Is the Bush Administration Backing Ban Ki-Moon?
Jim Hoagland thinks so, and he thinks we may regret that:
That warning of the dangers of answered prayers applies particularly to President Bush and his support for Ban Ki Moon, South Korea’s reliably stolid foreign minister, in the highly competitive race to succeed Kofi Annan at year’s end. Bush — pilloried by Third World radicals at last week’s General Assembly opening — may be picking up a lightning rod instead of a shield.
Hoagland isn’t very clear in his explanation of why that is, other than the fact that other nations will feel slighted. Yes, and that’s why we should try to keep our balloting choices out of The Washington Post. We’d be foolish to support Ban at all, but doubly so to let talk of it slip into the public domain.
It may be that many in our State Department genuinely want Ban in. One possibility is that an axis between Ban and State Department officials from the Armitage-Burns mold could block those like Robert Joseph and John Bolton who might favor stronger action. Another possibility that occurs to me is that Ban is so predictably awful that those who seek to undermine American confidence in the U.N. see Ban as the ideal candidate. That may be true for the long term, but the U.N. still has considerable ability to impede us. With Ban in charge, it will probably exercise it.