Oman Daily Observer

UN scans Trump foreign policy hints from Haley

US Secretary of State has kept a low profile, leaving the UN evnoy as the face of US foreign policy

- MICHELLE NICHOLS

Nikki Haley has made a tough-talking debut as US President Donald Trump’s envoy to the United Nations but her counterpar­ts on the powerful Security Council are waiting to see if that will translate into policies differing from those of the Obama administra­tion on crises from South Sudan and Somalia to Yemen and North Korea. Although Haley is one of the few veteran politician­s in Trump’s Cabinet, her diplomatic prowess is facing an early test as she represents an administra­tion with policies that are unclear and top foreign policy posts that are empty.

“There’s only two subjects where there is some kind of determined policy: The Middle East and also (UN) budget cuts, especially peacekeepi­ng,” said a senior council diplomat.

Haley assumes the monthly presidency of the 15-member council in April, adding to the challenge as the Trump administra­tion moves to slash US financial support for the world body.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has kept a low profile, leaving the former Republican governor of South Carolina as the face of US foreign policy after Trump himself.

“She’s establishi­ng for herself quite a lot of leeway in terms of pursuing things the way she wants to pursue them here in New York,” said a second senior Security Council diplomat.

But the diplomat said that on Iran and North Korea: “The tone might be just slightly tougher, but the substance is almost identical (to the previous administra­tion).”

Haley has said that while it would be difficult to reimpose sanctions on Iran that were removed under a 2015 deal with world powers to curb Tehran’s nuclear programme, the United States is “going to watch them like a hawk.” The Trump administra­tion is reviewing how to handle a North Korea that continues to press its missile and nuclear weapons programs despite UN sanctions.

“The problem is the whole administra­tion is still in the making. They don’t have many officials who are responsibl­e for policy,” said the first senior diplomat. ‘‘There’s a huge difference between what they want and what they do.”

While Trump pledged to build closer ties with Moscow when he took office on January 20, Haley has followed in the footsteps of her predecesso­r, president Barack Obama’s envoy Samantha Power, in confrontin­g Russia over its seizure of Crimea and for protecting Syria’s government from council action.

“On Russia handling, there’s been a lot of speculatio­n about different views from members of the administra­tion, but... she has been at the tough end of the spectrum, and has now done that on multiple occasions,” the second diplomat said.

Haley appears set for a clash with Russia and China over her plans to hold a council meeting in April on human rights.

“It will be very telling if any country tries to block this debate,” Haley told the Council on Foreign Relations in New York on Wednesday.

Moscow and Beijing say rights discussion­s should be confined to the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council, which Washington has threatened to quit unless its agenda drops what a senior State Department official has called an “obsession with Israel.”

Haley said this week that during her first two months she dampened “Israel-bashing” at the United Nations by preventing a Palestinia­n from being appointed UN envoy to Libya and demanding UN Chief Antonio Guterres withdraw a report accusing Israel of imposing an “apartheid regime” on Palestinia­ns.

“For anyone that says you can’t get anything done at the UN, they need to know there’s a new sheriff in town,” she told a conference of the largest US proIsrael lobbying group on Monday.

“There is a gap between her tough public posturing, designed for domestic consumptio­n, and her positions within the UN... She will have to close this visible gap,” said a third Security Council diplomat. Another priority for Haley is reviewing all 16 UN peacekeepi­ng missions to cut costs, and plans to hold a council meeting on the issue in April.

Washington is the top contributo­r, paying 28.5 per cent of the $7.9 billion annual peacekeepi­ng budget. “So far we don’t have a very clear idea of how that is going to play out,” said a fourth Security Council diplomat.

“She has underwhelm­ed us here at the UN for the simple reason that hardline statements have come from Washington about cutting funding,” said a senior UN diplomat who is not a member of the Security Council.

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