Even conservatives in the U.S. Senate were never warm to the rhetoric of Bolton. He was rude, pushy, and the most anti-United Nations ambassador in the history of American diplomacy. In fact Bolton wanted the U.S. To pull out of the UN at one point. It was difficult to imagine why a U.S. president, even a conservative president, would seek to appoint a man with such a shrill, ostentatiously hostile attitude about the institution he was appointed to serve.
In his critique of Bolton's book (Surrender is not an Option), Richard Gowan (associate director for policy at the Center on International Cooperation at New York University) notes that Bolton famously stated: "The United Nations to this day remains the UN of UNICEF trick-or-treating on Halloween…" (Gowan, 2008, p. 502). Bolton alluded to Europeans as "EUroids" and he attacked his department superiors (Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice) for participating in dialogue that preceded Bush's invasion of Iraq. As to members of the U.S. Senate that supported six-party talks on North Korea, Bolton called them "Munchkins" -- much as a little bully in middle school somewhere would call students he was hoping to induce into a fistfight.
The point of bringing up Bolton is that Badescu rightly should have pointed out that not all American dealings through and with the UN have been arrogant and self-serving; and by failing to mention extremely bad actors like Bolton, she does her readers a disservice.
Meantime, on page 59 Badescu explains that there may be alternatives to states having to go through the UN, especially in cases where the Security Council is deadlocked, as often is the case, in a paralyzing stalemate of political wrangling and stalling. That solution is to use the General Assembly, as an alternative to the Security Council. Articles 10 and 11 of the UN Charter state that the General Assembly has a "responsibility regarding matters related to the maintenance of international peace and security" (Badescu, p. 59). When the Security Council is "unable or unwilling" to effectively deal with a humanitarian issue, the General Assembly can then meet in emergency session under "Uniting for Peace" procedure and with a two-thirds vote on the assembly floor, can indeed pass a resolution authorizing the use of force "for human protection purposes," Badescu continues on page 59.
Moreover, the author also asserts that Article 51 in the Charter explains that regional organizations may use force without prior UN authorizations -- indeed regional states may act in self-defense or in what the UN Charter refers to as "collective self-defense" (p. 60). Admitting that Article 51 is not really totally clear, Badescu also mentions Article 52, which supports the "responsibilities of regional arrangements"; the article states, albeit somewhat vaguely, that "nothing in the Charter should preclude the existence of regional arrangement...
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