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Sarin

The United States Positioning as a World Superpower:

Its Subsequent Influence in the United Nations and Views Regarding Human Rights

Nina Sarin

Student ID Number: 5104478

Professor Bruce Lusignan

EDGE Spring 2005

“America stands at this moment at the summit of the world.”

-Winston Churchill, 1945

As World War II came to a close, a new need for an international peacekeeping organization became apparent in order to maintain peaceful relations among nations in the post-World War II era. The United Nations (UN) came into effect on October 24, 1945 for this very purpose and also “to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small”.[1] One of the leading organs of the UN, the Security Council (UNSC), was given “primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security” and held its first session on January 17, 1946. [2] The United States was overwhelming supportive and instrumental in the construction of the UNSC as compared to their post-WWI refusal to support the League of Nations, an organization similar in structure to that of the UNSC. The United States decision to reject the League of Nations after WWI was seen as a controversial move to the rest of the world. It reinstated the U.S.’s isolationist foreign policy when the world was seeking for their cooperation in the maintenance of post-WWI peace. However by rejecting the League in 1919, the United States conversely benefited as it led them to be more influential in the creation and administration of the United Nations Security Council. The United Nations and its Security Council worked cooperatively with the U.S. post-WWII. However, in the last few decades, it can be seen that the values of the United States have grown apart from those of the UN. Nowadays, the United States seeks to encourage the protection of human rights and reducing human prejudices by advancing the notion of democracy and not necessarily by advocating global peace as it once had. Ironically, even though the UN aided the U.S. into its position as a world leader post-WWII, the U.S. tends to believe that the UN is holding them back from further developing as a prevailing Nation. This conflict between the U.S. and the UN can be seen specifically in the events leading up to America’s war on Iraq, where the U.S. demonstrated the use of force to promote democracy as their method of improving human rights.

The conclusion of World War II not only ended four years of bitter global warfare, but also marked the creation of a new era for the United States. The United States emerged out of World War II not only victorious but newly strengthened. The other Ally powers had proven victorious as well, but were faced with much greater losses than the United States. The United States exited the war relatively physically unharmed, economically revived, and diplomatically reinforced. The period of the Great Depression that had lingered over the American people for twelve years was over. The country was stimulated by economic growth and rising prosperity. The policies of American isolationism that had governed foreign policy for a century and a half were coming to a close. The American people were feeling invigorated and possessed much national self-confidence. The United States came out of WWII a leading nation, which enabled them to join the United Nations and be an influential member.

The United Nations was not the first global organization founded with the goals of preventing war and keeping peace among nations. The original organization assembled with these purposes was the League of Nations in 1919. As this organization proved to be less-successful in its task, especially in its inability to prevent WWII, it was eventually voted out of existence. The League of Nations stemmed mainly from the ideas of President Woodrow Wilson after WWI. In his address to Congress in January 1918, Wilson proposed the Fourteen Points mainly concerning the war aims of the United States and the creation of the League of Nations. Wilson explained that: “a general association of nations must be formed under specific covenants for the purpose of affording mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike.”[3] Foreign participants who supported Wilson’s idea urged the United States to take the foremost role in creating the new institution as they felt that U.S. participation was crucial for its success.

The League of Nations had two main objectives as quoted from the Preamble of its Covenant: “to promote international cooperation and to achieve international peace and security.”[4] Its two main organs through which it could act were an Assembly and a Council, which much resembled the later developed United Nations Security Council. According to the Covenant, the League’s Council was to consist of “Representatives of the Principal Allied and Associated Powers”, which included France, Great Britain, Japan, Italy, the United States, and four other members of the League whom were to be elected by the Assembly.[5] It was intended that the great Allied powers have a majority of one over the elected members. But without the membership of the United States, the Council began with four members in each category. Thus the League showed signs of weaknesses from its very beginnings as a result of the United States unwillingness to join.

When WWI began in 1914, the United States foreign policy of isolationism strongly came into effect. President Wilson’s during the early years of the war kept U.S.’s neutrality, which contributed to his popular re-election in 1916. However, with increased pressure, the United States entered the war on April 6, 1917. During WWI, Wilson realized the importance of collective security in the world. His position as an idealist came into full effect after WWI as Wilson’s views on foreign policy changed drastically. Instead of isolationism, Wilson believed that the next step in American foreign policy was to participate in a system of collective security, which therefore stemmed his idea of the League of Nations.

Despite Wilson's efforts to establish and promote the League, the United States was unable to see the benefits of membership largely in part due to the opposition from isolationists in the U.S. Senate, especially the influential Republican leader Henry Cabot Lodge. Lodge believed that membership in the world peacekeeping organization would threaten the sovereignty of the United States by requiring the nation to participate in international commitments that it would not or could not keep. In 1919, Senator Lodge argued against the League by saying:

The United States is the world's best hope, but if you fetter her in the interests and quarrels of other nations, if you tangle her in the intrigues of Europe, you will destroy her powerful good, and endanger her very existence. Leave her to march freely through the centuries to come, as in the years that have gone.[6]

As seen from the words of Senator Lodge, the strongholds of isolationist foreign policy were still present post-WWI, despite the United States dismissal of this policy during the war. Entering an organization to promote peacekeeping interests was not on the United States agenda at the time. The United States was ready to reinvest itself in its isolationist tendencies post-WWI, as they felt that America would be better off by ending its brief participation in European affairs in order to focus on its own potentials as a nation.

The United Nations was the follow-up organization to the League of Nations, taking on a reevaluated form of many of the same principles and structuring. In the words of F.P. Walters, a historian of the League and a senior member of its Secretariat, the League had been “’in success or failure alike, the embodiment in constitutional form of mankind’s aspirations towards peace and towards a rationally organized world’”.[7] The League was an important and good-intentioned starting point to the realization that a governing body in order to maintain peace was necessary in the post-WWI era. In the end, it was helpful that the world’s first attempt for a peacekeeping organization failed as its faults stimulated fresh thinking which ultimately led to some of the most notable accomplishments of the United Nations while also influencing the United States decision to play a newly active role in the organization.

The need for a second installation of a peacekeeping organization was first articulated during a meeting between President Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in August 1941. These two statesmen consequently issued a joint charter, known as the Atlantic Charter, where they expressed the need for the establishment of a “’wider and permanent system of general security’” in order to disarm the potentially aggressive nations of the time. The name “United Nations” was first used in January 1942 at a meeting in Washington, where the Allied nations approved the principles of the Atlantic Charter. During the Moscow Conference in 1943, the governments of the United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union, and China met and expressed their desire for the creation of such an organization to commence. The United States, the Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom were given primary responsibility in drawing up a more comprehensive plan for the association. These nations negotiated early on that the United Nations was intended to be a new organization, not a reproduction of the League of Nations. However it was agreed upon that it would follow some of the Leagues more successful principles, mainly the notion of being an institution based upon the “sovereign equality of all its Members”.[8]

The United States was instrumental in the construction of the United Nations governing Charter as it was the strongest nation coming out of the WWII and therefore looked upon to lead the world in sustaining peace among nations. The extent of the United States influence can be firstly noted in the Preamble of the Charter which begins: “We the peoples of the United Nations determined to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war . . .”[9] The United States was clearly significant in the wording choice of the Preamble as it is very similar to the beginnings of the United States Constitution. From the onset, the United States was able to push the notion of democracy within the United Nations, which is seen here in the Preamble, by stressing the role and rights of the peoples as well as the governments in the organization.

The pursuit of human rights is an ideal that has been ingrained within the UN Charter from its very beginnings. But the events of World War II, especially the profound mistreatment of people, led the UN to place an even greater importance on the human rights issue so to prevent similar tragedies in the future. Accordingly, the UN formed a legal framework composed of human rights organizations to review and if necessary to act upon violations seen towards the inherent rights of people. The complete structuring of these organizations is as follows:

Human Rights Machinery at the UN[10]

General Assembly
The 3rd Committee with competence in social, humanitarian and cultural affairs
Economic and Social Council (54 members): and human rights
Its subsidiary bodies:
Working Group of Governmental Experts on the Implementation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (15 members)
Human Rights Commission (1946) (54 members)
Working groups on:
Punishment of the crime of apartheid
Gross violations of human rights disappearances
Analysis of the promotion of human rights
Preparation of various conventions
Sub-Commission on the prevention of discrimination and the protection of minorities
(1947) (27 experts)
With working groups on:
Communications made to the Sub-Commission
Slavery
Indigenous populations
And working groups for each session
Commission on the Status of Women (1946) (32 members)

The UN Charter addresses the necessity of human rights by requiring all member nations to promote "universal respect for, and observance of, human rights" and to take "joint and separate action" to that end.[11] In addition, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, though not legally binding, was adopted by the General Assembly in 1948 as the precedent to follow when detailing the inherent rights of human beings. This Declaration continues to be upheld by the main UN body in charge of promoting human rights: the UN Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR). The UNCHR’s primary responsibility is to investigate and to propose technical assistance in situations dealing with the mistreatment of human rights. Such technical assistance includes providing free and fair elections, improving judicial structures, drafting constitutions, training human rights officials, and transforming armed movements into political parties. These actions can evidently be seen as better supporting countries in transition towards democratic societies more so than other types of governments, as well as advancing the U.S.’s hope for a democratized world.

In addition to the dealings of human rights, the written improvements made to the UN Charter from concepts first seen in the League of Nations Covenant, further promote and sustain the United States presence in the United Nations. The United Nations Charter saw the need for a system of general security within the organization and therefore took the idea of the League Council and reshaped it to form the United Nations Security Council. A detailed outline of the issues and actions the Security Council covers as deemed by the UN Charter is charted below: