As President Bush addressed the
United Nations last week, I could not help thinking we have become
incredibly mired in the "entangling alliances" another
President George George Washington warned against.
Sadly, many in Washington and the media seem to consider UN approval
of our war plans far more important than a congressional debate
on the matter.
America has an absolute sovereign
right to defend itself. We do not need permission from the UN
or anybody else to use military force. What is needed, however,
is a congressional declaration of war. Our Constitution does not
permit any President to initiate war simply because the UN gives
him permission. When we seek permission, or even mere approval,
from the United Nations, we give credibility to the terrible notion
that American national security is a matter of international consensus.
America alone should decide whether to send its sons and daughters
to war.
I’m disappointed that the President
has chosen to further entangle the American people with the United
Nations by rejoining UNESCO. For decades UNESCO has promoted its
anti-American "education" agenda with our tax dollars.
President Reagan was right to withdraw America from the politicized
and corrupt UNESCO, especially since American taxpayers funded
a whopping 25% of its budget. Our new promised financial commitment
to UNESCO is at least $60 million annually. Given our present
economic problems and immediate national security concerns, we
surely cannot afford to send even more taxpayer dollars to the
UN especially to an organization that actively promotes
values so contrary to those of most Americans.
Meanwhile, Russia and France have
made it known that they might be persuaded to support our war
effort if the American government guarantees payment for commercial
debts owed them by Iraq. This amounts to nothing less than buying
allies. Incredibly, the U.S. Treasury may make good on Saddam
Hussein’s bad debts, with American taxpayers settling his unpaid
bills! Who can possibly believe these kinds of unholy deals represent
an acceptable foreign policy?
The root of the problem is our insistence
on accepting the concept of one-world globalist government while
pursuing unilateralist goals. We participate in globalist institutions
like the UN, sign globalist treaties, and send our sons and daughters
to fight in globalist wars that have nothing to do with our national
interest. Yet we also demand the right to act unilaterally when
it suits us, to set all policy in the global arena, and to exclude
ourselves from many of the international rules.
This schizophrenic approach inevitably
gives us the worst of both worlds. We give up our sovereignty,
but fail to win any real allies. We pay all the bills, risk
the lives of our young people, and invite UN meddling in our
domestic laws, yet still we sow the seeds of discontent and
future hostility with the world community. All because we have
abandoned our Constitution and the founder’s ideal of noninterventionism
in favor of globalism. What is badly needed today is a coherent
foreign policy based on American national security and self-defense,
free trade, a rejection of entangling political and military
alliances, and a wholesale removal of the U.S. from the clutches
of global government.
September
17, 2001