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September 30, 2006
From tomorrow's London Sunday Times Magazine, the case against Kofi Annan: Srebrenica is rarely mentioned nowadays in Annan’s offices on the 38th floor of the UN secretariat building in New York. He steps down in December after a decade as secretary-general. His retirement will be marked by plaudits. But behind the honorifics and the accolades lies a darker story: of incompetence, mismanagement and worse. Annan was the head of the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) between March 1993 and December 1996. The Srebrenica massacre of up to 8,000 men and boys and the slaughter of 800,000 people in Rwanda happened on his watch. In Bosnia and Rwanda, UN officials directed peacekeepers to stand back from the killing, their concern apparently to guard the UN’s status as a neutral observer. This was a shock to those who believed the UN was there to help them. Read it all; it is a sad story. It seems to me that the United Nations is not a unique phenomenon; rather, it is typical of much of the modern world in its preference for fine words over hard action; its valuing of intentions over achievements; and the world-weary cynicism that lies behind its purportedly noble ideals. Posted by at 8:06 PM
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