Mas, como muitos intelectuais asiáticos, Kishore Mahbubani acredita na teoria do complô ocidental contra os pobrezinhos asiáticos. Pode até haver algum fundamento histórico nessa história, em vista do colonialismo e do imperialismo desde a era dos descobrimentos, a era de "Vasco da Gama", como escreveu um historiador indiano. Mas, no more; não há nenhum fundamento hoje para essa teoria da conspiração ocidental contra a Ásia. Essa é uma história antiga, que ele desenvolveu em outros livros.
Vejamos agora a sua acusação atual: a de que a ONU é mantida fraca por uma conspiração (ou que seja "interesse") do Ocidente.
Trata-se, simplesmente, de uma mentira, e de uma cegueira.
Os EUA, e outros países ocidentais, foram consistentemente multilateralistas desde o início, com algumas condicionalidades. É evidente que os EUA nunca, jamais cogitariam de submeter suas principais políticas públicas e sobretudo suas estratégias e táticas de segurança nacional para a ONU ou qualquer esquema multilateral porventura existente. Nisso ele pode ter razão. Mas a culpa não é dos EUA apenas, mas sim de todas as grandes potências, sobretudo, e aqui há um grande SOBRETUDO, da União Soviética.
Se a ONU foi mantida fraca, durante a maior parte de sua história, isso é devido às grandes potências em seu conjunto mas principalmente devido à URSS e, desde 1972, à China, que substituiu Taiwan no CSNU. Esta é a principal razão, e o Ocidente é o menor culpado nessa história. Mahbubani não está apenas errado, ele acusa de má fé e isso é indesculpável para um intelectual.
Quanto à conclusão implícita, no sentido contrário, de que uma ONU forte seria melhor para o mundo, e para o desenvolvimento dos países atrasados, tampouco se deve atribuir muita consistência a essa "tese". A ONU é um dinossauro muito caro, e nunca fez nenhum país atrasado avançar no caminho do desenvolvimento, que não tenha sido pelos próprios esforços dos países em causa. Já estamos há seis décadas de assistência oficial ao desenvolvimento e poucos, se algum, países em desevolvimento avançaram em função de programas onusianos. A burocracia onusiana é como esses burocratas keynesianos nacionais, que acham que dinheiro resolve qualquer coisa...
Em todo caso, aceitando ou não minhas críticas, vocês podem ler agora esta matéria, parte de um livro desse intelectual asiático antiocidental.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Globalist Bookshelf
> Global Governance Why the United Nations Is Kept Weak |
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By Kishore Mahbubani | Saturday, February 09, 2013 |
Even during the Cold War, when Moscow and Washington disagreed on pretty much everything, both nations were united in one regard: they actively conspired to keep the UN weak. Unfortunately, writes Kishore Mahbubani in his new book, "The Great Convergence," this state of affairs has persisted long after the Cold War ended — to the great detriment of global development.
dirty little secret is that institutions of global governance are weak today by design, rather than by default. This has long been an open secret, as I know from having lived in New York City, the home of the United Nations, where I served for more than ten years.
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To the best of my knowledge, not one of these senior figures ever acknowledged that it has been a long-standing Western strategy, led primarily by Washington, to keep the UN weak.
Even during the Cold War, when Moscow and Washington disagreed on pretty much everything, both nations were united in one regard. They actively conspired to keep the UN weak.
The United States and the Soviet Union did so through a variety of means. They selected all too pliable secretaries-general, such as Kurt Waldheim. They bullied whoever was secretary-general at a given time into dismissing or sidelining competent or conscientious UN civil servants who had shown any backbone.
They squeezed UN budgets endlessly. And, of course, they planted CIA and KGB spies in all corners of the UN system. All this was well known to anyone who worked within the UN system.
As we move into the era of the great convergence, the world clearly needs stronger "global village" councils. The time has come for the West to begin a fundamental rethink of its long-held policy that it serves long-term Western interests to keep institutions of global governance weak.
Of course, Western strategy has been a bit more nuanced. While it has kept the UN system at large weak, the UN Security Council was kept relatively strong and effective. Why? Because the West has been able, by and large, to control and dominate the UN's most important body.
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This once-intelligent long-term strategy is no longer so intelligent, however. As the West progressively loses relative power within the international system, the inclination is to hold on to past power as much and as long as possible.
With only 12% of the global population and an inevitably declining share of economic and (increasingly) military power, the West's hardcore long-term geopolitical interests will quite naturally switch to delay the unavoidable.
It will move from trying to preserve Western "dominance" to trying to put in long-term safeguards to protect the West's "minority" position in a new global configuration of power.
This game can of course be played for a long time. However, the best way to protect minority rights is actually through strengthening the rule of law and strengthening the institutions that promote it.
This is precisely what most institutions of global governance are designed to do. The time has come for the West to work on strengthening, rather than weakening, these institutions. I hope that we will soon see a major debate in Western capitals on the rapidly diminishing wisdom of sticking with the old policies.
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Predictably, China reacted with a great deal of suspicion to this unsolicited Western advice. It was seen to be a clever, but transparent maneuver by the West to derail or slow down China's economic development.
A Chinese policymaker told me that China finally accepted the policy advice when it was given to them by an independent UN agency, the UNDP. No wonder then that, when the Chinese government finally decided to organize a global seminar to address this issue, its partner of choice was the UNDP.
Trust is an essential commodity as we go about restructuring the global system to handle new global challenges. We should try to retain as much as possible all the trust that the UN has accumulated in our world.
One very direct policy consequence of all this is that the time has come for the United States to terminate its zero-budget policies and to invest in the UN constructively.
If it were to do so, the impact on the American economy and the U.S. federal budget would be truly inconsequential.
Just consider that the budget of the New York City Fire Department, which serves one city, was $1.73 billion in 2011. In contrast, the budget for the UN's core functions — the Secretariat operations in New York, Geneva, Nairobi, Vienna and five Regional Commissions, which serve the whole world — is $1.74 billion a year.
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But adamantly clinging to zero-budget growth policies for the entire UN is not the answer.
Editor's note: This essay is adapted from The Great Convergence: Asia, the West, and the Logic of One World (PublicAffairs) by Kishore Mahbubani. Published by arrangement with the author. Copyright © 2013 by Kishore Mahbubani.
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