Pubdate: Fri, 31 Aug 2001 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2001 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentuckyconnect.com/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: Bill Miller Note: Bill Miller of Frankfort is past president of the Kentucky Division for the United Nations Association of the USA. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) U.S. SHOULD BE AT THE TABLE TO SHAPE U.N. RACE DEBATE The latest official pronouncement from the State Department is that Secretary Colin Powell will not participate in the U.N. World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance - -- even though he has publicly stated that the conference, which begins today in Durban, South Africa, is very important and that he wanted to attend. Given U.S. concern about some of the agenda items, the Bush administration plans to send a low-level State Department delegation, accompanied by some members of Congress. The administration fears that there may be a stampede to identify reparations for involvement in past slavery activities, to single out Israel for intense criticism of its policies toward Palestinians and to downplay the tragedy of the Holocaust. Although these may be legitimate concerns, it would be a serious mistake for the United State to boycott this major international forum. The obvious reason we should participate is that racism is a cross-cutting problem that affects virtually every society in the world, including our own. Thus, this conference has the potential to: Focus the spotlight of international scrutiny on the evils of racism and, it is hoped, pursue a constructive strategy to eliminate racial discrimination. Encourage national leaders to identify solutions and commit their legal, human and financial resources to overcome racial intolerance. Assist the United States in achieving its foreign policy goals of promoting democracy, human rights, tolerance, and social and economic development. Showcase areas, such as civil rights legislation and affirmative action programs, that have diminished racism in the United States. Demonstrate that the United States is not pursuing a totally isolationist and unilateral position on international conferences and treaties. The Bush administration is viewed negatively by a majority of other countries, friend and foe alike, because of its insistence on going it alone and thumbing its nose at international treaties, such as the Kyoto Protocol on Global Warming, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. The administration's self-described "a la carte multinationalism" -- whereby we participate in international activities that we control or perceive to be in our national interest -- is not well received by other countries. Axiomatically, since the United States is the last superpower, every issue affects our country. By downgrading our participation at the U.N. conference, we will reinforce to the other 188 member countries of the United Nations that we are not a team player, which will ultimately isolate us even more. The United Nations should be congratulated for taking on such a thorny issue. Racism is a volatile topic, and few easy answers will emerge -- but emerge they must. The conference is a logical follow-up to U.N. conferences on genocide and apartheid in 1948 and 1983, respectively. Although the United Nations confronts a myriad of tough international issues -- ranging from combating drug production and abuse to maintaining 15 peacekeeping missions in dangerous areas -- to moving aircraft, ships, mail and weather information around the globe, racism may be one of the most difficult to tackle. The United States will be criticized for a variety of perceived or real racial conditions, such as a disproportionate number of minorities receiving the death penalty, racial profiling and unfairly targeting blacks in the battle against drugs. Other countries should be severely scrutinized for a wide-range of racist/human rights abuses, such as slave trafficking in Sudan; China's authoritarian control over Tibet; Turkey's mistreatment of the Kurds; and the excesses of the Taliban in Afghanistan, which has demonstrated a most pernicious use of religion by persecuting anyone who disagrees with its interpretation of fundamentalist Islamic teachings. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, in tacit support of the Bush administration, has clearly and forcefully said that it is critical to acknowledge the past, but that it is even more important to focus on the future and devise a strategy to eliminate racism, intolerance and divisiveness. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson indicated that one major U.S. concern about equating "Zionism with racism" has been eliminated from the conference agenda, undoubtedly to the chagrin of some Arab states. Looking through the rear view mirror may help us identify where we have been, but it does nothing to help us move forward into the future. The United States, as the world's most powerful country, should look to the future and take a positive leadership role in the conference, developing a workable plan that will alleviate racial problems and tensions. Are we going to leave it to the French, Chinese, Russians or Rwandans to develop a forceful agenda to combat racism? If we are conspicuously absent at the highest official level, other countries will set the agenda and will probably attack racial conditions in the United States. If we are at the table, we help set the agenda, exert some control over the outcome and defend our interests. There's still time for Powell to catch a flight to Durban. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake