Joseph A. Harriss’s recent article (“The
United Nations’ Rogue Agency,” TAS, February 2012)
expresses appropriate concern about certain recent events at
UNESCO. At the same time, the piece mischaracterizes events that
are portrayed as stains on the organization when they were actually
triumphs for UNESCO—and U.S. interests.
For example, Harriss alleges that the election pitting Mubarak’s
corrupt henchman Farouk Hosni against other candidates was a black
mark on UNESCO’s reputation. On the contrary, due to intense and
vigorous pressure by the United States, Hosni was defeated and
instead the organization elected Irina Bokova, who in my view has
been a superb Director General. Without U.S. active membership in
UNESCO, this would not have happened.
Similarly, the controversy over Iranian sponsorship of World
Philosophy Day ended in a U.S. victory and Iranian defeat. Director
General Bokova played a statesmanlike leadership role during this
crisis, making a clear decision to cancel the plan to hold World
Philosophy Day in Tehran. Without U.S. active membership in UNESCO,
this would not have happened.
Third, the piece makes the classic mistake of conflating the
organization with its Member States. This is the world. The United
Nations and organizations like UNESCO reflect the full spectrum of
its membership—democracies, dictatorships, failed states, emerging
powers. We can either be engaged and active in fighting for our
values and interests, or we can find a seat on the bench while
other players dictate the game.
UNESCO’s conduct and constitution are profoundly influenced by
the United States. Its mandate to promote education, science, and
culture to advance universal respect for justice, rule of law,
human rights, and fundamental freedoms reflects American values.
Our active engagement is absolutely critical to ensuring that the
organization stays on track.
Mr. Harriss also gets it wrong when he suggests that UNESCO
doesn’t do anything to fight discrimination against women except to
“preach the good word.” To cite just a few examples, UNESCO is on
the front lines in Egypt and Tunisia, educating women about their
rights and supporting their participation in political processes.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, UNESCO works to prevent
violence against women through school and community-level programs.
These programs help create stable, democratic societies that are
more resistant to extremism and violence.
Of course, Harriss is right to be outraged about Syria’s
reappointment to the UNESCO committee that deals with human rights.
But the story isn’t finished. In early February, thirty countries
from around the world, including the United States, requested that
UNESCO’s Executive Board review the issue when it meets in late
February/early March. With active U.S. engagement, respect for
human rights and dignity may triumph once again.
If we follow the author’s advice to withdraw, we would be unable
to pursue the Syrian issue and many others fundamental to our
interests at UNESCO. American leadership is crucial at UNESCO and
this is true now more than ever. Without it, UNESCO—an organization
that has enjoyed widespread bipartisan support—could very well
become a “rogue agency.”
AMBASSADOR DAVID T. KILLION
U.S. Permanent Representative to UNESCO
If only UNESCO could embalm the brain of Joseph A. Harriss. It
contains a perfect example of cold war mentality from around the
time of the Cuban missile crisis—definitely a cultural artifact
worth preserving. Harriss is so busy looking for communists and
defending U.S. global hegemony that he can’t see the modern UNESCO.
We are the UN agency that:
- Teaches police in Afghanistan how to read and write;
- Leads global research in Tsunami warning systems;
- Ensures that the Holocaust is never forgotten; and
- Spearheads Education for All, the movement for universal
schooling.
And yes, we’re the first UN agency to admit Palestine. What
Harriss misses is that—put to the vote—every UN agency would make
the same decision, except for the General Assembly in New York
where the U.S. has a veto through the Security Council. At UNESCO,
he blames this new global reality on the “aggressive Arab-African
regional bloc” and comes dangerously close to racism when he talks
of “grinning, gibbering, gesticulating inmates” “taking over the
asylum.” Does he always have such an extreme reaction when a vote
goes against him? I’m surprised The American Spectator
agreed to print such bigoted, undemocratic cant.
But never mind. No one’s perfect, certainly not UNESCO. We’re in
the middle of reforming our business processes and management
systems so that the excesses Harriss so exhaustively describes can
never happen again.
Actually, there’s a lot that someone with his perspective should
be cheerful about. The old UNESCO tried to stifle media through the
New World Information and Communication Order. The new UNESCO
defends media freedom by protesting every time a journalist is
killed in the line of duty. Isn’t that what was supposed to happen
when America won the cold war?
NEIL FORD, DIRECTOR
Division of Public Information, UNESCO
Joseph A. Harriss replies:
I was delighted when the editors told me they had received
letters reacting to my article on UNESCO. I expected that they
would be the sort of serious, constructive discussion of the
organization’s problems and what to do about them that the article
was intended to stimulate. They did, after all, come from Mr. Neil
Ford, UNESCO’s director of public information, and Ambassador David
Killion of the U.S. Mission to UNESCO. Imagine then my
disappointment on discovering that the official response from
UNESCO, as formulated by Mr. Ford, contained only spiteful
vociferation and personal attacks.
First, to answer Mr. Ford: After a brief flash of wit concerning
the desirability of embalming my brain, he launches into a snide
tirade, beginning with preposterously trying to paint me as a
commie hunter of the old Cold War school. He also says I cannot see
the modern UNESCO. On the contrary, his reaction indicates that I
have seen today’s UNESCO only too well. More to the point, a close
reading of the article will show that there is no “looking for
communists” or “defending U.S. global hegemony,” though clearly Mr.
Ford, in keeping with the prevailing UNESCO attitude toward
America, certainly does not favor the latter. It is distressing
that the UNESCO director of public information, surely an
intelligent, articulate gentleman as one would expect, resorts to a
cheap ad hominem attack. Indeed, his whole missive is devoted to
assailing the author, rather than responding concretely to the
facts and issues mentioned in the article. He might usefully even
have pointed out errors, if any.
His statement that every UN agency would also have admitted
Palestine is a spectacularly unsupported allegation. If he has any,
Mr. Ford would do better to give us his empirical evidence for that
assertion. That would have gone far to refute, if possible, the
point that the Palestinian Authority chose UNESCO, not some other
agency, because they knew it was the weak link in the UN
system.
He refers to the Arab-African bloc being a “new global reality.”
This does indeed reflect the official UNESCO line and its
day-to-day reality on the ground. But what concerns me is that he
comes dangerously close to calling me a racist, the lowest of low
blows, to which I do not take kindly. But in all due Christian
charity, I forgive him. I understand that, in the absence of
seriously contesting points I raise, and being unable to express
himself with the sort of verbal elegance one might expect of a high
UNESCO official representing what claims to be the world’s premier
cultural organization, he has no choice but to fall back on
guttersnipe rhetoric.
He asks, oddly, whether I always have such an extreme reaction
when a vote goes against me. While I am flattered that UNESCO might
have been voting for or against me personally, the vote actually
had nothing to do with me. It was against the member states that
considered UNESCO was not the proper forum for deciding the
question of Palestinian statehood. Besides the United States, these
included such considerable nations as Australia, Canada, the Czech
Republic, Germany, Israel, Lithuania, the Netherlands, and Sweden,
among others. Your argument about the vote is with them, Mr. Ford,
not with me. I am only the messenger of the bad news.
When he refers to an ongoing reform of the “excesses” I
describe, I can only accept and applaud Mr. Ford’s candid admission
that 1) my article was indeed exhaustively researched, and 2) that
these “excesses” need to be corrected. QED.
As to America’s winning the Cold War, I fail to see the
connection between that and the fact that UNESCO has again become
dysfunctional due to the political and, occasionally, economic
corruption made clear in my article. More likely, such incoherence
is simply another example of Mr. Ford’s regrettably angry reaction
due, no doubt to a sensitive nerve having been touched. Perhaps he
would like to cool down and make a positive contribution to a
discussion about what can be done to reform that organization? Just
a thought. But the present reality is that such reform, as in the
1980s and '90s, will probably be possible only as a result of the
salutary shock of America’s complete withdrawal.
As to Ambassador David Killion’s contribution, I salute his
sincere engagement in his task, as do many other ambassadors to
UNESCO I interviewed. The problem is that he understandably—and, I
am sure, sincerely—wants to portray these setbacks as victories. My
research makes it necessary that I disagree, as my article
demonstrates.
His contention that the defeat of Farouk Hosny as director
general was a triumph is unconvincing. At best, this is barely
snatching victory from the jaws of defeat. But, while the U.S.
Mission’s role here was indeed exemplary, that is not the point,
which is that Hosny’s very candidature and near victory
demonstrates the systemic failure of the organization.
Ditto the embarrassing mess over World Philosophy Day in Iran.
The question is not whether the U.S. and other member states were
able at the last moment to change that incredibly stupid decision,
but why on earth UNESCO decided to hold it in Iran in the first
place. Systemic, self-perpetuating failure is the answer.
Ambassador Killion argues, as anyone in his position must, that
engagement in such an organization is the only way to influence it.
The unfortunate reality is that most of the time, it’s a losing
game for the U.S., as the vote on Palestine admission and the
corruption of the World Heritage Convention decisively
demonstrate.
His argument that UNESCO has programs that promote democracy
fails to pass the test of results. UNESCO, as I have pointed out in
the article, has many high-flown programs with impressive names,
and indeed programs within programs. The problem, as the
thoroughgoing British evaluation last year says, is showing
convincing results. I see very few, as do the British.
Yes, there is the promise to review the disastrous decision to
include Syria on the committee that treats human rights. Nice try
again, Ambassador, but Syria’s appointment to that committee would
never have happened if UNESCO were not dysfunctional. The whole
episode illustrates its systemic failure.
Lastly, Ambassador Killion argues with some heat the need of
American participation and engagement to keep UNESCO from becoming
a rogue agency. Dear Ambassador, it is already a rogue
agency, as anyone who reads my article can see. The U.S. can do
nothing useful about that except to make the ultimate protest of
withdrawing. History shows that only that will concentrate UNESCO’s
collective mind on the root and branch reform that could make it,
once again, a worthwhile enterprise worthy of American support.