Originally posted by Krusher
posting it as our myth is nice touch but not based in reality.
I was merely quoting the Fact sheet provided by the United States Mission to the United Nations verbatim. Got a problem with the wording, take it up with them (I think they're part of the State Department).
for the record name one US citizen who is in charge of any UN program. (not to be confused with un ambassadors) Nice representation we have for our money
For the record here's 2:
Carol Bellamy - Executive Director of UNICEF
James T Morris- Executive Director of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP). The previous director Catherine Bertini (also from the US) served for 10 years, and is now the Under-Secretary-General for Management.
There's probably more - but you can look them up if it bothers you that much, cos the UN websites are far to labyrinthine for me, especially so soon after FB1.1 patch

.
Do remember, though, before you rant too much:
1. There are 190 other countries in the UN (not 177 as Ripsnort's post would have us believe) as well as the US, which is a lot more countries than job vacancies for UN programme directors, so you do have to expect that there won't be lots of US citizens, or indeed lots of [insert any country name here] citizens for that matter.
2. Some appointments are nominal/administrative - with committees (on which many countries are represented) hold the real power.
The US also gets a veto and a permanent seat on the security council - which is lot more power than 97% of UN member countries - and a permanent seat on the Economic and Social Council, and so far a member on the International Court. The US director of the IMF has the largest number of votes of any director - 371,743 votes or 17.14% of all the votes. It goes on, but as I say the patch is here.