[Mb-civic] FW: Article by Amb. F. Hoveyda
Golsorkhi
grgolsorkhi at earthlink.net
Sun Apr 10 10:52:49 PDT 2005
------ Forwarded Message
From: Samii Shahla <shahla at thesamiis.com>
Date: Sat, 9 Apr 2005 22:43:42 -0400
Subject: Article by Amb. F. Hoveyda
Ambassadors vs. Ambassador
The Unites States and the United Nations
Fereydoun Hoveyda
April 9, 2005
iranian.com
Some fifty-nine former ambassadors and officials have signed a letter
to the U.S. Senate against the nomination of John Bolton as U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations. The gist of their argumentation boils
down to the fact that the nominee has always been disdainful of
multilateral diplomacy in general and the world organization in
particular.
On Friday April 8, an editotial of the New York Times added: "When
the country chooses an ambassador to the United Nations, it ought to
avoid picking someone whose bulliying style of leadership symbolizes
everything that created the current estrangement between the United
States and most of the world.²
Curiously enough in the world at large the only other people opposed
to Mr. Bolton are members of the North Korean dictatorial government
who despise the Proliferation Security Initiative, Bolton is said to
have helped to design and which is a multilateral initiative that,
among other things, drew attention to the spread of nuclear secrets by
a Pakistani scientist.
I don¹t know Mr. Bolton and have not followed his career at the State
Department. Moreover I don¹t mind if he is or not confirmed, because
this is certainly not the most important problem facing the United
States and the world at the present time. The question of a radical
reform of the scandal-ridden United Nations and his Secretary-general
is much more urgent and significant.
But as a retired ambassador, something bothers me with the action
undertaken by his 59 colleagues and the criticism uttered by a part of
the medias. Indeed if one follows their line of reasoning to its very
end, one would come up with the rule that diplomatic envoys should be
chosen according to their sympathy in favor of the country and/or the
international organization where they are supposed to represent their
governments. The New York Times editorial states : "At a minimum, the
United States representative to the United Nations should be a person
who believes it is a good idea "
If this was the yardstick of diplomatic nominations, as a writer in
the French language and a long time friend of French culture, I should
have been posted in Paris and not at the United Nations in the 1970s.
Following the line supported by the above-mentioned 59 distinguished
American officials and their friends in the media, President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt should have sent to pre-World War Berlin and to the
former Soviet Union ambassadors who believed in the "good ideas" of
Hitler and Stalin! Which certainly would have been an aberration!
Actually most foreign offices avoid to nominate ambassadors who are
sympathetic to the governments of the countries where they are to
serve on the grounds that their reports might be biased and would not
reflect the reality of the political situation. Because some European
countries have deviated from this practice for instance in the case of
the Islamic Republic of Iran, Tehran¹s theocratic regime is still in
power notwithstanding the opposition of a majority of the population.
What the world organization needs in the first place especially from
democratic countries is the nomination of ambassadors capable of
imposing the implementation of basic reforms.
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About
Fereydoun Hoveyda (www.hoveyda.org) is a Senior Fellow at the National
Committee on American Foreign Policy. As a young Iranian diplomat , he
was involved in the preparatory work for the San Francisco Conference
that adopted the Charter of the U.N. (1945) In 1947 and 1948 he
participated in the drafting and voting of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. From 1952 to 1966 he became an international civil
servant in UNESCO's Department of Mass Communications where he
specialized in development of free flow of information in the
developing countries. From 1966 to 1970 he represented Iran in the
annual General Assembly sessions of the U.N , as Iranian deputy
foreign minister in charge of international organizations. From 1971
to 1979 , he served as Iran's ambassador and chief delegate to the
United Nations. He is the author of The Broken Crescent: The Threat of
Militant Islamic Fundamentalism (2002), The Shah and the Ayatollah,
Iranian Mythology and Islamic Revolution (2003) >>> See his articles
in iranian.com
URL:
http://www.iranian.com/FereydounHoveyda/2005/April/Ambassador/
index.html
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