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>From www.antiwar.com/bock/pf/p-b012700.html

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Eye on the Empire
by Alan Bock
Antiwar.com
January 27, 2000

Madeleine’s Dubious Endorsement

Perhaps Madeleine Albright’s abject apology to the presumptive Masters of the
Universe at the United Nations for the unfortunate and retrograde comments made
by North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms the week before was predictable. You could
even argue that it was amusing. But it was unfortunate and contained some
dubious assertions, reflecting some dubious attitudes.

Senator Helms, you may remember, had appeared at the U.N. at the invitation of
the current U.S. ambassador to the UN, Richard Holbrooke, in what appeared to
me to be a gesture of resigned reconciliation with an outfit he has criticized
in the past, but looked to most media observers like a savage attack on the
world organization and a ringing statement of isolationism. He did use the
occasion to offer some criticisms of the UN and to convey some of the
misgivings some Americans have about the world body.

Americans will become impatient, he said if the UN seeks "to impose its
presumed authority on the American people.’’ More than a few Americans, he
continued, "see the UN aspiring to establish itself as the central authority of
a new international order of global laws and global governance. This is an
international order the American people will not countenance."

REMARKABLY MILD
This was a rather mild and civil bit of criticism of an organization that has
received and deserved much harsher words, some of them from Sen. Helms. Even
Ambassador Holbrooke, appearing that night on "Nightline" (fully aware, of
course, that he will have to deal with the chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee whether he respects him or not), praised Sen. Helms for
having entered into the hostile precincts of the UN at all. And while he was
careful to emphasize that he didn’t agree with much of what Sen. Helms had to
say, he applauded the appearance as a statesmanlike gesture. But most of the
media and the foreign policy establishment reacted as if Sen. Helms had
firebombed the place or maybe ordered a nuclear strike on the Tower of Babel on
the East River. Among certain of the enlightened and anointed ones in our
society, the United Nations remains one of the most sacred of the many sacred
cows these worthies worship.

Even Sen. Helms, although he was so bold as to utter a few remonstrances, has
in actions joined the worshippers. There is no question, despite the
misconceptions of the headline writers, that he is and has long been an
internationalist, though more because he thinks the United States needs to lead
than because he respects the "international community" of professional
freeloaders. And he worked with the insufferable Sen. Joe Biden to put together
the Helms-Biden bill to pay the United States’ supposed arrears in UN dues in
exchange for almost certainly empty promises of fundamental reforms in the UN
institutional structures.

That’s sad. There were moments in the late 1980s when you could at least get
agreement in some establishment quarters to the general proposition that the
United Nations was an ineffectual and somewhat anachronistic institution and
that the world would not be notably worse off if it were to disappear. To be
sure, much of the disappointment was due to the fact that the UN had not turned
out to be the harbinger of an enlightened World Government but a debating
society for the pampered and pretentious.

BUSH THE ELDER’S WAR OF RESURRECTION
I think the most important event in the resurrection of the UN in the minds of
otherwise intelligent and sometimes realistic internationalists was George
Bush’s lovely little war in the Persian Gulf. A veteran internationalist and
elitist, George the Elder used the UN as the framework to build a coalition
against the evil Saddam and praised it continually as the indispensable
instrument of bringing in the New World Order.

Plenty of otherwise conservative and nationalist Americans came to see the UN
as an essentially harmless and sometimes useful instrument of American imperial
power. Armed with new respectability and with the institutional framework to
conduct weapons inspections in Iraq after the famous victory, the UN seized
various opportunities to rebuild its image among American elites.

The UN is still essentially a debating society that should be a laughingstock
among intelligent people. But it has proven useful to certain avatars of the
empire who believe it can be used without waxing so strong as to become an
actual threat to American dominance. And the chattering classes have reverted
to their natural instincts revering international institutions like the UN
Perhaps they don’t see it as the "last best hope" any more, but as a useful
instrument in the ongoing project of prodding the unwashed masses into
supporting actions that will take us beyond the parochialism of being most
concerned about mere American interests.

MADELEINE ABASES HERSELF AND US
As a true (or aspiring) member of the class of the anointed, therefore,
Madeleine Albright felt the need to make it clear as if anyone had any doubt
that she was no Jesse Helms.

"Let me be clear," she told the Security Council during a laughable meeting on
peace prospects for the Congo. "Only the president and the executive branch can
speak for the United States. Today, on behalf of the president, let me say that
the Clinton administration and I believe that most Americans see our role in
the world quite differently than does Senator Helms."

She went on to aver that "We strongly support the United Nations Charter and
the organization’ purpose. We respect its rules, which we helped to write. We
want to strengthen it through continued reform and we recognize its many
contributions to our own interest in a more secure, democratic and humane
world."
She groveled so abjectly that even the Associated Press reported that her
remarks "drew intermittent chuckles from foreign ambassadors seated around the
Security Council table."

ONLY THE PRESIDENT?
What about her contention that "only the president and the executive branch can
speak for the United States?" Well, the constitution does say that the
president is the commander in chief of the armed forces. He also has the power
to make treaties "provided two-thirds of the Senators concur." With "the advice
and consent of the Senate" he can appoint ambassadors and other officials.
It is a popular modern notion that the president is the sole conductor and
formulator of foreign policy in the United States. But the constitution doesn’t
specifically give him such authority. He can only make treaties and appoint
ambassadors with Senatorial concurrence. The Congress, meanwhile, is
specifically given authority to declare war, to provide and maintain an army
and navy, to define and punish piracies and felonies on the high seas and to
regulate commerce with foreign nations. It has the power to lay and collect
taxes and provide for the common defense. Indeed, the founders were so desirous
of keeping the real power in the body supposedly closest to the people (and
farthest from the potentially monarchical pretensions of the executive) that
they specified that "All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House
of Representatives."

POWER DIFFUSED, FREEDOM PRESERVED
None of this suggests that "only the president" can speak for the United
States. The power to make protestations of representing the country and of
contesting those claims was purposely diffused and kept a bit ambiguous. You
could even claim that in a government that respected the US Constitution as
written, the power of the purse would be seen as the ultimate ability to speak
for the country and that power was specifically not vested in the president.
But the idea that any one person could "speak for" the entire country would
have struck the founders as ludicrous. Maybe an ambassador stationed overseas,
with proper safeguards, could be said to speak for the country on a certain
limited number of matters to certain limited audiences. And after a proper
declaration of war the president had the power to carry it out. But no one
person could be said to embody the entire country, to speak for it or to
represent its will. If anything, the president of the kind of government
envisioned in the constitution would have no more justification for claiming to
"speak for" the entire country than a soapbox orator in the park on a Sunday
afternoon.

EXECUTIVE ARROGANCE
The 20th century, of course, has seen an astounding growth in executive power,
aided and abetted by a Congress filled with politicians only too eager to
abdicate their responsibilities to the people, and an intellectual class of
worshippers of near-absolute power. So the idea that the president has the sole
power to conduct foreign policy does not seem as foreign to us as it should.
But accepting the notion let alone proclaiming and celebrating it betrays a
predilection for absolutism and arbitrariness. Even in the US government as it
exists today, the president is faced with numerous checks on his ability to
conduct foreign policy, let alone "speak for the United States." The president
is not a dictator or the embodiment of the common will.

Madeleine Albright, so worshipful of imperial power, might wish that it were
so. But it isn’t yet. If it ever is our freedom will truly be gone.
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