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- NATION, Page 28DIPLOMACYA Man for All Nations
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- Outmaneuvering the U.S., the Africans put one of their own at
- the helm of the world forum for the first time
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- By BONNIE ANGELO -- With reporting by Dean Fischer/Cairo
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- For the United Nations' African bloc, the election last
- week of Egyptian diplomat Boutros Boutros Ghali as the new
- Secretary-General to succeed the retiring Javier Perez de
- Cuellar was a semisweet victory. The Africans had engineered
- their continent's first turn at the helm of the world
- organization -- and had outmaneuvered the big guns of the U.S.
- and Britain to achieve it. But Ghali was the "least African"
- candidate put forward by a bloc that dearly wanted to see the
- job go to a sub-Saharan black.
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- American and British officials privately disdained all the
- candidates as lacking stature and experience for the top spot
- at the U.N. in the post-cold war era and regarded Ghali, 69, as
- too old. To the surprise of Security Council members, his
- victory came on the first official ballot. The last straw poll
- had given the edge to the leading black African candidate,
- Zimbabwean Finance Minister Bernard Chidzero. But on the first
- tally, 11 members selected Ghali and none of the five permanent
- members of the Security Council vetoed him. Among the other
- candidates, including Chidzero and early favorite Prince
- Sadruddin Aga Khan, a veteran U.N. figure who had his eye on the
- job for 20 years, no one had enough votes to force a runoff. The
- four Europeans on the ballot, including the first woman to be
- considered, Norway's Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland,
- trailed badly.
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- The Egyptian Deputy Prime Minister who will lead the U.N.
- into the new world order defies categorization. He won under
- the African banner, but he is not black. He is an Arab who is
- a Coptic Christian with a Jewish wife. He represents the Third
- World with the stamp of Paris-honed sophistication; he is the
- son of a wealthy family, the grandson of a Prime Minister. He
- was widely considered old for the demanding job but was
- criticized for campaigning for it too vigorously.
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- But Ghali brings strong qualifications to the
- $202,346-a-year post. He is an expert in international law and
- comes with a 21-page curriculum vitae replete with degrees,
- decorations and scholarly writings in three languages. After
- Anwar Sadat brought him into political life in 1974, Ghali
- became a key negotiator in the Camp David peace process, and he
- has helped mediate many quarrels among African nations.
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- Those ties helped, since it was largely the determination
- of the Africans that won him the job. Last June the
- Organization of African Unity, meeting in Nigeria, agreed to go
- all out to demand its turn in power and drew up a list of six
- candidates, all except Ghali from sub-Saharan nations. He was
- added almost by chance, to meet France's demand for a
- French-speaking candidate. In drawing up the list, President
- Mobutu of Zaire looked about the room, fixed his eye on Ghali
- and declared, "Vous!" China quickly pledged its support for an
- African, and France endorsed Ghali.
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- The U.S. has always resisted the notion of a rotating
- regional claim to the job -- a concept not mentioned in the U.N.
- charter -- but it did not counter with a serious candidate of
- its own. A State Department official insisted that "that would
- be the kiss of death," and an American diplomat at the U.N.
- agreed it would be impolitic for the U.S. to use its big-power
- muscle: "We weren't going to be the 900-lb. gorilla."
-
- Instead Washington quietly dithered as Perez de Cuellar's
- second five-year term neared its Dec. 31 end. A proposal to
- extend his tenure, floated by the Soviet Union and France, was
- knocked down by the U.S. and Britain, which wanted a man with
- new energy and attitude to stir up the sluggish U.N.
- bureaucracy. Famous names like Margaret Thatcher and Eduard
- Shevardnadze were suggested but never taken seriously.
-
- As months slid by with little sense of urgency about
- choosing a leader for the next five and possibly 10 years, the
- Africans hardened their position. They warned that if the
- Security Council bypassed their nominees, they would flout
- precedent and take the fight to the floor of the General
- Assembly, which must formally approve the council's
- recommendation. Were they bluffing? Possibly, but more likely
- not. "What we didn't want," said an American diplomat, "was a
- Clarence Thomas situation, with a deeply divided vote."
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- Meanwhile, Ghali was breaking the first rule of U.N.
- politics: don't appear to seek the job and don't get out front.
- He traveled to every crucial capital pressing his view of a
- revitalized U.N. After meeting with a noncommittal President
- Bush in September, he checked into the National Naval Medical
- Center at Bethesda, Md., and emerged with a clean bill of health
- to counter objections to his age. Both Egyptian President Hosni
- Mubarak and Saudi Arabian Ambassador to Washington Prince Bandar
- bin Sultan personally called Bush.
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- As the Security Council assembled late Thursday, rumors
- persisted that the U.S. and Britain would somehow craft an
- eleventh hour surprise. But by then Washington had decided that
- if it came to a choice between Ghali and Chidzero, the U.S.
- would vote for Ghali.
-
- The victor will be expected to inject new life into a
- bloated U.N. bureaucracy. Can Ghali do it? A Western analyst in
- Cairo calls him "a man of vision and integrity, not anybody's
- pushover." But with only five years to make his mark, the
- incoming Secretary-General must work fast. He takes over a U.N.
- facing a devastating financial crisis, increasing demands for
- peacekeeping operations and humanitarian aid, and a whole new
- global agenda -- an awesome challenge for an untried man.
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