Tempers flare as US, UN bicker over relationship

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

UNITED NATIONS, June 9: Tensions are soaring at the United Nations as a confrontation between the United States and U.N.

leaders escalates to the point it may lead Washington and possibly Japan to start holding back on dues payments.

Payments expected later this year from Washington, Tokyo and possibly other major powers could be in jeopardy if the conflict ends up derailing a faltering drive for U.N. reforms that Washington wants adopted by the end of the month.

Japanese and U S officials say they have no intention at this point of curtailing their dues or triggering a budget crisis at the world body.

But some U S officials warn that angry members of Congress could do so as a result of what they see as growing anti-U S sentiment among both U N leaders and developing nations, which make up the vast majority of the U N membership.

The bad feelings escalated this week after U N Deputy secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown accused Washington of keeping its extensive working relationship with the United Nations ''a secret in Middle America.'' The Bush administration, he said, has failed to defend the world body against domestic critics even as it relied on it to deal with hot spots ranging from Iran to Syria to Afghanistan.

''Too much unchecked U N-bashing and stereotyping over too many years'' has made the U N membership suspicious of U S motives even when it champions issues like management reforms, Malloch Brown, a Briton, told a New York political conference.

The speech prompted U S Ambassador John Bolton to demand that Annan repudiate his deputy, warning that while the speech's target was Washington, ''the victim, I fear, will be the United Nations.'' That raised concerns at the United Nations that the Bush administration might withhold all or part of its 2006 U.N.

dues, which pay for about a quarter of the UN budget.

Japan, the second biggest dues payer, has also expressed dismay over the slow pace of U N reform, particularly after it lost a bid for a permanent seat on the U N Security Council.

ANNAN STANDS FIRM But Annan stood firm, saying he agreed with the thrust of the speech. ''The message that was intended is that the U.S.

needs the U N and the U N needs the U S, and we need to support each other,'' he told reporters on Thursday.

His refusal to back down triggered a phone call on Wednesday from U S Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice assuring Annan she shared Bolton's sentiments.

Then on Thursday, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns called Malloch Brown to express disappointment that a senior U N official had singled out a U N member for criticism, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

Prodded by Bolton, wealthy nations paying for more than 85 percent of the U N budget arranged in late 2005 for a June 30 budget cut-off if satisfactory reforms are not adopted.

Developing nations, fearing the big powers want only to cement their grip on the world body, have threatened to override the cut-off even if reforms fall short, daring wealthy nations to follow through on their threats to curtail dues.

Bolton insisted this week that Washington was not trying to produce a financial crisis at the United Nations.

''But we are committed to reform,'' he said. ''The issue for us is how much substantive reform will we have achieved by June 30,'' he told a reporter when asked if the lights would soon be going out at the world body.

A U S decision to withhold U N dues in protest, as it has in the past, could be politically risky.

U.S. payments are typically made during the final months of each year, and a decision could fall right before November elections in which President George W. Bush's Republican Party is scrambling to retain control of Congress.

But Annan played down the odds of a crisis.

''Quite frankly I think we are all too excited and nervous about this budget issue,'' he said. ''The member states ought to be able to work it out.'' Even if someone threatened to ''close down the shop,'' he said, ''they will have lots of explanation to do, not just in this building, but to the people out there'' in the world.

Reuters

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X