“Make no mistake: this cannot be solely America’s endeavor,” Obama told the audience of dignitaries that packed the General Assembly chamber to the walls and welcomed him with applause. “Those who chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world’s problems alone.” In his speech, the president ranged over decisions his administration made so far that demonstrated a new approach to foreign policy, including prohibiting torture, ordering the closing of the Guantánamo Bay detention center, paying America’s bills to the UN, joining the UN Human Rights Council and opposing new Israeli settlements on Palestinian land. “America will live its values,” he said. He also reiterated, however, his pledge to a continued fight against terrorism, in particular Al Qaeda, leaving it “no safe havens.”
In Obama’s speech, interrupted about 10 times by mostly polite applause, he mentioned four pillars of his international policy. Unlike others who spoke today, he named nuclear nonproliferation – not climate change or the global economy – first, and peace and security second among his priorities. On nuclear arms, the president said he was committed to ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which President Clinton signed, only to see it defeated in the Senate. Obama said that the US would continue to pursue arms reductions in talks with Russia, would conduct a review of its nuclear activities and policies and would press for an international agreement against the spread of fissile nuclear materials. The administration plans to hold a summit on nuclear nonproliferation in April 2010.
While he did not name Israel, India and Pakistan, which have nuclear weapons but have refused to sign the nuclear nonproliferation treaty, other administration officials say they will be pressing those countries to sign as well. Obama did say that Iran and North Korea had to live up to the NPT’s obligations. Both countries signed the treaty, although North Korea announced it was withdrawing. Addressing peace and security, the president drew applause by saying that the US would strengthen support for peacekeeping in the Darfur region of Sudan and would be more active in aiding other UN missions around the world.
Obama acknowledged US shortcomings on measures to halt or reverse climate change when he said: “The days when America dragged its feet on this issue are over.” But he also reiterated Washington’s position that efforts to curb global carbon emissions must involve the large developing nations. China now ranks first, ahead of the US, as an emitter, with Russia and India in third and fourth places. On this issue, the US received a boost from China’s president, Hu Jintao, on Tuesday, when Hu said at a climate meeting convened by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon that his government would take concrete steps to tackle its problems. President Obama, on the other hand, has yet to see climate legislation passed through the US Senate. That legislation will help him play a stronger hand at a world conference in Copenhagen in December that is charged with rewriting the Kyoto Protocol, a 1997 worldwide emissions agreement.
Turning to the global economy, the president looked ahead to talks among the 20 leading economic powers in Pittsburgh this week, when such as issues as a rethinking of the work of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank will be put on the table by developing nations. This was a major theme of the speech today by Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. “In Pittsburgh, we will work with the world’s largest economies to chart a course for growth that is balanced and sustained,” Obama said. “That means vigilance to ensure that we do not let up until our people are back to work. That means taking steps to rekindle demand, so that a global recovery can be sustained. And that means setting new rules of the road and strengthening regulation for all financial centers, so that we put an end to the greed, excess and abuse that led us into disaster and prevent a crisis like this from ever happening again.”
“This body was founded on the belief that the nations of the world can solve their problems together,” Obama said of the UN, speaking more broadly and philosophically about his hopes. He said that finger-pointing in the UN and speeches from the podium by leaders that go against the interests of their own people are to be deplored. “We have reached a pivotal moment,” he said. “The United States stands ready to begin a new chapter of international cooperation – one that recognizes the rights and responsibilities of all nations. With confidence in our cause, and with a commitment to our values, we call on all nations to join us in building the future that our people deserve.”
Still President Obama bluntly prodded world leaders Wednesday to join the U.S. in solving pressing global problems, challenging them to move beyond "an almost reflexive anti-Americanism which, too often, has served as an excuse for collective inaction." Obama, making his inaugural address to the U.N. General Assembly, told fellow leaders in so many words that he has changed the tone and substance of U.S. security policies he inherited from President George W. Bush, and it is time for them to reciprocate. "Make no mistake: This cannot be solely America's endeavor. Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world's problems alone," Obama said.
Iran and North Korea, he said, "must be held accountable" if they continue nuclear programs outside international inspection. Israel, the Palestinians and the Arab States "must decide whether we are serious about peace or whether we will only lend it lip service." And developed and developing nations together bear responsibility for stopping global climate change, he said. Obama's remarks betrayed frustration, and perhaps some surprise, that after eight months in office in which he's overturned much of the Bush legacy and offered engagement to friends and enemies alike, he's won few concrete benefits in return.
His Middle East peace initiative is stuck in low gear, Europeans and others are declining to offer more troops for the war in Afghanistan, and it remains unclear at best whether powers such as China and Russia will join in imposing harsher sanctions on Iran if negotiations that begin on Oct. 1 fail. Obama met later Wednesday with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, in a session that senior U.S. officials said focused almost entirely on strategy toward Iran.
Afterward, Medvedev appeared to soften Russia's long-standing opposition to new sanctions on Iran if it fails to halt enrichment of uranium that could be used for nuclear weapons. "Sanctions rarely lead to productive results but in some cases are inevitable," the Russian leader said. Obama's top aide on Russia, Michael McFaul, said that Washington and Moscow now agree on a joint strategy toward Iran. But it remains to be seen whether Russia will actually endorse tougher measures if the time comes.
In his U.N. speech, Obama repeated a familiar refrain for U.S. presidents who make the annual pilgrimage to its Turtle Bay headquarters. The world body should live up to its promise, he said. "The United Nations can either be a place where we bicker about outdated grievances or forge common ground, a place where we focus on what drives us apart or what brings us together, a place where we indulge tyranny or a source of moral authority," he said. It took only minutes for Obama's hopes to be dashed.
However, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, in the audience for Obama's speech, along with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, took the podium next and delivered a rambling, 96-minute tirade. In a speech harkening back to the ideological battles of the 1960s and '70s, he denounced the U.N. Security Council, which holds most of the world body's real power, and trashed U.S. policies from the 1983 Grenada invasion to the current war in Afghanistan. He praised Obama, however, calling him "our son," because of his African roots, and suggesting he should be permanent president of the United States. Obama and the senior members of his delegation had left the General Assembly hall before Gadhafi began speaking.
Obama himself was greeted politely by fellow leaders, who seemed well aware of the U.S. president's international star power and were eager to hear him out. He received his loudest applause when he criticized Israel's settlements in the West Bank. While the U.S. stands by Israel, "America does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements," Obama said. White House aides, who're under increasing pressure to show the dividends of Obama's soft-glove foreign policy, said that his moves on many fronts have laid the groundwork for real change. Obama didn't take office thinking "that years of these challenges would be wiped away in eight months," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said.
However, Obama felt the need to remind the world leaders, foreign minister, diplomats and delegates of how much he'd altered in U.S. policies since taking office. He ticked off a long list of changes he's ordered: a ban on extreme interrogation techniques that many consider torture; closing the Guantanamo Bay prison; withdrawing from Iraq; seeking deeper cuts in U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals; fully paying the U.S. tab to the U.N. and rejoining the U.N. Human Rights Council.
Therefore, America can’t solve everything but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to solve the world’s problems as long as they world is willing to work with us to solve the problems of the world. This is the initial message that President Obama delivered to world leaders and the world.
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