By Daneille Pletka
Tuesday, January 23, 2024
Calls
for the United States to withdraw from the United Nations have historically
been the purview of fringe right-wingers and garden-variety paranoiacs. At a
certain moment, however, it is not unreasonable to ask whether there is any
point in remaining part of what is swiftly becoming the most corrupt,
compromised, and useless international organization since the League of
Nations.
Those
hostile to the world-government impulses and overall anti-Americanism of the
United Nations and its specialized agencies have long questioned its cost and
the mission. But in recent years, the international body’s problems have begun
to verge on the farcical: Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Cuba, and Russia elected
as members of
the U.N. Human Rights Council, with Iran set to chair the council’s Social
Forum this week; Iran and North Korea presiding over the U.N.
Conference on Disarmament; a
Chinese-hand-picked leader managing COVID at the World Health Organization
(WHO); rape and
sexual abuse rampant among U.N “peacekeeping” forces.
And
then there’s the money. The Biden administration requested $1.7
billion in funding for the U.N. (an increase of $265.8 million) for the 2024
fiscal year. But those are just the assessed fees. Biden also asked for $485.8
million for “voluntary contributions” to various United Nations specialized
agencies, and $7.4 billion will
go to the U.N. through accounts at the State Department and USAID. The total
U.S. bill for 2022 (the last year the U.N. did the math) was an
eye-popping $18,095,456,587—33.6
percent of total government donations—to the United Nations.
But
wait, there’s more! While the COVID debacle—including evidence that WHO
Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus was complicit in
both facilitating China’s delay in sharing genetic sequencing and in the
cover-up of Beijing’s role in Covid’s genesis—was cause enough for former
President Donald Trump to pull the United States from WHO, it was far from
enough to stop the newly minted Biden administration from returning, no
questions asked, to that organization. Ditto Trump’s withdrawal from the Human
Rights Council, reversed nearly immediately by Team Biden. Indeed, the Biden
administration also rejoined UNESCO
(the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, which
Trump withdrew the U.S. from in 2017), and requested funding to repay back dues
withheld because, in violation of U.S. law, UNESCO admitted a
state of “Palestine” in 2011.
But
WHO’s complicity in the COVID scandal and the manifest and public malfeasance
of the Human
Rights Council—particularly its extraordinary and antisemitic obsession
with Israel—are merely the tip of the iceberg. A more insidious problem at the
United Nations and its specialized agencies is the creeping Communist Chinese
domination. Well documented by think
tanks and the press,
the Beijing government has made the United Nations its pet project. While
Washington and Europe slept, Chinese operatives took over Interpol, the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), and myriad other alphabet soups of United
Nations and U.N.-related organizations most of us have never heard of.
At
ICAO, the former secretary general (now back home in China) covered
up a major hacking scandal in 2016 that enabled Beijing’s spies to
infiltrate government agencies and private sector companies the world over. At
the ITU,
which sets global telephony standards, Chinese engineers now dominate the
communications standards-setting agenda and hew to instructions from the CCP.
Indeed, the implications of a pro-Beijing ITU are hard to understate: a
dominant role in setting global standards for emerging technologies like 5G and
standard setting for global cell phone and satellite communications.
Fundamentally, through the United Nations, China has rendered almost moot
national efforts to ban companies like Huawei and ZTE that engage in
surveillance and theft on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party.
For
the most part, these efforts to suborn the U.N. have been treated in Western
capitals as business as usual, the cost of having a truly “international”
organization. Even the U.N.’s single-minded efforts to delegitimize the state
of Israel and target it with investigations, sanctions and other
disproportionate measures have
been treated by the U.S. Congress—normally a redoubt of support for the Jewish
state—as ho-hum. Until October 7, that is, when in one fell swoop, the United
Nations and its specialized agencies turned with unprecedented and
near-collective venom against the people of Israel. Finally, it seemed, the
U.N. had gone too far.
U.N. Women—a group theoretically devoted to the rights and status of women around the world —remained silent for early two months in response to the appalling rapes, torture, and murder of Israeli women on October 7. (Per the organization, the U.S. government ponied up $20 million for its budget in 2021.) Here’s the deputy honcho of U.N. Women sharing her antisemitism on X, something she did more than 150 times (in violation of the U.N.’s “policy” of neutrality and impartiality) before deleting her accounts:
She’s far from alone. U.N. Secretary General António Guterres also felt the need to explain to the Security Council that the events of October 7 “did not happen in a vacuum.” The U.N. General Assembly demanded a ceasefire. And then there’s the incredible UNRWA can of worms.
For
many years, Congress has tried in vain to call attention to the U.N. Relief
Works Agency for Palestine, the only United Nations agency devoted to a single
national cohort of “refugees” from Israel’s war of independence in 1948. UNRWA
is nominally committed to the
“human development and relief” of Palestinian refugees, whose numbers have now
swelled to 5.9 million. The litany of UNRWA’s organized antisemitic and
pro-terrorism labors is long and dispositive. It starts with the very curricula of
UNRWA-run schools, where students are taught that Israel is the enemy and that
terrorism is justified. UNRWA leadership
bashes Israel incessantly in public statements. Thousands of UNRWA
teachers celebrated the
events of October 7 in a Telegram channel.
Then
there’s South Africa’s appalling “genocide” case at the International Court of
Justice, a
legal complaint so perverted that the United States, Germany, France,
and the United Kingdom weighed
in against both the process and the arguments themselves. The ICJ is
also part of the U.N. system.
Indeed,
there are few corners of the United Nations system that have not weighed in
against Israel in its war with Hamas. Far from outrage at Hamas’ abuse of
women, kidnapping of children, use of human shields, targeting of civilians and
worse, most U.N.
agencies have singled out only the
Jewish state for disapprobation and sanction. And finally, Congress has
noticed.
Republican
Reps. Michael
McCaul, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Mario
Diaz-Balart, chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on State and
Foreign Operations, have held hearings, stepped up oversight, and generally
begun holding the U.S. government’s feet to the fire because of its uncritical
support for the U.N. system. While the most vocal criticism has come from the
GOP side of Congress, sources tell me that Democrats also agree, quietly, that
more questions need to be asked about the United Nations in general, and the
organization’s rampant antisemitism in particular.
But
here’s the hard question: What exactly does the United Nations do for the
United States in return for the tens of billions spent annually? Are U.N.
Security Council resolutions useful in maintaining the global order? Does the
General Assembly play a constructive role in guaranteeing “world peace?” Are
the United Nations specialized agencies promoting the world’s economic
interests, or just China’s? Does the International Court of Justice actually
deliver justice? If the answer to the questions is consistently “no,” is there
not a reasonable conversation to be had about the usefulness of the United
Nations overall?
The
right answer is to apply a simple test of merit. The International Atomic
Energy Agency has delivered little in furtherance of global nuclear
non-proliferation, but not nothing. ICAO remains a critical venue for global
aviation regulation and standards. But the Human Rights Council, UNESCO, UNRWA,
most peacekeeping operations, the Office for the High Commissioner for Human
Rights, the Office for the High Commissioner for Refugees, and too many other
U.N. “humanitarian” organizations are corrupt, fail to deliver for the
neediest, and would generally be better replaced by bilateral or multilateral
aid and advocacy programs run by sovereign nations.
The
time has come to listen to the criticism of U.N. skeptics and to reassess U.S.
taxpayer dollars flowing uncritically, and, for the most part, without
accountability to a mass of international organizations that more often than
not actively oppose U.S. values and allies. The question is not whether the
United States should withdraw from the United Nations entirely. Simply cutting
dollars to the least worthy of U.N. bodies will, at the very least, begin the
process of ending the waste, fraud, hatred, and abuse that characterizes the
work of too much of the United Nations.
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