UN's only value is as a spy nest
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- U.S. President Donald Trump made his United Nations debut this week
at the annual General Assembly. "I think the main message is 'make the United
Nations great' -- not 'again.' 'Make the United Nations great,'" Trump said to
reporters in advance of his Tuesday speech.
Trying to reform the United Nations is like dating someone with the hope that
they'll change. The U.N. won't change. But that doesn't mean you should dump it
when there's an opportunity to exploit it.
Everyone with a half a brain knows that the U.N. is a useless bureaucracy. On
the surface, it has a nifty list of do-goodism that includes everything from
climate change to global health care. None of these problems are ever solved (if
they're even solvable), but they perpetuate the existence of the U.N. itself. No
one in their right mind would look to the U.N. to actually solve critical world
problems. Even when it comes to the most egregious global threats -- such as
North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un launching missiles and bragging about nukes --
the U.N. Security Council (a group whose members inherently distrust each other)
would have to unanimously approve an intervention.
There's only one area where the United Nations has proved valuable to its member
states: as a spy nest. What better cover for espionage than a humanitarian cover
that also confers diplomatic immunity?
At the 2015 General Assembly, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced a $1
billion donation to the U.N. and offered 8,000 Chinese troops as a peacekeeping
force. Xi also pledged $100 million to the African Union for security purposes.
The donation was hardly a surprise, given China's intense economic activity in
Africa. That continent's abundant mineral supply helps sustain China's consumer
technology manufacturing sector.
As for those "donated" 8,000 troops, they aren't a sacrifice by China, but
rather an opportunity to learn best practices from other countries' soldiers and
trainers who are also involved in U.N. deployments. According to the latest U.N.
stats, there are more than 112,000 people serving in 16 peacekeeping operations
around the world, 80,000 of whom are soldiers. Each of those peacekeeping
missions provides precious ground truth: access to political and economic
information under humanitarian pretext that would be difficult to obtain in
another context.
Former NSA contractor and CIA employee turned whistleblower Edward Snowden said
that working covertly at the U.S. Mission to international organizations was
like being in a candy store of espionage.
"The reason that made Switzerland so interesting as the capital of espionage --
especially Geneva -- has not changed, Snowden said in 2015. "There have always
been international headquarters, the United Nations, WTO, WHO, ICRC. There are
representations of foreign governments, embassies, international organizations,
NGOs ... A number of organizations, and all of them are in one city!"
U.N. headquarters in New York City isn't any less of a spy nest. It's a place to
collect information and to recruit or subvert potential assets. Let's be clear:
No nations are above exploiting such a perfect opportunity. To do so would be
negligent, given that everyone else is playing the same game.
When a Russian spy ring was rolled up in New York in 2015, for example, one
alleged member was a diplomatic attaché at Russia's mission at the U.N.,
according to the FBI. He was afforded diplomatic immunity and deported.
The U.S. has also benefited from the access to information and sources (not to
mention the cover) that the U.N. provides.
In his book "Breaking With Moscow," Soviet diplomat Arkady Shevchenko detailed
how he spied for the U.S. and then defected from the Soviet Union while serving
as undersecretary general of the U.N.
A U.S. State Department cable from 2009 that was later published by WikiLeaks
briefed U.S. diplomats on the department's "reporting and collection needs" with
respect to the United Nations. Directives included gathering intelligence on
everyone from then-U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to representatives of the
Security Council. The cable also outlined electronic assets to be obtained, such
as biometric information, passwords and personal encryption keys.
It's no wonder that the U.S. secretary of state at the time, Hillary Clinton,
was such a big fan of the United U.N. Perhaps Trump's seemingly softened stance
on the U.N. is an indication that he recognizes the intelligence-gathering
opportunity provided by this pricey, bloated, mostly unless international
organization.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN