Yesterday, President George W Bush of the United States and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran joined the queue of world leaders delivering canned speeches before the Annual Meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. None of them said anything of any consequence (Do they ever?).
But the dirty UN secret is that most world leaders treat this annual event as little more than an invitation to wine and dine their wives – who spend their days shopping along Fifth Avenue – all at their taxpayers’ expense. Nonetheless, I’d be remiss not to comment.
I am mindful, however, that it would be a Sisyphean endeavor to try to separate the wheat from the chaff amongst the speeches emanating from this veritable Tower of Babel, which masquerades as a forum for international dispute resolution.
Therefore, I shall suffice to reprise my commentary from last year. Because the 2006 annual meeting was suffused with such political drama, saber rattling, and outright buffoonery, the hackneyed speeches hardly mattered. Most of the histrionics was courtesy of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez – who didn’t even bother to attend this year.
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Yesterday, in his address before the United Nations General Assembly 61st Session, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez highlighted his undiplomatic rant against U.S. President George W. Bush by calling him “the Devil”.
But I found it instructive that – when a reporter asked her what she thought of Chavez’s speech – US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice replied, quite properly, that she would not dignify it with a comment. Because, frankly, that’s how I feel about all of the hot air passing for dignified debate at this week’s session.
Accordingly, the following is all I care to share about Bush’s congenitally-trite, Ahmadinejad’s passive-aggressive and Chavez’s hysterically-bombastic utterances:
Your rulers have chosen to deny you liberty and to use your nation’s resources to fund terrorism and fuel extremism and pursue nuclear weapons….Iran must abandon its nuclear weapons ambition.
[Fair enough, Mr Bush. But now that French President Jacques Chirac is leading a European coalition of the willing to betray your agreement to impose sanctions against Iran, what are you going to do to stop it from fulfilling its ambition? Operation deny nukes?]
…if the governments of the United States or the United Kingdom…commit aggression, occupation, and violation of international law, which of the organs of the U.N. can take them to account?
[Excellent point, Mr Ahmadinejad. Now tell us which international law gives you the right to develop nuclear weapons to “wipe Israel off the map”?]
Yesterday, ladies and gentlemen, from this rostrum, the president of the United States, the gentleman to whom I refer as the devil, came here, talking as if he owned the world….The United States empire is on the way down and it will be finished in the near future for the good of all mankind.
[Good one, Mr Chavez. But, if you really think Cuba is the best place to live in the Western Hemisphere (and, by inference, that America is the worst), why do you think so many people are fleeing Cuba and Latin America (including your own country) to seek a better life in the United States? Moreover, if the delegates laughing at your speech yesterday were to vote on your proposal to move the UN out of the US (To where, pray tell, China?), would you bet your presidency on the outcome?]
Meanwhile, one has to wonder about the conscience of Third World leaders who endorsed Ahmadinejad’s speech (indicting America as the greatest threat to world peace) and laughed at Chavez’s comedy routine (demonizing Bush). After all, these are the very same leaders who are still debating whether Bush is right to declare the ongoing slaughter of over 400,000 Africans by Arab militiamen in Darfur an “unfolding genocide”, which requires immediate UN military intervention – in the name of humanity….
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NOTE on Taiwan: One of my associates challenged my cynicism about proceedings at the UN by citing its “pretty significant decision” to reject a bid by Taiwan to reclaim its seat in this august Assembly. In fact, the Taiwanese petitioned to be readmitted as “Taiwan” rather than the “Republic of China” – the name under which they lost their (de facto-independent) seat in 1971 to the newly-admitted People’s Republic of China.
Alas, I was constrained to inform him that Taiwan has failed in similar bids at every annual meeting of the General Assembly since 1992. And, with China increasing its influence amongst the member states each year, chances are very good that all future bids will be similarly rejected. (Incidentally, of the UN’s 192 members, Taiwan is recognised by only 24 relatively poor and powerless countries, including three from the Caribbean.)
There is only one China in the world, and Taiwan is a part of China’s territory. This is the common position of the United Nations, and the overwhelming majority of its member states. [Chinese Ambassador Wang Guangya]
Confronting Iran, North Korea and Syria
United Nations, Taiwan independence, Myanmar Buddhist monks protests
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