(Archived document, may contain errors)
654 June 2,1988 US. LEVERAGE AT TEE U.N ALL THAT MONEY CAN BUY
Charles M. Lichenstein Distinguished Fellow INTRODUCI'ION This
year, as USUBI, the Unit ed Stam will contrikte nearly $1 billion
to support United Nations activitid This is about one-fourth of
total U.N. outlays and far more than any other country contriites.
In 1986, for example, the Soviet Union gave the organization only
about $120 millio n or less thau 3 prcent of t0tal;U.N.
expenditures. The Soviet Union contriites 102 percent of the
so-called assessd budget, which supports the U.N.
Secretariat in New York and a few specialized U.N. agencies, but
less than 1 percent of the costs of the hu manitarian and economic
development programs that consume the bulk of U.N. resources
Striking US. Generosity. Even more striking is the contrast between
U.S. generosity and the combined contriitions of the some lB
nonaligned US. member-states that dominat e U.N. proceedings. These
are the countries generally labeled 'Third World In aggregate the
Third World contributes only 95 percent of the assessed U.N.
budget. Just 80 of these nations constitute an absolute controlling
majority in the U.N. General Assemb l y, but together contriite
less than one-tenth of one percent of the total assessed U.N.
budget It might seem that the preeminent role of U.S. funding at
the U.N. would give the U.S substantial leverage to influence U.N.
budgets, policies, and programs. Bu t this presumption is belied by
the evidence of more than a decade. Most U.N. members pay attention
to U.S. views only rarely. Frequently, the U.S. votes almost alone
in opposition to key U.N. measures. According to the most recent
State Department compila t ion, in fact the average voting
coincidence with the U.S. among all U.N. members in the 1987
General Assembly was a mere 18.6 percent Dead in its Tracks. Only
in the past couple of years when the Reagan Administration under
orders from Congress, held back a substantial part of the expected
U.S. contribution to the U.N. has the U.S. wielded some noticeable
leverage at the U.N. The best example U.N. reform, especially of
runaway budgets and the bloated U.N. bureaucracy. When the U.S.
threatened major cuts in its contributions, and followed through'on
its threat, the U.N reform process finally made some headway. Yet,
as soon as U.S. payments were resumed U.N. reform stopped virtually
dead in its tracks.
U.S. leverage over U.N. programs and activities also can be
exerted by nonfinancial means. U.S. participation in the U.N. and
U.S. collaboration in major U.N. programs lend legitimacy and
credibility to the U.N. system as a whole. Strong and consistent
U.S advocacy sometimes can force issues important to U.S. i
nterests onto the U.N. agenda and shape, if not control, U.N.
activities. If and when the U.S. leads unequivocally, U.N
majorities sometimes follow.
Given the record of recent years, the only reasonable
prescription.for increased U.S leverage at the U.N. must combine
financial and political measures to I Withhold U.S. contributions,
clearly linking this to specific, feasib1e.U.N. reforms. 8 Refuse
to a ccept promises as a substitute for genuine reform Maintain the
pressure until reforms are built into the permanent.U.N. structure
Exert forceful leadership in behalf of a coherent U.S. agenda, both
for U.N budgetary and administrative reform and for subst antive
improvement of U.N. programs REVERSE LEVERAGE WITHHOLDING Last
year, the U.S. withheld $70 million from its contribution to
support the U.N.
Secretariat in New York; this was one-third of the U.S.
assessment. In 1986, the U.S withheld more than h.df of its U.N.
assessment. In addition to its assessment, of course, the U.S. in
1986 made nearly $900 million in other contributions to the U.N.
Nearly every observer of the U.N the U.N. Association of the United
States, the International Organizations Bur e au of the State
Department (IO), and probably U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Vernon
Walters would agree that' it was precisely these U.S. withholdings
of a substantial part of its annual U.N. assessment, as mandated by
Congress, that prodded the U.N. toward a ny reform at all. This was
the culmination of a process nearly a decade old 2 In 1979, under
the terms of the Kemp-Moynihan amendment (co-sponsored by
Representative Jack Kemp, the New York Republican, and Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the New York Dem o crat) barring U.S. aid
to terrorist groups, the U.S. withheld that portion of its U.N.
assessment that would benefit the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) both
identified as terrorist groups bd Cuba . The amounts withheld were
minuscule, never more than about 50,000 a year; and U.N support"
for all three continued unabated.
Beginning in 1981, U.S. scrutiny of the U.N. intensified.
Scrutiny focused on U.N programs, the runaway budget (which had
nearly tripled in the previous decade the top-heavy U.N.
bureaucracy in the New York-based Secretariat, and its safe haven
for Soviet bloc spies (including more than 500 "international civil
servants almost 99 percent of whom were "seconded to the U.N.
Secretari a t on fixed-term contracts andawere as a consequence
under Moscow's tight control This effort was spearheaded by
Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Ronald Reagan's newly appointed
U.S. Permanent Representative to the U.N. and by detailed studies
undertaken b y Washington-based research organizations?
Congressional concern with the U.N. mounted. ,At the U.N. in New
York, however, it was business as usual Kasten Reports. In 1982,
Congress mandated what is known as the annual Kasten reports, named
for the legisla tion's sponsor, Senator Robert Kasten, the
Wisconsin Republican. These are scorecards.ranking all U.N.
members' voting records in the General Assembly by percentage of
coincidence with the U.S. position. The reports list UrS. foreign
aid country by countr y in a parallel column. The powerlessness of
the U.S. in the U.N which Kirkpatrick had noted in widely
publicized speeches inside and outside the U.N were demonstrated
statistically by the Kasten reports. The first Kasten report (1983
showed an average coi n cidence ivith the U.S. position among all
other U.N. members of only 25.5 percent. By 1987, the average had
declined to a record low of 18.6 percent By 1985, Congress
apparently had lost its patience with U.N business as usual." That
year, Representative D on Sundquist, the Tennessee Republican,
attached an amendment to the State Department appropriation
withholding the U.S.-share estimated at about 18 million a year of
salaries paid to Soviet nationals seconded to the U.N. Secretariat
who routinely kicked back a major portion of their pay to Moscow.
Also in 1985 Representative Pat Swindall, the Georgia Republican,
proposed withholding an additional 20 million from the U.N this
represented the U.S. share of the budget. of the U;NI!.
Department of Public Info rmation (DPI whose publications, press
releases, films, and radio tapes (according to a content analysis
conducted by the General Accounting Office typically show a
systematic anti-U.S. bias Kassebaum-Solomon Amendment. The
centerpiece of the congressiona l crackdown on the U.N however, was
the reform-oriented 1985 Kassebaum-Solomon amendment 2 The Heritage
Foundation began its United Nations Assessment Project in January
19
82. Since then the 3 See Roger A. Brooks The U.N. Department of
Public Information: A House of Mirrors Heritage project has
published more than 100 studies.
Foundation Buckpunder No. 332, February 23,1984 3 (co-sponsored
by Senator Nancy Kassebaum, the Kansas Republican, and
Representative Gerald Solomon, the New York Republican). This
legislation called on the U.N. to consider weighted voting a rough
parity between voting power and U.N. members ranking on the sliding
scale of assessments for mandatory contributions to the ,U.N.
budget in the U.N. General Assembly on budget resolutions. The
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, for example, from
their inception have had weighted voting.
Should the U.N. balk at introducing weighted voting on budget
matters, the Kassebaum-Solomon Amendment forces the U.S. to cut its
contribution to all U.N agencies funded by mandatory assessment
from 25 percent to 20 percent of the total annual assessment
Flirting with Radical Changes. The cumulative effect of these 1986
congressional enactments was a dramatic cut from $206 million in
assessed co n tributions to $100 million in actual U.S. payments to
the U.N, in New York. Finally the U.S. message got through to the
U.N. The 40th U.N. General Assembly in 1985 already had authorized
U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar, to set up a
committe e on U.N. reform, the "Group of High-Level
Intergovernmental Experts to Review.the Efficiency of the
Administrative and Financial Functioning of the United Nations Its
report was due August 19
86. In the meantime, the Secretary General froze hiring at the
Secretariat The Experts Group, whose membership included most of
the major contributors to the U.N. budget, labored long and hard
(67 meetings in six months) and nearly agreed on a genuinely
radical reform package. This omnibus proposal would have revised
the scale of assessments (with a 15 percent cap for the U.S.
share), required major contributor consensus on the budget, cut
U.N. Secretariat staffing by 15 percent (lopping. off; among. 8
other slots, some 200 "supergradell sinecures consolidated a numbe
r of overlapping Secretariat units, reduced secondments to no more.
than 50 percent of any country's Secretariat contingent, and capped
budget add-ons" to 2 percent of the total. But the Experts Group
consensus fell apart, and its carefully crafted reform p ackage was
scaled back drastically to little more than a recommended wish list
Diluted Reform. The 41st U.N. General Assembly, convening in
September.1986 diluted the Experts Group proposals even more. Its
so-called Reform Resolution (41/213 dropped all o f the specific
numbers and percentages and simply called on the Secretary General
to tidy up the costly administrative mess, amply documented in
the'Experts Group report, as best he could.
In the end, the only tangible reform adopted was to "enhance1'
the role of the largely moribund 21-member Committee on Program and
Coordination (the CPC, elected by the General Assembly for fixed
terms from nominations by the regional blocs, with a slight tilt
toward the major contributors). This Committee was to make co n
sensus budget recommendations (if it could achieve consensus) to
the General Assembly, where consensus might or might not hold. It
was the CPC3s failure last year to make any decision at all on a
budget ceiling for 1988-1989 that Ambassador Vernon Walters ,
current U.S 4 Permanent Representative, has described as the "key
disappointment" of the 42nd U.N General Assembly. So much for U.N.
reform Paying Up Anyway. Even so, the U.S., seeking added leverage
presumably, resumed payments of its mandatory U.N. ass essment for
19
87. On November 12,1987, the U.S.
Mission in New York turned over $10 million. On December 3,1987,
an additional check for $90 million was handed to the Secretary
General. What happened next is highly instructive. On December 17,
the Genera l Assembly voted to expand the CPC to 34 members,
opening up about ten additional seats to the Soviet bloc and less
developed countries, all largely hostile to U.S. interests. The
result: any chance that the CPC, the linchpin of U.N. reform, would
serve a s a brake on U.N. profligacy and waste diminished to near
zero. So much for leverage WHAT DO THE KASTEN SCORECARDS SHOW The
annual Kasten reports provide one index'of U.S. influence at the
U.N, They began with the 38th General Assembly in 1983, counting on
l y contested votes and excluding the housekeeping and/or
"motherhood'l resolutions adopted by consensus, which inflate the
appearance of coincidence with the U.S. position. While they may be
an imperfect index they nonetheless are useful and have been the f
irst systematic attempt to measure how the U.S. fares at the U.N.
Jeane Kirkpatrick in 1984 compared the Kasten scorecards to
congressional voting records, noting that both reflect such
external pressures as upcoming I elections, constituency interests,
p a rty (or U.N. bloc) loyalty, and financial rewards or penalties.
She concluded But cumulatively a Congressman's votes tell us in a
general way about where he stands on various kinds of issues, what
he stands for, and with whom he stands And over time a cou n try's
votes [at the U.N reflect its choices about values and priorities.
5 What if anything do these scorecards tell us about U.S. leverage
at the U.N 1) They provide a crude measure of U.S. powerlessness.
At best, in recent years, the U.S. has been on th e winning side in
the U.N. General Assembly about 25'percent.of: the time; at worst,
about 18 percent: of the time. When the index's focus is narrowed
to key issues those affecting such vital U.S. interests as
disarmament, terrorism, and the Middle East pe a ce process or
resolutions attacking the U.S. by name strong friends of the U.S
become stronger. Israel's coincidence with U.S. positions increases
from the high 80s to 100 percent, and NATO countries from about 65
percent to 90 percent or better 4 See Cha r les M. Lichenstein
United Nations Reform: Where's the Beef?" Heritage Foundation 5
From Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Legirimucy and Force, Vol. 1 (New
Brunswkk, New Jersey Transaction Books Buckgrounder No. 567, March
10,1987 1988), pp. 280-281 5 2) In the 1970s , when all General
Assembly votes were counted, the averages were higher. But the
pattern of increasing U.S. powerlessness was clear. The earliest
data available from the State Department go back to 19
75. In that year, the average coincidence with the U.S .
position in the U.N. General Assembly was 55.2 percent. By 1980,
the average had dropped to 30.6 percent, a huge 45 percent decline
3) The U.S of course, could puff up the coincidence index: the U.S.
delegation simply could go with the flow" and vote fo r all but the
most outrageous U.N. General Assembly resolutions. This was the
tendency during the Carter Administration. Example: The annual
General Assembly resolution on "the free flow of information" and
related issues of international communications. I n the late 1970s,
the nonaligned countries and the Soviet bloc invented the New World
Information Order, which to most U.S. journalism professionals
smelled of old-fashioned censorship. The early U.S. position.was to
join the consensus, sometimes with a bl a nd statement of
reservations. But begieng in.1981 however, U.S. representatives in
the U.N. Committee on Information fought to amend the draft
resolution drastically; they demanded separate votes on the most
offensive paragraphs; they lobbied friendly del e gations to join
with the U.S and in the end they broke the consensus (usually in
concert with Israel and a few West European delegations and
sometimes alone), and they made the U.S. objections clear. But on
the Kasten scorecard it was another negative vot e and a lower
index of coincidence 4) Most significantly, there is no discernible
correlation between the coincidence index and U.S. payment or
nonpayment of its assessed U.N. contribution. When in the 1970s the
index was up in the 50 percent range (inflat e d by the inclusion
of consensus resolutions the U.S. paid a full 25 percent of total
U.N. expenditures: In the 198Os, with the index in the 20 percent
to 25 percent range, the U.S. was still paying its full 25 percent
assessment From year to year, through o ut the 1970s and 1980s, the
index drifted up and down. But the trendline of ever increasing
U.S. powerlessness never varied significantly. Last year, in fact,
the U.S. did withhold about one-third of its assessment for the
U.N. core budget, and the Kasten scorecard hit an all-time low. But
the chronology noted above the vote to dilute U.S.-major
contributor influence in the committee in charge of the budget
process the sole tangible focus of serious U.N. reform, immediately
following a large-U.S. payment s t rongly suggests that the
leverage of U.S. dollars is modest at best EFFECTIVE LEVERAGE The
important questions remain: 1) what kinds of leverage does the U.S.
really want at the U.N 2) what kinds can it reasonably hope to
achieve; and 3) by what means is it likely to increase its
leverage? The experience of 1981 to 1985 is instructive!
The U.S. is not likely to win most of the votes in the U.N
certainly not in the one nation-one vote General Assembly, and only
marginally in the Security Council (where the 6 The writer must
admit to possible bias in what follows. He was a participant at the
U.S. Mission to the U.N during much of the period in question. But,
whatever discounting may be require d , facts to a major extent
speak for themselves 6 threat of the U.S. veto provides substantial
leverage, especially in toning down the rhetoric and sometimes
keeping a draft resolution off the table altogether). The working
majority of the nonaligned and t h e Soviet bloc is too strong. The
ingrained bent toward lashing out at the majority's designated
pariahs, Israel and South Africa, is too deep. And many potential
U.S. allies shrink from getting too far out front, either for fear
of retaliation (one weak b u t often supportive African country
spoke openly to members of the U.S. Mission in 1983 about direct
Libyan threats of stepped-up terrorism) or because of the
perception that U.N resolutions are just words and do not make much
difference in the real world ( a favorite rationale for West
European concurrence in Israel-bashing Doing Something About
Business As Usual. But some U.N. votes can be won on issues of
special importance to the U.S. The prevailing climate at the U.N.
can be modified especially by worki n on otential support
constituencies outside the.U.N. itself, as in the U.S. foreign
policy can be'forced onto the U.N. agenda, or brought forcefully to
the attention of the members, if the U.S. seizes the opportunities
or creates them and refuses to case o f U.N. reform P Perhaps most
important of all, some issues of special.significancetoy go with
the flow Example: Introduction into the debates of the General
Assembly's Third (or Human Rights) Committee, within regular agenda
items, of documentation of psy c hiatric abuse in the Soviet Union,
religious oppression in Nicaragua (as well as in other Soviet bloc
countries and political prisoners in Cuba These draft resolutions
were intended by their Soviet surrogate sponsors to focus only on
Chile and Guatemala, o n South Africa and a Israel, but U.S.
representatives made sure they did not full-scale review of Soviet
use of anti-personnel mines in the guise of children's toys
terrorism against the civilian population, and evidence of Soviet
use of chemical and biol o gical warfare Example: Elaboration of
the annual resolution on "foreign forces in Afghanistan into a
Example: Using the occasion of the debate on famine and refugee
flows in the Horn of Africa to describe how Ethiopian dictator
Mengistu Haile Mariam creat e d famine'and exploits refugees as
deliberate weapons in the civil war with Ethiopian separatist
resistance movements Winning Votes. Some votes can be won, even in
the U.N. General Assembly Themost dramatic illustration was the
Puerto Rican "inscription" i ssue, September-October 1982.
Cuba had proposed that the question of Puerto Rico's "colonial"
status as a %assall' of the U.S. be inscribed on the agenda of the
Committee of 24, or Decolonization Committee.
This committee echoes the conventional Soviet li ne that the
Western democracies, and 7 See Charles Lichenstein, Mohamed
Sahnoun, Gunther van Well, Tommy T.B. Koh How the United Nations
Can Be Reformed, The Recommendations of Four Former Ambassadors to
the U.N Hetituge.
Lecture No. 66, August 7,1986, in which three current
ambassadors to the U.S., former U.N. representatives endorse
far-reaching U.N. reforms. In doing so, they must be assumed to be
reflecting their governments views Working the capitals" is always
an essential complement to "working the corridors" at the U.N 7
especially the U.S are guilty of imperialistic aggression in the
Third World. They point to Puerto Rico.
Ambassador Kirkpatrick decided to fight this, in strong
opposition to the State Department, which was prepared to
capitulate. U.S. representatives put this issue at the top of their
lists for their traditional summertime bilateral consultations in
foreign capitals around the world, looking toward the next U.N.
General Assembly. Latin American countries were given special
attenti on. Mayor Hernan Padilla of San Juan, a rising young Puerto
Rican political leader was appointed as a U.S. public delegate to
the 37th General Assembly. The mayor, along with all of the
ambassadors and political officers of the U.S.
Mission, lobbied hard, conceding only the core Soviet bloc as
lost causes. Kirkpatrick personally made the case against putting
this issue on the decolonization agenda in the General (or
Steering) Committee, the group that controls General Assembly
business.
Much to the State D epartment's astonishment, and probably
Moscow's the U.S. wonwith votes to spare a Cuba was not convinced
and decided to appeal to the full General Asse'mbly, which formally
adopts the agenda at an early plenary session; And there the U.S.
won again by a b igger margin than before.
The U.S. can win if it clearly identifies an issue as "very
important" to U.S. national interests if it pulls out all the stops
in bilateral diplomacy and works the U.N. lobbies and corridors in
the approved manner of legislatures everywhere. Leverage in such
cases follows the flag, if the U.S. shows unequivocally that it
cares about the outcome Winning Some in the Security Council.
Experience in the U.N. Security Council during the Kirkpatrick era
suggests the same conclusion, wi t h the provisos that 1) the
threat of a U.S. veto carries special weight, and 2) the most
frequent measure of success in the Security Council is that nothing
happens: that is, no resolution is tabled, or none makes it past
informal consultations" where con s ensus is the rule. The
imperative that operates with particular force in the Security
Council is the desire to avoid a U.S. veto. U.S. willingness to use
the veto when vital U.S. interests are at stake must be signaled
clearly..'This Kirkpatrick did early in her tenure with full
support from the:White House The most striking illustration: her
successful negotiation with the Foreign Minister of Iraq (who had
come to New York to head the Iraqi delegation followingIsrael%:r. I
preemptive air strike in June 19 8 1 on the Iraqi nuclear reactor
outside Baghdad only months before it would have been able to
produce weapons grade nuclear fuel. The U.S had criticized the
strike severely but had no intention of permitting the incident to
turn into the usual round of Isr a el bashing. For its part, Iraq
very much wanted U.S. support for a tough Security Council
resolution against Israel. In several days (and nights) of hard
bargaining, most of the inflammatory rhetoric was stripped away,
and the issue came down to a single p aragraph condemning
"nations1' that provided military assistance to Israel. It was
aimed straight at the U.S. With the U.S. veto explicit, Iraq
withdrew the offensive paragraph, and the resolution was adopted by
consensus. Israel was by no means pleased b ut a rupture in the
U.S.-Israeli strategic relationship was avoided, and the process of
restoring formal U.S.-Iraqi diplomatic ties continued to a
successful conclusion late in 1983.
Another example: Throughout the spring and summer of 1982 the
U.N. Securi ty Council was in almost nonstop session over the
Israeli military operation against PLO bases in Lebanon. The U.S.
officially deplored the operation and joined in several Security
Council resolutions calling for a cease-fire. As the Israeli troops
pushed north, however, Syrian involvement became increasingly
apparent, and the U.S. position hardened: any Israeli withdrawal
had to be matched by a Syrian withdrawal, leaving Lebanese
sovereignty intact In the Security Council, the Soviet Union argued
Syria's b rief, and three times the U.S had to resort to the veto.
On another half dozen occasions, however, it was the Soviets who
backed off when it became obvious that they lacked the eight
additional votes to force a veto. (In the 15-member Security
Council, ni n e votes constitute a working majority on all but
procedural motions.) In fact, a subtle shift could be detected
among the Council members in reaction to Soviet heavy-handedness.
On one notable occasion, the Chinese representative (who rarely
took part in t he closed-door debate) was moved to reprimand those
he was looking directly at the Soviet ambassador who "make no
constructive proposals to end the conflict. A famous victory for
the U.S Hardly. But over these many months the U.S. articulated a
coherent p o sition and, with the veto handy, was able to shape if
not quite control the process. As a result, it could at least limit
the damage to its own and Israel's strategic interests 7 LEVERAGE
THAT WORKS Clearly, money does not talk as effectively in the U.NI
c ontextas 1) A clear, coherent, forcefully presented U.S.
position, backed up by ample documen tation 2) A willingness to use
negative rewards the Security Council veto, for example as weapons
of choice 3) Understanding of the politics of the U.N. and usin g
that skill to manipulate the process 4) Coordination within the
U.S. government, embracing both Congressand executive departments
and agencies, in explicit support of U.S. strategy.in the U.N
Insofar as money talks at all and equals effective leverage, i t
tends to work in reverse.
Money withheld, or even the threat of it, only oc-ionally
provides the lever of control or influence. This is no novel
discovery. In 1954, George Kennan stated the principle succinctly 9
I view with skepticism our chances of exe rting any useful
influence unless we learn how to create respect for our possible
disfavor at least as great as the respect for our possible
favor?
Kennan was writing in this passage about U.S.-Soviet relations,
not about the U.N. but he might have been. Examples from U.S.
experience in the U.N 1981 to 1985 Refugee Relief. In April 1981;
Kirkpatrick headed the U.S. delegation to a U.N conference in
Geneva in which pledges of contributions were to.be made for
African refugee relief. Moves were made to bar the Israeli
delegation from the conference.
Kirkpatrick reminded the delegates of the serious purpose of the
conference and observed that her airplane was warmed up and ready
to return to the U.S with both delegation and checkbook aboard.
Israel remained i n the conference Telecommunications Union. A few
months later, the same issue arose at a meeting of the
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) in Nairobi The same
warning was delivered by the U.S. chief of delegation. Same result
1 Atomic Energy Age n cy. At about the same time, at an executive
board meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (MA) in
Vienna, Israel was excluded from participation in a key study
group. The U.S. immediately suspended payments to the agency and
threatened to withdr a w altogether. At the next board meeting, the
Israeli pp exclusion was dropped Nonpeace-Loving State Beginning
with the 1982 U.N. General Assembly, Libya, Iran and South Yemen
introduced an amendment to the credentials report denying Israel
its seat in the General Assembly as a "nonpeace-loving state." The
U.S. delegation warned that, if such action were taken, the U.S.
would walk out (with the implicit threat that most of the U.S.
assessment would be withheld). U.S. Secretary of State
George.Shultz I unequ i vocally repeated the warning. With Finland
in the lead, the General Assembly voted to set aside the exclusion
amendment as "out of order." Recurrently over the next five years,
the issue was revived. Sometimes it was voted down on a procedural
motion, and sometimes the amendment was withdrawn. Now, wisely, the
U.S. response to Israeli exclusion immediate withdrawal, immediate
suspension of funding has been written into law by Congress and
extended to all U.N. bodies, including those, such as subsidiaries
o f the Economic and Social Council, in which membership is
elective CONCLUSION Other legislative applications of the Kennan
"disfavor principle" are theSundquist and Swindall amendments
related, respectively, to Soviet "civil servant kickbacks to Moscow
8 F rom "Realities of American Foreign Policy essay cited in
Kirkpatrick, op. cit p. 292 10 id the anti-U.S. bias of the U.N.
Department of Public Information? The principal case in point, of
course, is Kassebaum-Solomon.
With the full impact of Kassebaum-Solomon withholdings looming
late in 1985, U.N.
Secretary-General Perez de Cuellar became a born-again budget
cutter, and the U.N.
General Assembly created the Experts Group to spearhead U.N.
reform. Coincidental?
Not very likely. Now, however, with the dilution of the Experts
Group's recommendations into little more than a potentially useful
new budget process and the further dilution even of that modest
step by the expansion of Committee on Program and Coordinati o n
membership the issue is no longer the idea of reform. The issue,
rather, is the reality of reform. Early signs are not hopeful A
Condition of U.S. Participation. Assuming that the U.S. is serious
about U.N. reform possibly even as a condition of continu e d U.S.
participation in the U.N how'can the momentum be revived and
increased? How can U.S. leverage be exerted for the best. This
appears to be what the State Department and the U.S; Mission to the
U.N. are doing. This ignores the lessons of history and f ails to
serve U.S. interests One possibility would be to "declare victory
pay up all withheld contributions, and hope A second possibility is
to pursue vigorously the course laid down by Congress. In the
Foreign Relations Authorization Act for fiscall 198 8 and 1989,
adopted last December Congress set out detailed findings concerning
1) Soviet bloc violations of the U.N. Charter relating to blatant
abuse of secondment (which keeps the door open for continued Soviet
use of the U.N. system as a safe haven for spies 2) effective
implementation of the consensus process for adoption of the U.N.
budget, pursuant to the recommendations of the Experts Group; and
3) the Secretary General's compliance with his own announced hiring
freeze (and 15 percent staff reductio n s in the U.N. Secretariat
in New York equitably allocated among the nationals of all U.N.
members. (About two-thirds of all exceptions to the freeze so far
have been of benefit to the Soviet bloc Leverage of Penalties. The
congressional formula is clear-c u t: 40 percent of the assessed
U.S. contribution to the U.N. (as compared to the hundreds of
millions the U.S. voluntarily contributes to a host of U.N.
agencies and programs) will be paid on October 1st of each year; an
additional 40 percent will be paid o n receipt of an annual report
by the President that genuine progress is being made in all three
areas of concern; and the final ,20'percent will be paid within 30
days unless Congress finds inadequate compliance in these three
areas. Any catch-up on arrea r ages from previous years, moreover,
will be contingent on availability of federal financial resources
and acceptance by Congress of the President's assurances that the
reform process is on track. The message is plain: Congress is
prepared to reject wishfu l thinking and to demand tangible
evidence of genuine compliance. And so it should 9 Mark Huber At
the (U.N.) Movies: Making America the Villain Heritage Foundation
Backpunder No. 648, May 6,19
88. Apparently, the DPI has not yet gotten the message and the
pattern of anti-U.S. bias persists 11 The ball is now in the
Presidents court or as a practical matter, in the State
Departments. Ultimately the ball is in the U.N.s own court, which
is where it has been all along. Effective U.S. leverage as a direct
con s equence of U.S. benefits and rewards has no track record at
all. Quite the contrary. The leverage of penalties on the other
hand of U.S. support withheld in the absence of tangible,
measurable progress toward U.N. reform occasionally has nudged the
ball a head. But the reform process is barely under way and the
outcome is far from certain. r 12