May 15, 2007
The New World Order GOP
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
A federal program, Ronald Reagan used to say, is the
closest thing to eternal life here on earth. Even the
Gipper conceded he failed to get control of the federal
behemoth.
At least he tried. But what can be said for the
conservative movement today, as one witnesses the
Wall Street Journal
battle to save the $400,000-a-year tax-free sinecure
of
World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz, imperiled
because Wolfie
parked his World Bank squeeze over at State at a
fatter salary than Condi Rice's?
There was a time when the Republican Party would have
seized on this scandal to try to defund this 63-year-old
relic. No more.
Yet, what is the purpose of keeping the World Bank
and
International Monetary Fund, the United Nations and
its agencies, and
NATO, all of which date to an era long gone?
The World Bank and IMF were created when the United
States was the greatest creditor on earth. The bank was
to lend for the
reconstruction and development of Europe and Asia.
The IMF was to provide loans to help members with
balance of payments problems.
When Europe and Asia recovered, the need for the
World Bank came to an end. By 1971, when the United
States closed the gold window and let the dollar float,
the need for an IMF to maintain fixed rates of exchange,
in a world of floating rates, disappeared.
Yet both institutions reinvented themselves as
lenders of last resort to bankrupt Third World regimes,
and Republican presidents and a Republican Congress went
along. Why?
Why should the United States, now the world's largest
debtor nation, go out into the capital markets and
borrow billions, so the World Bank and IMF can continue
to subsidize the most corrupt and least competent
regimes on earth? Does this make sense?
Between them, the Japanese and Chinese have amassed
$2 trillion—two thousand billion dollars—in reserves.
Why not turn the IMF and World Bank playpens over to
them?
Though the soft-loan window of the World Bank, the
Institutional Development Fund, was created to help
"the poorest of the poor," 8,000 of the 10,000 World
Bank employees live and work in the Washington area,
where "World Bank neighborhood" is a realtor's
way of saying, "You can't afford it."
The United Nations is another case in point. American
kids were once taught that it was the "last best hope
of Earth." Now, the thing is a source of comic
relief. Last year, Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was bested
for top honors in the elocution contest when
Hugo Chavez had the General Assembly in foot-stomping
hilarity with his remarks about having been preceded
on the podium by "El Diablo," the Devil—George
Bush—who had left the stench of sulfur from hell.
This weekend, we
learned the chairmanship of the U.N. Committee on
Sustainable Development will be going to Zimbabwe,
"Comrade Bob"
Mugabe's African
paradise. Four years ago, Khadafi's Libya, which was
behind the air massacre of our college kids on
Pan Am 103, was elected to chair the U.N.
Human Rights Commission.
Ought not a self-respecting nation, as we once were,
laugh at these antics, get up, pay our share of the tab,
walk out and let the nutballs have the asylum? What is
the matter with us?
As for NATO, it was indeed the most successful
alliance in history. The United States and its partners
stood guard on the Elbe until the Cold War came to an
end. But what is the need for a NATO to defend Europe
against the Soviet Empire and Soviet Union, when both
ceased to exist more than 15 years ago?
When the Red Army went home from East Berlin, East
Germany, Eastern Europe, the Baltic states and Ukraine,
why did we not also come home? Forty-six years ago, Ike
urged JFK to start bringing U.S. troops home, lest
Europe become dependent upon us. Now, instead of ceding
NATO to the Europeans and pulling out, we have moved
NATO onto Russia's front porch and driven Moscow into
the arms of Beijing.
Why, when the defense of Europe is done, cannot we
celebrate with champagne, close up shop and go home? Why
can we never let go? Why must we retain all these relics
at immense cost to American taxpayers?
In the IMF, World Bank and United Nations, we are
talking about scores of thousands of the highest-paid
government bureaucrats around. The money we could save
by ceding NATO to Europe, bringing the troops home,
letting Europe pay for its own defense and using the
funds saved to rebuild our armed forces would be
immense.
At least Ronald Reagan said goodbye to a corrupt
UNESCO, walked out, and killed the U.N. power grab of
the world's oceans and their resources by refusing even
to consider
the Law of the Sea Treaty.
And President Bush? He has rejoined UNESCO, started
paying dues again and, says
WorldNetDaily, is about to push to have Congress
bring the United States under the Law of the Sea Treaty.
Fortunately, the election is only 18 months off.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.