Mr. Danforth Takes U.N. To Task

This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The New York Sun

Plop in the middle of the entangled, entangling, impossible mess of the United Nations, where Kofi Annan’s ego attempts achingly to over swell diurnal scandals (Friday morning’s – “Swiss Firm Suspected of Fraud/Paid U.N. Chief’s Son $50,000”), enters John C. Danforth.


This resolute human being, who only four months ago became America’s ambassador to the U.N., announced that he was quitting Why? And why at this time? Because, he said he wants to be home. He needs to spend more time with his wife, Sally.


“Forty-seven years ago,” Mr. Danforth wrote to the president, “I married the girl of my dreams, and, at this point in my life, what is most important to me is to spend more time with her. Because you know Sally, you know my reason for going home.”


Well, if we knew Sally like John knows Sally, we’d perhaps simply ignore all other considerations before the house. But we don’t and are therefore driven to pause over other matters that might have entered the mind of Mr. Danforth when he decided to pull out.


Pause, first, for an aerial view of the scene:


The secretary-general is pretty universally discredited by a money scandal which some estimate as perhaps the largest in human history. It is a scandal that has so immobilized normal respiratory practices that Paul Volcker himself, the most direct and fearless public official in recent history, is tongue-tied. He appears to be hiding behind remote technicalities in order to serve the U.N., whose secretariat is of course the agent of Mr. Annan, who is the primary defendant in the whole mess.


There are no less than five congressional committees living on the tether’s end of patience for failure to get cooperation from the U.N. on a matter of far-reaching concern. Is it possible that some of the $20 billion routed and re-routed from the sale of Iraqi oil, ostensibly collected to buy bread for starving Iraqis, has ended up by financing the insurgents who kill American Marines every day?


But the framework is even wider, as the files on Mr. Danforth quickly reveal. New York Times correspondent Warren Hoge advises that it was actually the day after he wrote his private letter of resignation that Mr. Danforth publicly criticized the U.N. “in an unusually brash denunciation of a move in the General Assembly to cut off a motion that would have criticized human rights violations in Sudan, which the United States has called genocide.”


Mr. Danforth declaimed: “One wonders about the utility of the General Assembly on days like this. One wonders if there can’t be a clear and direct statement on matters of basic principle, why have this building (in New York City)? What is it all about?”


The question of legitimacy dogs the U.N. For years it has been so, living lopsidedly on the arbitrary allocations of membership in the Security Council done in San Francisco in 1945. But these distortions, and others – notably the victimization of Israel and the coddling of Castro-Cuba – diminished in strategic consequence because the Cold War swept away everything in its path, generating among other things the undenied and undeniable legitimacy of American leadership of the free world.


That has changed. Europe’s security from Soviet imperialism has led to the delegitimization of America as inherent and singular leader in policy-making on international problems. That is the reason for Europe’s refusal to back our venture in Iraq. It isn’t that Germany and France objected to troops in Iraq. They objected to their being dispatched there other than by an organization, the U.N., in which France exercised a veto power.


The survival, in its present shape, of a U.N. pockmarked by the charter of 1945 may not be in question: Nobody’s about to rescind the U.N. But its prestige is at rock-bottom low. Its hypocrisy was sensed and, indeed, articulated by Mr. Danforth, and its bureaucratic self-interest is reinforced by Mr. Annan’s refusal to resign. It is a true mess, and whatever our concern for Sally, the world joins in asking, with Mr. Danforth, “What is it all about?”


The New York Sun

© 2025 The New York Sun Company, LLC. All rights reserved.

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. The material on this site is protected by copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used.

The New York Sun

Sign in or  Create a free account

or
By continuing you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use