Rice and Christopher – Competing world views
The
current conflict between Israel and Hezbollah demonstrates the past
failures of the UN, and Warren Christopher type diplomatic solution to
these problem.
In today’s Washington Post, Warren Christopher wrote a column
explaining the folly of Secretary Rice’s “wrongly focused diplomacy.”
He goes on to explain his “successes” in 1993 and 1996 dealing with, in
general terms, the exact same problem. Both times a quick cease fire
was called for and Syria was engaged diplomatically. The fighting
stopped- for a while. Yet here we are
again. That template that has been used for dealing with this crisis
has produced a temporary secession from major combat, but it does not
change the entrenching, arming, and continued attacks by Hezbollah on
Israel.
The template used by the two
State departments of the Clinton administration for dealing with
international crisis management produce only short term results if any.
Christopher’s own article
incriminates his own policy. We are now faced again with the exact
problems that he so “successfully handled”. Let us not forget North
Korea, Somalia, Iraq, and Afghanistan, the Balkans, and Rwanda. Each
one of these was dealt with by the Clinton Administration, and yet all
of these became bigger problems or so much time passed as to allow the
issue to die (Rwanda where the genocide ran its course before any
action took place).
I don’t pretend
to know the answer to this whole problem, but I think it is time to try
another path from the Christophers’ of the world. Bush and Rice
are allowing Israel to neutralize the threat. They want to push the
stop button, not the pause button. Charles Krauthammer’s piece says it
well. Read it here.
In response to the cease-fire now crowd – we already know what doesn’t work, lets try something else now.
This
brings me to the UN. The recent bombing of a UN post in Southern
Lebanon, reminded us of the efforts of UN to resolve this on going,
repetitive conflict when they issued resolution 1559.
The unarmed, military positions, like the one that was hit, were to
report on violations of this resolution. This resolution was to result
in the withdrawal of Israel from Lebanon, disarming of Hezbollah and
the elimination of the control of Southern Lebanon by Hezbollah. The
only thing that was accomplished was the withdrawal of Lebanon by
Israel. The arming of Hezbollah was significantly increased, and
Hezbollah is now essentially a state within a state stronger
politically and militarily than the government of Lebanon.
This is just one example of the incompetence of the UN. A few other examples are Rwanda, Somalia, and oft forgotten Oil-for-Food and Sex-for-Food scandals.
In fairness, the UN does a great job of supplying immunizations, rice and grain.
Keep
these in mind the next time Annan, Christopher, or Albright indignantly
lectures the US on how to operate our foreign policy.