Oliver North: The UN Asylum
Oliver North: The UN Asylum

 


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LtCol Oliver L. North is a nationally syndicated columnist and the honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance. An educational and charitable foundation, the Alliance was founded in 1990 by LtCol North, who now serves as the organization's honorary chairman. The committee works to promote freedom and liberty, support the American military and educate American youth on the military.

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July 8, 2004

Washington, D.C. - I was reminded recently of the 1975 classic movie, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, starring Jack Nicholson as Randle Patrick McMurphy, a rebellious convict who gets himself transferred from prison to a mental hospital hoping that his incarceration will be easier under the authority of medics in white coats than prison guards with billy clubs. McMurphy soon realizes that life in the institution is a great deal more destructive than any prison could be.

The hospital is run by the evil and uncaring Nurse Mildred Ratched who takes sadistic pleasure in stripping McMurphy and the other patients of their freedoms and self-reliance. Many of them have voluntarily checked themselves into the hospital and can ask to be discharged at any time. But they wind up staying for years because they believe this is an Institution of healing - if only they stay longer, their condition will improve. But they don't. There is just something about the Institution - the atmosphere, the conditions and the supervision of Nurse Ratched - that guarantees that the patients' mental health will only deteriorate, but never improve.

In McMurphy's case, the Institution forces him to undergo a lobotomy to "cure" him of the mental problems which were caused by the Institution itself. It's a sad and depressing film whose commentary on the care in mental hospitals sparked some much-needed reform in that industry at that time in America's history.

I was reminded of the film after reading Jed Babbin's latest book, Inside the Asylum: Why the United Nations and Old Europe are Worse Than You Think.

In it, Babbin, a former deputy undersecretary of defense in the first Bush administration, describes how so many political leaders - like the patients in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - continue to put their faith and trust in the United Nations, even after it fails them again and again. Babbin outlines the problems America faces when we attempt to conform U.S. national security policy to the dictates of the United Nations - an asylum that is increasingly run by the inmates.



When Colin Powell went to the UN Security Council and presented a bill of particulars on Iraq's destructiveness, deceit and duplicity, he asked, "How much longer are we willing to put up with Iraq's noncompliance before we as a council - as the United Nations - say, 'Enough is enough'?" French Foreign Minister Dominique De Villepin responded by demanding that the UN triple the number of weapons inspectors and open more regional offices. In other words: postpone the inevitable for as long as possible.

Such delays, Babbin argues, allowed insurgents in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Jordan and Sudan to amass weapons and make plans for further terrorism. "The cost of the UN delay," Babbin writes, "is the time it gave Saddam and the terrorist neighbors of Iraq to plan the postwar insurgency and to move or hide weapons of mass destruction." Or as Ronald Reagan used to say of the federal government, "the UN is the problem, not the solution."

Yet that didn't stop congressional Democrats at the time from casting their lot with the United Nations. "I would hope [Bush] would get a Security Council vote of approval," said Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle. Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Joe Biden warned Bush to watch it because the "very legitimacy of [the United Nations] is at stake."

It is that kind of blind faith in the United Nations which resulted in the UN headquarters being built in New York. Thousands of diplomats running wild in our largest city can cause numerous problems. Babbin explains: "The UN's tolerance of espionage and terrorism is old and systemic, and includes granting 'observer status' to Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority, which is encouraged, in the words of the UN… to maintain 'permanent' offices at UN headquarters."

The UN Security Council's obstructionism was the first time the American people really got a good look at the corruption of this institution. The allegations of bribery and malfeasance which are surfacing day after day in the Oil-for-Food program should convince anybody who wasn't convinced the first time that the UN is an institution in which the United States should no longer be heavily invested.

Instead, Babbin argues that America's "destination should be a new global organization of the free and democratic nations with which we share values and goals." It should be established independent and outside the influence of the United Nations and open "to nations which allow their people the basic freedoms of religion, press, and assembly."

To stay in the UN asylum as it currently exists and allow Kofi Annan to dictate U.S. security policy is insane.


[Have an opinion on this column? Sound off here.]

© 2004 Oliver North. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.


 



 



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