Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 5, 2012

Op-Ed Contributor

Cong Nghe | girls education |

PRESIDENT OBAMA recently nominated Jim Yong Kim, the president of Dartmouth, to be the next president of the World Bank — a privilege accorded to the United States since the bank's founding in 1946. A European, in turn, gets to run the International Monetary Fund .

Banker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

By BENN STEIL
Published: April 8, 2012
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In the wake of World War II , such a divvying up of the top spots among the great powers was inevitable. But how did the United States, the primary founder and financer of the two institutions, wind up taking the helm of the World Bank, and not the I.M.F., which was of vastly greater importance to its government?

In fact, that was the original goal of Harry Dexter White, the Treasury Department's key representative at the Bretton Woods conference of July 1944, where the two institutions were created. The I.M.F. was central to White's vision of a postwar global financial architecture dominated by the American dollar.

White relegated the British delegation head, John Maynard Keynes, to the commission creating the World Bank specifically to keep him away from the main event: creating the I.M.F. White so masterfully outmaneuvered the British that they wound up signing on to a dollar-centric design for the fund, one they thought they had already blocked.

Then, on Jan. 23, 1946, Harry S. Truman nominated White to be the first American executive director of the I.M.F. (such directors representing the major member countries). Truman was also widely expected to nominate White for the fund's top post of managing director.

But trouble soon arose in the form of J. Edgar Hoover , the F.B.I. director. White had been under surveillance for two months, suspected of being a Soviet spy. Hoover prepared a report for the president, based on information provided by 30 sources, including the confessed spy Elizabeth Bentley, asserting that White was "a valuable adjunct to an underground Soviet espionage organization," who was placing individuals of high regard to Soviet intelligence inside the government. If word of his activities became public, Hoover stressed, it could jeopardize the survival of the fund.

Oblivious, the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency approved White's nomination on Feb. 5, the day after Hoover's report was delivered.

Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, having read the report, wanted Truman to withdraw the nomination; Treasury Secretary Fred M. Vinson wanted White out of government entirely. Truman, who did not trust Hoover but who knew he had a major political problem on his hands, decided to quarantine White as the American I.M.F. executive director, a huge step down from managing director.

Nominating another American to sit above White, however, would have raised red flags. Why was the fund's chief architect being passed over? It was a question the White House wished to avoid.

On March 5, Vinson met with Keynes, now the British governor of both the I.M.F. and the World Bank. He said Truman had decided not to put White's name forward for the I.M.F. top job, despite his being "ideally suited" for it. The United States would, instead, back an American for the World Bank. Keynes was shocked.

Washington got its way, of course, and a Belgian, Camille Gutt, became the first head of the I.M.F. , while an American, Eugene Meyer, became the first head of the World Bank . Though the United States was clearly in a powerful enough position to claim the I.M.F. job after Gutt's departure in 1951, the fund was for the moment effectively moribund, its role supplanted by the Marshall Plan, and the United States was content keeping the World Bank post.

As for White, he resigned from the I.M.F. in 1947. The next summer Bentley and Whittaker Chambers accused him of spying for the Soviets, a charge he denied before the House Un-American Activities Committee on Aug. 13. He died of a heart attack three days later.

Following Alger Hiss's perjury conviction in 1950, Representative Richard M. Nixon revealed a handwritten memo of White's given to him by Chambers, apparently showing that White had passed classified information for transmission to the Soviets. Yet his guilt would only be firmly established after publication of Soviet intelligence cables in the late 1990s.

Instead of treating the World Bank presidency as a sacred American birthright, we should remember that it was never more than a consolation prize for an administration trying to dodge a spy scandal.

Benn Steil , the director of international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, is the author of the forthcoming "The Battle of Bretton Woods."

Theo www.nytimes.com

A Fragile Tourist Attraction on the Ocean Floor

ly huong | girls education |

Explorers and United States government experts have put together the first comprehensive map of the Titanic's resting place, illuminating a square mile of inky seabed as a guide to better understanding the liner's death throes and better preserving its remains.

By WILLIAM J. BROAD
Published: April 9, 2012
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Already, knowing the exact positions of thousands of parts, structures and artifacts has allowed the government and the International Maritime Organization to draw up recommendations for the operation of the mini-submarines that ferry tourists more than two miles down to the bottom of the North Atlantic for a glimpse of the great ship.

"People have the right to see, explore and learn," said James P. Delgado, director of maritime heritage at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which monitors the wreck. "But you want to put down guidelines like those at Gettysburg and the Acropolis, so visitors can experience it in the same way."

The Titanic went down in international waters, 380 miles off Newfoundland, so no nation has an exclusive claim to its scattered remains. In 1985, a team of American and French explorers found its wreckage upright but split into two large sections, the bow and stern about a third of a mile apart.

Entrepreneurs mounted expeditions in 1987, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2004 that picked up roughly 5,500 artifacts. An American company, RMS Titanic Inc., owns the salvage rights and displays many of the artifacts in Titanic shows. On Wednesday, it plans to auction off its entire trove .

Meanwhile, the tourist submarines have a history of damaging delicate artifacts and bumping into the increasingly fragile wreck, threatening to accelerate its demise.

Starting in 2004, the United States sought to forge an agreement with France, Canada and Britain to find ways to protect the ship's remains.

Then, in 2010, federal experts joined with RMS Titanic on an expedition to do extensive mapping. Sonars crisscrossed the dark site, and cameras snapped 130,000 pictures, revealing much that had previously been lost to history. The technical muscle behind the effort came from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, which originally helped find the doomed liner.

"It's the first bird's-eye view of the entire site," said David Gallo, director of special projects at Woods Hole.

One revelation is that the liner broke in two near the surface and that the stern pinwheeled down through the dark waters. Judging from roiled sediments, the force of momentum kept trying to rotate the stern as it slammed into the bottom.

"We can identify the big pieces, put them back together and better understand what happened," said Paul H. Nargeolet, a French mini-sub pilot who helped lead the 2010 expedition.

National Geographic magazine has posted many images from the project online, at ngm.com/titanic , including ones that allow viewers to zoom in to see individual artifacts and parts of the shipwreck up close. And on Sunday, the History Channel will broadcast a documentary featuring the project.

The National Park Service is now helping to analyze the images as part of an increasingly wide effort to subject the entrepreneurial zone to the ordered thoroughness of an archaeological site that can be analyzed and preserved for future generations.

"The overwhelming majority of the artifacts that we see on the bottom come from a small section where the ship disintegrated," said David Conlin, an underwater archaeologist with the park service. "That leads to the conclusion that millions of other artifacts remain inside the bow and stern."

Dr. Delgado of NOAA said he expects the team will issue an archaeological report next year. He said it could become the basis for accelerated efforts at protection.

"There's an awful lot of stuff that's come down in recent years — beer cans and garbage bags — plus equipment left over from various expeditions," he said. "We wouldn't think that was a good thing at Gettysburg," he said of the Civil War battlefield. "With Titanic, we need the same kind of standard."

In January, the International Maritime Organization issued an advisory based on a United States Coast Guard analysis conducted in cooperation with the imaging project. It is now "strongly recommending" that vessels refrain from dumping garbage at the site or installing memorial plaques, "however well intentioned."

The advisory also designates four areas where mini-submarines can release their dive weights so the vessels can become buoyant enough to return to the surface.

Dr. Delgado said the team's analysis showed the designated drop zones to be "artifact-free — not unlike a wilderness area."

Theo www.nytimes.com