Chicago Sun-Times

‘ONE OF THE GREAT PEACEMAKER­S OF OUR TIME’

Former U.N. leader won Nobel Peace Prize, said his ‘darkest moment’ was U.S.-led war in Iraq

- BY FRANCIS KOKUTSE AND JOHN HEILPRIN Associated Press

ACCRA, Ghana — Kofi Annan, a charismati­c global diplomat and the first black African to become United Nations secretary-general who led the world body through one of its most turbulent periods, died early Saturday at age 80.

Tributes flowed in from around the world after his foundation announced his death in the Swiss capital, Bern, after a short and unspecifie­d illness. The statement remembered the Nobel Peace Prize winner as “radiating genuine kindness, warmth and brilliance in all he did.”

He died “peacefully in his sleep,” the president of Ghana, where Annan was born, said after speaking to his wife.

Reflecting the widespread regard that won him a groundbrea­king unconteste­d election to a second term, leaders from Russia, India, Israel, France and elsewhere expressed condolence­s for a man Bill Gates called “one of the great peacemaker­s of our time.”

Annan spent virtually his entire career as an administra­tor in the United Nations. His aristocrat­ic style, cool-tempered elegance and political savvy helped guide his ascent to become its seventh secretary-general, and the first hired from within. His two terms were from Jan. 1, 1997, to Dec. 31, 2006, capped nearly midway when he and the U.N. were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001.

During his tenure, Annan presided over some of the worst failures and scandals at the world body. Challenges from the outset forced him to spend much of his time struggling to restore its tarnished reputation.

His enduring moral prestige remained largely undented, however, both through charm and by virtue of having negotiated with most of the powers in the world.

When he departed from the United Nations, he left behind a global organizati­on far more aggressive­ly engaged in peacekeepi­ng and fighting poverty, setting the framework for its 21st-century response to mass atrocities and its emphasis on human rights and developmen­t.

Annan took on the top U.N. post six years after the collapse of the Soviet Union and presided during a decade when the world united against terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks — then divided deeply over the U.S.-led war against Iraq. The U.S. relationsh­ip tested him as a diplomatic leader.

“I think that my darkest moment was the Iraq war, and the fact that we could not stop it,” Annan said in a February 2013 interview with TIME magazine to mark the publicatio­n of his memoir, “Interventi­ons: A Life in War and Peace.”

“I worked very hard — I was working the phone, talking to leaders around the world. The U.S. did not have the support in the Security Council,” Annan recalled in the videotaped interview posted on his foundation’s website.

“So they decided to go without the council. But I think the council was right in not sanctionin­g the war,” he said. “Could you imagine if the U.N. had endorsed the war in Iraq, what our reputation would be like? Although at that point, President (George W.) Bush said the U.N. was headed toward irrelevanc­e, because we had not supported the war. But now we know better.”

Before becoming secretary-general, Annan served as U.N. peacekeepi­ng chief and as special envoy to the former Yugoslavia, where he oversaw a transition in Bosnia from U.N. protective forces to NATO-led troops.

The U.N. peacekeepi­ng operation faced two of its greatest failures during his tenure: the Rwanda genocide in 1994 and the massacre in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica in July 1995.

In both cases, the U.N. had deployed troops under Annan’s command, but they failed to save the lives of the civilians they were mandated to protect. After becoming secretaryg­eneral, he called for U.N. reports on those two debacles — and they were highly critical of his management.

As secretary-general, Annan forged his experience­s into a doctrine called the “Responsibi­lity to Protect” that countries accepted — at least in principle — to head off genocide, crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing and war crimes.

In 2005, however, the U.N. was facing almost daily attacks over allegation­s about corruption in the U.N. oil-for-food program in Iraq, bribery by U.N. purchasing officials and widespread sex abuse by U.N. peacekeepe­rs.

It emerged that Annan’s son had not disclosed payments he received from his employer, which had a $10 million-a-year contract to monitor humanitari­an aid under the oil-forfood program.

Before leaving office, Annan helped secure a truce between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.

After leaving his high-profile U.N. perch, Annan didn’t let up. In 2007, his Geneva-based foundation was created. That year he helped broker peace in Kenya, where election violence had killed over 1,000 people.

As special envoy to Syria in 2012, Annan won internatio­nal backing for a six-point plan for peace. The U.N. deployed a 300-member observer force to monitor a cease-fire, but peace never took hold and Annan was unable to surmount the bitter stalemate among Security Council powers. He resigned in frustratio­n seven months into the job.

Like many in the internatio­nal community he expressed alarm at the Trump administra­tion’s decisions to back out of the Iran nuclear deal and move the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

Annan’s homeland of Ghana was shaken by his death. “One of our greatest compatriot­s,” President Nana Akufo-Addo said, calling for a week with flags at half-staff. “Rest in perfect peace, Kofi. You have earned it.”

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 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? ABOVE: Kofi Annan was the first black African to become U.N. secretary-general.RIGHT: Annan, with then-President George W. Bush in 2003, opposed the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
AP FILE PHOTOS ABOVE: Kofi Annan was the first black African to become U.N. secretary-general.RIGHT: Annan, with then-President George W. Bush in 2003, opposed the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

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