http://www.townhall.com/columnists/robertnovak/rn20041227.shtml
 
Coddling Kofi Annan
Robert Novak (back to web version) |  Send

December 27, 2004 

WASHINGTON -- Sen. Norm Coleman bit his lip and kept silent when the State
Department expressed confidence in United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan. The Bush administration seemed to be repudiating the freshman
Republican senator from Minnesota, who had called for Annan's resignation.
But Coleman was well aware that his investigation of UN corruption is
trumped for now by a transcendent issue.

 When Annan made a hurried trip to Washington Dec. 16, his non-cooperation
with the Jan. 30 election in Iraq was manifest. His attitude changed
markedly after Secretary of State Colin Powell declared: "We have confidence
in the secretary-general." With that, Annan began to provide the UN's
desperately needed help on the elections.

 That looks like a big-time deal in the best interests of the United States.
Nothing is more important to President Bush than the Iraqi election,
dwarfing even full exposure of the UN's oil-for-food scandal in Iraq,
including the secretary-general's complicity. But Annan has not bought
permanent immunity by belatedly helping in Iraq. The U.S. government
includes an independent legislative branch, and Norm Coleman is biding his
time.

 Just finishing his second year as a senator, Coleman would be invisible in
the old Senate. But as chairman of the Senate's permanent investigations
subcommittee, Coleman has become the leading congressional watchdog over UN
abuses. Despite Powell's avowed confidence in Annan, Coleman is standing by
his Dec. 1 column in the Wall Street Journal, which concluded: "If this
widespread corruption had occurred in any legitimate organization around the
world, its CEO would have been ousted long ago, in disgrace. Why is the UN
different?"

 The corruption was documented in October by chief U.S. arms inspector
Charles Duelfer's report. It shows Saddam Hussein "subverting" the $60
billion oil-for-food program to generate still uncounted billions for the
Iraqi dictator's own purposes.

 Annan's defense has been his appointment of former Federal Reserve Chairman
Paul Volcker to conduct an independent inquiry. But Volcker's report will go
directly to Annan, who has promulgated procedures permitting him to hack
away at the findings.

 In a letter to the UN Security Council, Annan asserted that the Volcker
report "will be made available to the public in a form that will take into
account the rights of staff members and, where necessary, respect any
undertakings as to confidentiality that may have been granted by the
inquiry." What will result from the report? "I will take such action as I
may deem appropriate," Annan said. It is as if Enron executives could edit
and act on the Justice Department investigation.

 This arrangement does not bother the bulk of UN member nations, who want
nothing unpleasant to happen to their friend Kofi. Two permanent Security
Council members, France and Russia, profited so much from the oil-for-food
scam that they desire no vigorous investigation.

 The question is how rigorous the U.S. government will be toward Annan after
the Iraqi election. Powell has a long-standing relationship with Annan, but
he is leaving. Powell's successor, Condoleezza Rice, has been
characteristically prudent in reacting to the UN scandal. According to
Capitol Hill sources, she remained mute after Coleman briefed her on Annan
and the scandal.

 Senior senators are similarly silent, partly not to discourage the UN from
helping a little in the Iraq elections but also mostly not to look like
yahoo isolationists. During a long interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" Dec.
19, Tim Russert asked four high-ranking senators whether they "still have
confidence" in Kofi Annan. Sen. John Warner, Armed Services Committee
chairman, answered that "we've got to wait until the Volcker report."
"Anyone disagree?" asked Russert. Nobody did.

 Sen. Carl Levin, who is ranking Democrat on both Armed Services and
Coleman's investigations subcommittee, specifically answered that he did not
disagree. That contradicted a tough letter last month to Annan co-signed by
Coleman and Levin, accusing the Volcker inquiry of obstructing the Senate
investigation. Instead, at a Nov. 15 hearing, Levin reverted to partisanship
in trying to pin culpability for the scandal on the Bush administration. It
seems impossible for Kofi Annan to escape unscathed from this scandal, but
peculiar things happen at Turtle Bay.





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