I. OUTREACH
Over the years, the members of the InterAction Council
have presented their joint proposals to Government
leaders, decision-makers and opinion-leaders worldwide.
This establishes regular channels of communication with
most of the world's leaders and allows Council members to
exercise influence on a continuous basis.
Contacts have also been established with the summits of
industrialized countries (Group of Seven), the European
Community (EC), the Organization of African Unity (OAU),
the Organization of American States (OAS), the Non-Aligned
Movement, the Frontline States, the Association of
South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), and with participants in
various high-level gatherings in Latin America and other
regions. Council members have also conveyed their
proposals to the Secretary-General of the United Nations
and the heads of numerous international organizations,
such as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund,
the OECD, the Gulf Co-operation Council, the League of
Arab States, the Islamic Conference, NATO, and the
specialized agencies of the United Nations system. Regular
contacts are also being maintained with several
non-governmental organizations and leading personalities
of the private sector.
The Council's role as a disinterested non-actor in the
complex field of international politics and relations has
proved to be an asset, especially when it comes to the
point of getting difficult and even unpopular suggestions
across and accepted.
II. ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND IMPACT
1. Universal Ethical Standards:
Since 1987, the Council has focused on the concept of
universal ethical standards. Recognizing that co-operation
with spiritual leaders is indispensable to cope with the
emerging global crisis, the Council arranged in March 1987
a consultative meeting bringing together, for the first
time, political leaders and spiritual leaders representing
six major religions. This endeavor brought about
remarkable agreements, based on commonly shared ethical
foundations, on possible remedial approaches to major
problems. These agreements have been widely circulated to
the political and religious communities of all
denominations throughout the world and have received
widespread acclaim.
In 1995, the Council again convened religious thinkers to
identify a set of universal ethical standards in the 21st
century. This initiative has led to the 1997 meeting on
human responsibilities, which resulted in the Council's
proposal for a Universal Declaration of Human
Responsibilities. The Declaration has become main subject
of global debates.
2. The search for global order -- the problems of
survival:
In 1992, the Council convened a high-level group to
examine the consequences of the end of the Cold War, in
particular aspects of the search for a new global order.
This Group concentrated not only on the new geostrategic
power constellations, but also on how the globalization of
international markets and, especially, the emergence of
new global challenges which are beginning to become a
menace to mankind -- population explosion, development and
poverty, environmental degradation, global warming,
transborder population movements -- could be tackled by
the world community. At its Queretaro session in May 1992,
the Council called for a new set of rules to manage
international relations and conflicts, which requires new
instruments and mechanisms for global governance.
The proposals of the Council have attracted wide and
favorable comments from government and political leaders.
The proposals of the Council demonstrably had an impact on
the international discussion and several policy statements
and initiatives. The deliberations of the Council and its
High-level Group are contained in a new publication
entitled "The Search for Global Order."
In 1990, the Council had already held a high-level meeting
in Lisbon, which addressed the sharpening dichotomy
between global interdependence and national sovereignty.
It suggested a redefined approach and framework of action
for a number of areas where the management of
interdependence will have to replace limited national
decision-making and action, while upholding the principle
of subsidiarity.
In 1997, the Council analyzed the globalization trend,
identifying winners and losers and policy recommendation
on addressing the problems and difficulties created by
globalized world economy.
3. Global deforestation trends:
In May 1988, the Council made public a program of action
to reverse global deforestation trends and their dangers
to the world's climate and ecosystems. In particular, the
Council called for the conclusion of a triad of global
conventions including monitorable commitments: an
international forest convention; a climate change
convention; and a convention on preserving biodiversity.
These and other suggestions have since been restated by
numerous international conferences, in particular during
the preparatory phase for the Rio Earth Summit.
As proposed by the Council, a European Forum for Forest
Protection was established in June 1989 and held its first
meeting in July 1990 in Stockholm. Equally, the recent
establishment of an independent commission on forests and
development, to be headed by a member of the Council, was
stimulated by the activities of the InterAction
Council.
4. Ecology and energy options:
In 1989, the Council presented proposals for new
directions in energy policies, sensitive to environmental
and climate concerns, economic development and population
growth. To provide energy for a habitable world, a
three-pronged approach was suggested: in the short term,
efficiency and conservation measures; in the medium term,
a shift in the mix of fossil fuels away from coal and oil
to gas; in the long term, a massive promotion of renewable
energies. During the period of transition to a world
without excessive reliance on fossil fuels, nuclear energy
will play a role.
The Council's program has had a significant influence on
the preparations for the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 as well
as on other intergovernmental and non-governmental
conferences. The Council's call in 1992 for ecological and
demographic self-discipline by developing and
industrialized countries was seen by many in the
international community as an important new concept, yet
it remains largely still unheeded.
5. Ecology and the global economy:
In 1990, the Council concluded that the application of
suitable economic instruments can make economic growth and
environmental protection compatible. The market mechanism
and its related instruments -- such as prices, taxes,
leasable permits, charges, property rights -- were seen to
provide both necessary signals and incentives. The
polluter-pays-principle was advocated as the point of
departure for policy development -- nationally,
internationally and at the corporate level. Among others,
the Council suggested that a climate convention should
incorporate binding commitments for the reduction of
emissions; until then major polluting countries should
associate in a climate protection club whose members would
voluntarily observe agreed emission targets. The Council
also advocated policies providing for the internalization
of the costs of environmental degradation and pollution
into public, corporate and private decision-making, and
for progressively lower targets for emissions and
pollution standards.
The international debate since then suggests that quite a
number of the Council's proposals have been accepted by
many actors on the international scene and further
developed. For example, several industrialized countries
announced targets for national CO2 emissions. In January
1991, the Council of Ministers of OECD adopted a decision
on "The Use of Economic Instruments in Environmental
Policy" that largely reflected the recommendations of the
Council. No doubt, a full implementation of such measures
is bound to stretch over several years, if not decades.
6. The globalization of financial markets:
In 1990, the Council began to focus on the globalization
of financial markets and its implicit dangers. It called
on regulatory authorities to reduce systemic risks through
more stringent capital requirements for lenders and
improvements in settlement procedures. It also underlined
the increasingly important role to be played by
independent and autonomous central banks.
Based on the recommendations of a High-level Expert Group
which the Council convened in 1991 to examine the specific
role of central banks in globalized financial markets, the
Council recommended measures to reduce the systemic risks
inherent in the growing interconnection between domestic
and international capital markets. In particular, the
Council called for the establishment of an international
regulatory authority and for central banks and supervisory
authorities to adopt a comprehensive approach to deal with
the new global financial environment, including
streamlining of bank and non-bank financial intermediaries
supervision and a program for strengthening the payment
and settlement systems. The Council perceived the
emergence of a tripolar international monetary system
entailing a move from the current Group of 7 to a Group of
3 (US dollar, yen and ECU) arrangement.
Ensuing debates bear out the timeliness and the relevance
of the Council's proposals, which were widely endorsed by
the international financial community.
7. Economies in transformation limitations and potential
of the transition process:
To devise a strategy tackling the challenges faced by the
economies of Central and Eastern Europe, the InterAction
Council convened in 1991 a high-level expert group. Three
key tasks were identified for the transition process:
appropriate macroeconomic stabilization policies;
introduction and guarantee of property rights;
privatization and commercialization of trade, industry and
services. These should be accomplished against the
background of a mixed economic system with a vigorous
private sector and a strong public sector. The Council
also urged dialogue between the OECD governments and the
countries in transformation, the financing of a massive
assistance program of infrastructure investment and for
investment by private entrepreneurs from industrialized
countries.
The programmatic approach by the Council was explicitly
recognized by the G-7 at its July 1992 summit in London.
It has since proved to be right on target, especially in
pinpointing problems and possible solutions for countries
undergoing the transition to a market economy, especially
in Eastern and Central Europe and Russia.
In 1996, another High-Level Expert Group Meeting was
convened to address the turbulent financial market. The
Group has endorsed the concept of a "target zone."
8. Proposals concerning international debt:
It was the InterAction Council which first stipulated in
May 1984 that any solution to the debt problem must be
based on the principle of joint responsibility of all
parties. It emphasized that the debt problem could not be
resolved in the short run and that burden-sharing among
all parties involved would be required. In October 1987
and at subsequent sessions, the Council refined its
comprehensive proposal on the management of the debt
crisis.
Beginning with the annual IMF and World Bank meetings 1986
in Seoul, the strategy first proposed by the Council --
especially the principle of joint responsibility -- have
become integral elements of all international efforts and
blueprints to find a durable solution to the debt crisis.
The Council's proposals influenced substantially the Baker
and Brady proposals aimed at a mitigation of the debt
crisis.
9. Crisis and change in Latin America:
In 1992, the Council convened a High-level expert group in
preparation of its annual session to examine the situation
in Latin America. It yielded a comprehensive program of
action, both by the Latin American countries individually
and jointly and by the international community, which will
be discussed at the 1992 plenary meeting of the Council.
One of the key points identified was that poverty
alleviation is a principal task for governments and
international organizations, not least to bolster the
nascent democratic structures on the continent.
Many leaders of Latin America have welcomed the Council's
proposals and underlined their timeliness and constructive
spirit.
10. The situation on the Korean peninsula:
Meeting in Seoul in 1990, the Council discussed the
situation in depth and urged the governments of the two
Koreas to take three specific action as a first step
towards peaceful unification:
a) The leaders of South and North Korea should agree to
meet -- without preconditions -- as soon as possible;
b) From a humanitarian point of view, both Governments
should permit immediate visits and unrestricted
communications between members of separated families in
South and North Korea;
c) To enhance mutual confidence between the two Koreas,
both Governments should legalize travel by the citizens of
the two Koreas to and from the South and the North.
These recommendations contributed considerably to the
dialogue that commenced at the Prime Ministerial level in
1991. The initial meetings concentrated on the three
elements suggested by the Council.
In 1993, the Council convened a High-level Group to
examine the lessons of the German unification process for
Korea.
11. Proposals on strategic issues:
At a time when the direct contacts and communications
between East and West were virtually non-existent, the
Council made a series of specific suggestions which
subsequently became the subject of negotiation and
official policy positions. Such recommendations
included:
a) Institutionalization of superpower summits: Since
November 1983 -- when all contacts at the political level
between the United States and the Soviet Union were frozen
-- the Council repeatedly called for the initiation of
annual summits between the superpowers. Since 1985, a
regular cycle of such summit meetings resumed.
b) Principles governing relations between superpowers: In
April 1985, the Council called on the superpowers to
jointly state that they agree that nuclear war cannot be
won and should not be fought; that equilibrium should be
sought at lower levels of armaments; that they pursue
equality rather than superiority of forces; that they
respect each other side's legitimate security interest;
that less money should be spent on armaments; and that
stabilizing weapons should be preferred to destabilizing
ones.
c) INF-zero option: In November 1983 and again in April
1986, the Council proposed that the problem of the
Intermediate Nuclear Forces should be treated separately,
preferably by a zero-zero solution on a global basis. This
proposal was then reflected in the US-USSR INF agreement
of November 1987.
d) Strict adherence to the ABM Treaty: Since November
1985, the Council advocated that the joint interpretation,
full application and strict observance of the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty was key to resolving the
problem of strategic defense programs. In late-1986, this
approach became the centerpiece of bilateral and
multilateral negotiations to curb the arms race in outer
space.
12. Bringing Africa back to the mainstream of the
international system and the situation in South Africa:
In early 1993, the Council convened a High-level Group in
Cape Town to deliberate about ways to integrate Africa
better into the international system thereby reversing the
decline and marginalization that has plagued the
continents for too many years. The report offers a
comprehensive picture of the African situation and
develops a series of recommendations to uplift the
situation, including moves toward democracy across the
continent, efforts to enhance sustainable economic
development, approaches to engage the international
community, tackling issues affecting the survival of
African societies (such as humanitarian emergencies,
conflict prevention and management), and dealing with
problems of population, health including HIV and AIDS and
the role of women in society.
The Cape Town group also heard a series of briefings by
senior South African politicians on the situation in the
country. The Group offered a number of observations and
recommendations pertaining to the political process, the
need to develop a culture of tolerance and the economic,
social and developmental challenges confronting South
Africa.
In March 1988, the Council had already held in Harare a
widely acclaimed hearing with personalities from the
region to allow an in-depth assessment of the situation at
that time.
Prior to that, the Council had developed a number of
proposals aimed at a peaceful solution to the complex
conflicts in the Southern African region. For example, the
Council's recommendations of November 1985 and April 1986
found direct reflection in the report of the Commonwealth
Eminent Persons Group on South Africa, which was
co-chaired by two Council members.
13. Prevention of conflicts:
In May 1991, before the internal armed conflict and
bloodshed started in Yugoslavia, the Council called on the
member countries of Conference on Security and Cooperation
in Europe (CSCE), at its meeting later the same month, to
apply all possible means at its disposal, including, if
appropriate, its dispute conciliation procedure, to
Yugoslavia immediately and to consider establishing an
independent commission of inquiry into the situation.
Although that item was considered by the CSCE Foreign
Ministers, no action was taken in a timely and effective
manner.
14. Population and Food Supply:
Problems created by population explosion have been a
priority issue for the Council since its inception. The
importance of family planning was endorsed by
representatives of the world's major religions in a
meeting organized by the Council in 1987. In 1995, the
Council reiterated its necessity in relations to the
world's long-term capacity to supply funds.