Nations that
stands for rule of law and the primacy of the rule of
law."
Say what? Exactly which "rule of law" authorizes the
corruption in the U.N.'s oil for food program? Which
"rule of law" authorizes the corruption in the office of
the corruption czar?
In the face of certain defeat, the Bush administration
withdrew the resolution from further consideration.
Now, the United States should withdraw its troops from
all U.N. peacekeeping operations. The U.S. should stop
payment of all peacekeeping funds, and remove the item
from next year's budget.
This action should signal the beginning of an orderly
withdrawal from the United Nations system, while the
United States redefines its role in the international
community. The United States has already negotiated
bi-lateral agreements with 89 nations to protect U.S.
citizens from ICC jurisdiction. This effort should be
expanded. It makes no sense to continue to support the
U.N., an organization whose goal is the creation of a
system of global governance that is antithetical to the
system of governance created by the U.S. Constitution.
Instead, the United States should fashion a foreign
policy that celebrates and encourages individual
freedom, representative government, and equal national
sovereignty.
As difficult as this course may be, it is the only
course the U.S. can follow and be true to its founding
principles. As foggy as the battlefield in Iraq may be,
it could be the Phoenix from which rises a prototype of
the new vision of U.S. foreign policy.
The new policy should honor every nation's right to
choose its own form of government, so long as it poses
no threat to the United States. When any nation,
regardless of its form of government, becomes a threat
to U.S. security, then the U.S. should remove the
threat, and encourage reconstruction on the principles
of freedom.
The U.N.'s vision of global governance is built upon
socialism, a system that cannot sustain its own
bureaucratic weight. An American vision of equal
sovereignty for all nations, envisions a world community
of voluntary cooperation and mutual benefit - without a
global authority, a global tax, a global court, a global
army - or a Secretary-General.
© 2004 Henry Lamb - All Rights Reserved
Henry Lamb is the founding Chairman
of Sovereignty International (1996), and the founding
ECO of the Environmental Conservation Organization
(1988). He is publisher of eco-logic Powerhouse, a
widely read on-line, and print magazine. His columns
are frequently translated into Spanish and published
throughout Central and South America, Spain, Portugal,
and Italy. He has attended United Nations meetings
around the world, is a frequent speaker at conferences
and workshops across the country, and is a regular
guest on dozens of talk radio programs. He has
provided testimony for the U.S. Congress, as well as
State Legislatures, and has served as a consultant to
FOX News on U.N. affairs.
For eight years, he was CEO of a national trade
association for contractors, headquartered in Chicago,
coming to that position from CEO of a private
construction company specializing in erosion control
and water management structures. His background
includes teaching at the secondary school level, and
serving four years as a legislative analyst for a
county government in Florida. E-Mail: henry@freedom.org
The International Criminal Court claims authority over
all nations - including the U.S. - even though the
U.S. is not a party to it.
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