首页
登录
职称英语
Critics and supporters of the United Nations have sometimes seen worlds apart.
Critics and supporters of the United Nations have sometimes seen worlds apart.
游客
2023-12-16
46
管理
问题
Critics and supporters of the United Nations have sometimes seen worlds apart. But since last year, almost all of them, whether multilateralist or unilateralist, American or European, have come to agree that the organization is in crisis. This week, a blue ribbon panel commissioned by the body’s secretary-general, Kofi Annan, released its report on what to do about it.
The U. N. ’s sorry state became most obvious with the Iraq war. Those favoring the war were furious that after a decade of Security Council resolutions, including the last-chance Resolution 1441 threatening "serious consequences" if Iraq did not prove its disarmament, the U. N. could not agree to act. Anti-war types were just as frustrated that the world body failed to stop the war. But Iraq was not the U. N.’s only problem. It has done little to stop humanitarian disasters, such as the ongoing horror in Sudan. And it has done nothing to stop Iran’s and North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons.
Recognizing the danger of irrelevance, Mr. Annan last year told a 16-member panel, composed mainly of former government ministers and heads of government, to suggest changes. These fall broadly into two categories: the institutional and the cultural. The former has got most of the headlines -- particularly a call for changing the structure of the Security Council. But changes in the U. N. ’s working practices are crucial too.
Everyone agrees that the Security Council is an unrepresentative relic: of its 15 seats, five are occupied by permanent, veto-wielding members (America, Russia, China, Britain and France) and ten go to countries that rotate every two years and have no veto. But that the council’s composition is a throwback to the world order immediately after the Second World War has been agreed on for decades, without any success in changing it. Japan and Germany, the secondand thirdbiggest contributors to the U.N. budget, believe they are entitled to permanent seats. So does India, the world’s second-most- populous country, and Brazil, Latin America’s biggest. Unlike in previous efforts, these four have finally banded together to press their case. And they are joined in spirit by the Africans, who want two seats for their continent.
But each aspirant has opponents. Italy opposes a permanent seat for Germany, which would make Italy the only biggish European power. It instead proposes a single seat for the European Union, a non- starter since this would require Britain and France to give up theirs, and regional institutions cannot be U.N. members under the current U.N. Charter. Spanish-speaking Mexico and Argentina do not think Portuguese-speaking Brazil should represent Latin America, and Pakistan strongly opposes its rival India’s bid. As for potential African seats, Egypt claims one as the representative of the Muslim and Arab world. That would leave Nigeria, the continent’s most populous country, and South Africa, which is richer and a more stable democracy, fighting for the other.
The panel has proposed two alternatives. The first would give six countries ( none is named but probably Germany, Japan, India, Brazil and two African countries) permanent seats without a veto, and create three extra non-permanent seats, bringing the total number of council members to 24. The second, which would expand the council by the same number of seats, creates a new middle tier of members who would serve for four years and could be immediately re-elected, above the current lower tier of two-year members, who cannot be re-elected. The rivals to the would-be permanent members favor this option.
While Security Council reform may be the most visible of the proposals, the panel has also shared its views on the guidelines on when members may use force legally, tinder the U. N. Charter, they can do so in two circumstances only: Article 51 allows force in a clear case of self-defense, and Chapter Ⅶ permits its use when the Security Council agrees. While the panelists have not proposed major changes to these two parts of the Charter, they have offered refinements.
Though the Charter was written to govern war between countries, the panel argues that even without revision, Chapter Ⅶ lets the Security Council authorize force for more controversial, modem reasons like fighting terrorists and intervention in states committing humanitarian horrors. It even considers "preventive" wars against serious but non-imminent threats potentially justifiable.
But the panel also says any decision to use force must pass five tests: the threat must be grave; the primary purpose must be to avert the threat; force must be a last resort; means must be proportional; and there must be a reasonable chance that force will succeed without calamitous consequences. All common-sense stuff, but the panel proposes making these tests explicit (if subjective and unofficial), thus raising the quality of debate about any decision to go to war.
On top of this, the report urges the U.N. to make better use of its assets in the fight against terrorism. One of the obstacles to an effective counter-terrorism strategy has been U.N. members’ inability to agree on a definition of terrorism. The panel tries to help by defining it as "any action that is intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants"; Arab countries may continue to press for exemptions in the case of "foreign occupation". The report also deals with what it sees as a possible "cascade of nuclear proliferation" in the near future. It recommends creating more incentives for countries to stop enriching uranium. [br] "...they have offered refinements" in paragraph 7 means that ______.
选项
A、the panelists have attempted to make changes to the Charter
B、the panelists have proposed minor alternatives to the Charter
C、the panelists have examined the Charter thoroughly enough
D、the panelists have made the Charter more logical in expression
答案
B
解析
语义题。原文第七段说这个16人小组没有对宪章进行大的修改(major changes),但是进行了refinements,根据前后的逻辑关系,可见offered refinements意为进行了小的修改,故选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3278508.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]TheUnitedStateshasproposedwithdrawingabout1/3ofAmeric
[originaltext]TheUnitedStateshasproposedwithdrawingabout1/3ofAmeric
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publi
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publi
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publi
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publi
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publi
HowmanyyearsdostudentshavetostudyatcommunitycollegeintheUnitedStat
TheUnitedStatesisconcernedabout______.[originaltext]AtopRussianoffi
TheUnitedStatesbelievesthattheefforttoreducetensionsisservedbyi
随机试题
HowtheCIAWorks[A]DespiteplentyofHollywoodfilmsabouttheCIAand
电子商务交易必须具备抗抵赖性,目的在于防()。A.一个实体假装成另一个实体
解除因腹部加压引起迷走神经反应的最有效措施是A.立即解除压迫 B.输液以加速对
患者死亡,医患双方当事人不能确定死因或者对死因有异议的,应当在患者死亡后多长时间
对于业主而言,采用固定总价合同形式发包工程,比较有利于业主控制()。A、质量
某护士在下班回家的路上正巧碰到一位突发心脏骤停的患者倒在旁边,立即上前为患者进行
A.豆科 B.蓼科 C.柏科 D.蔷薇科 E.木兰科蓼大青叶的原植物属于
(2021年真题)根据反垄断法律制度的规定,涉嫌垄断行为的经营者在被调查期间可以
九力模型综合评价效果较好,简单通用。它将企业能力按( )分类成九种能力。A.宏观
—车祸伤员送至急诊时,诉呼吸困难,腹部剧痛,检查发现左胸有一伤口,有气泡与血液从
最新回复
(
0
)