A Leading Role for
the Security Council
by Mikhail S. Gorbachev, October 21, 2001
Originally Published in the New
York Times
Moscow
In the past month, the world has witnessed
something previously unknown: a common stand taken by America,
Russia, Europe, India, China, Cuba, most of the Islamic world
and numerous other regions and countries. Despite many serious
differences between them, they united to save civilization.
It is now the responsibility of the world community
to transform the coalition against terrorism into a coalition
for a peaceful world order. Let us not, as we did in the 1990's,
miss the chance to build such an order.
Concepts like solidarity and helping third world
countries to fight poverty and backwardness have disappeared from
the political vocabulary. But if these concepts are not revived
politically, the worst scenarios of a clash of civilizations could
become reality.
I believe the United Nations Security Council should
take the lead in fighting terrorism and in dealing with other
global problems. All the main issues considered by the United
Nations affect mankind's security. It is time to stop reviling
the United Nations and get on with the work of adapting the institution
to new tasks.
Concrete steps should include accelerated nuclear
and chemical disarmament and control over the remaining stocks
of dangerous substances, including chemical and biological agents.
No amount of money is too much for that. I hope the United States
will support the verification protocol of the convention banning
biological weapons and ratify the treaty to prohibit all nuclear
tests ‹ though both steps would reverse the Bush administration's
current positions.
We should also heed those who have pointed out
the negative consequences of globalization for hundreds of millions
of people. Globalization cannot be stopped, but it can be made
more humane and more balanced for those it affects.
If the battle against terrorism is limited to military
operations, the world could be the loser. But if it becomes an
integral part of common efforts to build a more just world order,
everyone will win ‹ including those who now do not support
American actions or the antiterrorism coalition. Those people,
and they are many, should not all be branded as enemies.
Russia has shown its solidarity with America. President
Vladimir Putin immediately sent a telegram to President Bush on
Sept. 11 condemning the "inhuman act" of that day. Russia
has been sharing information, coordinating positions with the
West and with its neighbors, opening its air space, and providing
humanitarian assistance to the Afghan people and weapons to the
Northern Alliance.
This has been good policy. But we should bear in
mind that both in the Russian establishment and among the people,
reaction to it has been mixed. Some people are still prone to
old ways of understanding the world and Russia's place in it.
Others sincerely wonder whether the world's most powerful country
should be bombing impoverished Afghanistan. Still others ask:
We have supported America in its hour of need, but will it meet
us halfway on issues important to us?
I am sure Russia will be a serious partner in fighting
international terrorism. But equally, it is important that its
voice be heard in building a new international order. If not,
Russians could conclude that they have merely been used.
Irritants in American-Russian relations ‹
issues like missile defense and the admission of new members to
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ‹ will be addressed
in due course, but they will be easier to solve once we have moved
toward a new global agenda and a deeper partnership between our
two countries.
Finally, it would be wrong to use the battle against
terrorism to establish control over countries or regions. This
would discredit the coalition and close off the prospect of transforming
it into a powerful mechanism for building a peaceful world.
Turning the coalition against terror into an alliance
that works to achieve a just international order would be a lasting
memorial to the thousands of victims of the Sept. 11 tragedy.
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