
With India officially nominating a candidate 8212; Shashi Tharoor 8212; for the UN8217;s top job, there8217;ll be unavoidably and justifiably a fair amount of domestic excitement at being in the race. UN races can be smooth and almost predetermined or complicated and bitterly fought. It8217;s too early to say whether India8217;s candidate will have an easy ride but what can already be said, and indeed has been said in different contexts, is that whoever heads the UN will inherit one of the world8217;s most change-resistant and pampered bureaucracies. To say this is not to argue in the same vein as America8217;s radical conservatives, who have for years argued that the UN is a waste and that America should stop contributing to it. This view doesn8217;t acknowledge the fact that a world without the UN will be worse off than a world with it. But the American Right8217;s bad-tempered critiques have had the value, over the years, of sharpening the focus on the UN8217;s way of functioning.
The oil for food scandal was just one of the many demonstrations of dodgy UN administrative practices. In general, the UN8217;s critics have complained that while the organisation has always been quick to demand its dues from member countries, it has been rather slow in implementing radical administrative reform. Unfortunately, India has never quite added its voice to those asking for change.