What's New

Resources updated between Monday, October 15, 2007 and Sunday, October 21, 2007

October 19, 2007

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Libya was elected on October 16, 2007 to the UN Security Council, a position it will assume in January. Last month Syria was elected Vice-Chair of the General Conference of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency. These goings-on at the UN have been presented not only as perfectly normal but as laudable. While they have provoked strong reaction in some people, they should not come as a surprise.

The UN, we are told, is an essential institution because of its unique inclusivity. The argument goes that the goals and values of democracies on the world scene are dependent on their doing business with dictators as equals. One state, one vote. Regardless of the numbers of real people being subdued in various ways back home. Regardless of the financial contribution made by each member state to the world organization. Regardless of the extent to which the founding principles and purposes of the UN are flaunted by the member state every day of the week.

So Libya and Syria join a long list of dictatorships, despotisms, and human-rights violators in UN leadership positions -- positions that entail responsibilities diametrically opposed to their incumbents' qualifications.

Here are only a few of today's UN authority figures:

  • UN Security Council: Libya
  • International Atomic Energy Agency General Committee, Vice-President: Syria
  • UN Disarmament Commission, Vice-Chairman: Iran. Rapporteur: Syria
  • Committee on Information: China, Kazakhstan
  • UN Program of Assistance in the Teaching, Study, Dissemination, and Wider Appreciation of International Law Advisory Committee: Iran, Lebanon, Sudan
  • Commission for Social Development: North Korea
  • Commission on the Status of Women: Qatar, Togo, United Arab Emirates
  • Commission on Sustainable Development: Sudan
  • Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice: Libya, Russia
  • UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), Vice-President: Myanmar
  • UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) Board: China
  • UN Development Program Executive Board: Algeria, Kazakhstan
  • General Assembly Vice-Presidents: Egypt, Turkmenistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • General Assembly's First Committee on Disarmament and International Security, Vice-Chairman: Syria
  • Human Rights Council's Working Group on Arbitrary Detention: Seyed Mohammad Hashemi of Iran
  • Human Rights Council's Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, Member: Saied Rajaie Khorasani of Iran
  • UN Human Settlements Program (UN-HABITAT) Governing Council: Zimbabwe
  • UN High Commissioner for Refugees Executive Committee: Lebanon, Somalia, Sudan
  • International Labor Organization Governing Body: Saudi Arabia
  • World Food Program Executive Board: Sudan, Zimbabwe

In short, membership in the UN has no price tag, although, as this list suggests, Israel-bashing and anti-Americanism are its all-but universal currency.

This note first appeared in the blog of Commentary Magazine, Contentions.

October 17, 2007

October 16, 2007

October 15, 2007