-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the May 17, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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"SOMETHING'S HAPPENING OUT THERE": 
ASTONISHED U.S. BOOTED OFF UN COMMITTEES

By John Catalinotto

The would-be rulers of the world suffered two humiliating 
setbacks in United Nations votes in early May. They were 
paybacks for the extreme arrogance the Bush administration 
has shown towards allies and enemies alike.

The first rebuff was when the U.S. was voted off the Human 
Rights Commission. Washington had used this commission as a 
means of punishing those countries that dared to challenge 
its policies.

This year it had particularly targeted China and Cuba. It 
failed to win a condemnation against China but narrowly 
succeeded in getting a resolution passed against Cuba after 
twisting enough arms.

The U.S. also lost its seat on the International Narcotics 
Control Board. Washington had viewed this agency as a way to 
bring pressure against countries that fail to toe its line, 
coordinating this with the "war on drugs" that is really 
just a cover for U.S. intervention in Latin America.

The imperialist architects of U.S. foreign policy have grown 
so used to taking the UN for granted as a handy tool for 
aggression and intervention that they were stunned when the 
two secret votes in the 54-member UN Economic and Social 
Council went against them.

Four Western countries, including the U.S., had been running 
for three slots on the Human Rights Commission. France won 
52 of a possible 54 votes, Austria 41, Sweden 32 and the 
U.S. trailed with 29. The secret ballot had allowed 
countries that usually fear Washington's retribution to vote 
against it.

In a similar vote, U.S. representative Herbert Okun was 
removed from the International Narcotics Control Board after 
two terms. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said 
the two losses indicate that "there's something happening 
out there." He added, "I think it's fair to speculate there 
may be issues related to how we handled ourselves, to how we 
position.'' Columnist Maureen Dowd was blunter. "EVERYBODY 
in the world HATES us," she wrote in the New York Times on 
May 6. "Even the Swedes can't stand us, for Pete's sake."

Why a revolt now? The major capitalist media list, for 
starters, the Bush administration's rejection of the 1997 
Kyoto treaty on global warming and its unilateral rejection 
of the 1972 anti-ballistics missile treaty. There has also 
been the Clinton administration's rejection of a treaty to 
ban land mines, its refusal to support an international 
court, and the Senate's refusal to approve the nuclear test-
ban treaty. And there was the attempt to sue South Africa to 
keep it from acquiring affordable drugs to treat AIDS.

There are so many other issues: U.S. hypocrisy on human 
rights when this country is the largest prison house in the 
world with 2 million inmates. Its arrogant preaching to the 
world even as its cops shoot down unarmed Black people like 
Patrick Dorismond, Amadou Diallo and Timothy Thomas and its 
courts fail to prosecute the killers in blue. And its self-
righteousness on fighting drugs when the huge U.S. market 
for the stuff is what drives the production of coca, poppies 
and synthetic intoxicants around the world.

Many countries are also sick of Washington's attacks on 
socialist Cuba, which unlike the rich, capitalist U.S. 
guarantees free medical care and education for all its 
children and has been generous to others with its limited 
resources, providing doctors and nurses to Africa, Central 
America and the Caribbean.

Perhaps the weakening of the U.S. capitalist economy, the 
end of that raging bull market that seemed to drag everyone 
behind it, also made it easier to just say no.

Washington has always had a two-pronged approach to the UN.

On the one hand, over the past 56 years the U.S. ruling 
class has used the UN as a cover for its military 
interventions--in Korea in 1950, the Congo in 1960, against 
Iraq in 1990-1991 plus another decade of murderous 
sanctions, and in Somalia in 1992-1993. The Clinton 
administration even had the UN oversee the occupation of 
Kosovo after first relying solely on the NATO military 
alliance to carry out its war against Yugoslavia.

In a similar way, Washington has used bodies like the Human 
Rights Commission to condemn Cuba and, depending on the year 
and the needs of U.S. diplomacy, to attack Iraq, Libya, 
Sudan, China and others.

At the same time the U.S. has used its vote and influence 
again and again to keep Israel from being condemned for its 
brutal human rights abuses in occupied Palestinian 
territories.

But the U.S.--under both Republicans and Democrats--has also 
withheld support from the UN. It has specifically held back 
billions of dollars in dues as a form of pressure.

A grouping of reactionary U.S. politicians, led by Sen. 
Jesse Helms, has made a career of demagogically attacking 
the UN whenever it fails to be a completely subservient tool 
of narrow U.S. interests. Helms and others can be expected 
to use these latest votes as grist for a campaign to 
withhold some $580 million that Congress was about to 
authorize for UN dues.

Once Bush's foreign policy team finish licking their wounds, 
they'll undoubtedly come back with a strategy to bring the 
rebel nations to heel. But Boucher was right. Something is 
happening out there. The votes in the UN are just a pale 
reflection of the seething anger growing around the world at 
these lords of the universe who would privatize every drop 
of water, every inch of soil, while trampling down whole 
nations to get it.

- END -

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