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Russian in Trump scandal may be U.N.'s new anti-terror chief

By Rosa Freedman, University of Reading
Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak may be the front-runner for a new office for counterterrorism at the United Nations. File Photo by Joel Kowsky/NASA
Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak may be the front-runner for a new office for counterterrorism at the United Nations. File Photo by Joel Kowsky/NASA

May 16 (UPI) -- As if there wasn't enough controversy surrounding Sergey Kislyak. The Russian ambassador to the United States at the center of the Trump national security storm is set to become the United Nations head of counterterrorism, probably at under secretary-general level. The irony seems to have been lost on most of the world's media, with near-total silence about what looks set to be one of the U.N.'s most contentious appointments in recent years. The Conversation

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In April, the new U.N. Secretary-General, Antonio Gutteres, set out his plan to streamline and fix the U.N.'s approach to counterterrorism and preventing violent extremism. Currently, there are 35 U.N. entities that deal with these issues. Those entities fall under the fields of peace and security, development, and human rights, and there has been a near-failure to coordinate their work. Gutteres has proposed a new office for counterterrorism that will have a full-time senior official to oversee, coordinate and streamline the U.N.'s work in this area. And the whisper-stream has repeatedly said that Kislyak is the front-runner for this position.

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There are five main objectives for this new office: more leadership; more coordination, coherence and collaboration; more capacity-building assistance to states; more resources for the United Nations; and more attention across the U.N. system. These may seem like small steps, but given that U.N. member states have failed to agree on a definition of terrorism, it is remarkable that there is consensus about the need to enhance and strengthen the United Nations' work in this area.

Of course, one of the main reasons for this changed approach is the rise of terrorism and violent extremism around the world, with the spotlight firmly on Islamic State and on Syria. And Russia's role in Syria has played a major role in perpetuating that war and creating a situation in which individuals from many U.N. member states have traveled to Syria to become involved in terrorist activities.

Russia's record on counterterrorism and preventing violent extremism is also highly problematic. From the violent repression of Chechens under the guise of counterterrorism to more recent accusations of the country's funding of terrorism in the Ukraine, let alone the tactics deployed during and immediately after the Cold War, Russia's approach to these issues has been widely criticized.

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Strange days

Appointing a Russian diplomat to this new role, then, is controversial. And that is before we begin to look at Kislyak himself. The Russian diplomat has long been concerned with arms control, and served as an envoy on that topic to Washington during the Cold War as well as an ambassador to NATO, Belgium and the United States interspersed with terms as deputy minister of defense and minister of foreign affairs in Russia. But over recent months it is his central role in the alleged leaking of security secrets by U.S. President Donald Trump and his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn.

So, how is a man accused of being a spy by U.S. intelligence agencies, and at the center of this ongoing storm about national security and cyberterrorism, set to take the most powerful global role in counterterrorism? Well, this goes to the heart of the opaque world of how the United Nations appoints its senior officials.

The four most senior roles in the United Nations are secretary-general, deputy secretary-general, and a number of assistant secretaries-general and under secretaries-general. Appointments are political because they require the approval of the General Assembly, which is made up of all 193 U.N. member states.

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This means that there are many negotiations between states about which country ought to be given a senior appointment. The most important positions, usually on peace and security, tend to be given to nationals from the most powerful countries. Vote-swapping becomes a crucial tool, and the appointments process becomes a method for less powerful states to receive support on unrelated issues from those countries that want their national appointed to a post.

When it comes to new roles, the support of those powerful countries is needed as they provide the diplomatic and political pressure on other states that is required to build consensus for a new post. And it is widely discussed informally within the United Nations that the Russians were promised the counterterrorism position from early on in the negotiations about the new role.

We can draw our own conclusions about whether Russia would have supported or blocked the new role if these promises had not been made. But even if these promises need to be acted upon, surely there are other Russians more committed than Kislyak to the rule of law in the counterterrorism sector.

Guterres made early promises of new, effective and transparent processes for job selections to include gender parity as a main objective. Yet so far he has appointed men to all major posts other than the deputy secretary-general and a few of his special representatives. It seems from this latest turn of events that he is perpetuating the opacity of his predecessors.

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During Gutteres' campaign for the United Nation's top job, there were whispers about what the Russians had been promised in order not to block yet another European being elected secretary-general. Some said that Russia wanted a Russian as the under secretary-general for political affairs, but an American national has remained in that post for another year. It is likely that this backroom promise on the counterterrorism post is part of those previous negotiations. And if this all sounds murky, we should be clear that this is precisely how the United Nations often operates.

Murky dealings

It is deeply concerning that the most powerful and important positions are decided by recourse to diplomatic and political negotiations. But it is not only the political nature of these appointments that merits scrutiny. There is a wholescale lack of transparency around job descriptions and appointments process.

As Lord Dubs pointed out in relation to the secretary-general:

There is no job description, timetable or public scrutiny for the appointments process, and there is a troubling history of backroom deals.

What tends to happen when a new senior role is created is for terms of reference to be drafted by U.N. staff, circulated to select people for comment, and then distributed via U.N. entities and some civil society organizations to people whom they think might be interested in the job.

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Without a transparent application process, there is no way of ensuring that the best possible candidates are able to apply. And without a job description there is no way of knowing whether the person appointed is the most suitable candidate for the job. But of course, that is what many states want to happen.

These roles bring with them significant power, and countries are reluctant to relinquish that power to independent candidates. Of course, there are some people who are appointed on merit, usually individuals who have worked within the U.N. system and who the secretary-general wishes to appoint, and they do not want or require the support of their national government in the lobbying and election process. But these tend to be the exception to the rule at senior levels, and it seems very likely that Kislyak does not fall into this category.

The impact of this political, nepotistic and elitist appointments system goes beyond not being able to ensure that the best possible people are appointed to the most important roles globally. There are times, as with this current situation, that an appointment undermines the United Nations' legitimacy and brings the United Nations into disrepute. Indeed, if this were a film, viewers would say that it is too farfetched to be believable. Yet, it seems clear that someone at the center of what might be the biggest U.S. political scandal since Watergate is indeed set to coordinate global counterterrorism efforts.

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Rosa Freedman is a professor of law, conflict and global development at the University of Reading.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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