https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0809/S00544/president-bush-speaks-at-the-united-nations.htm
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President Bush Speaks at The United Nations
Wednesday, 24 September 2008, 4:53 pm
Press Release: The White House
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President Bush Speaks To The United Nations General Assembly
On Combating Terrorism And The Conditions That Give Rise To
It
On September 23, 2008, President Bush addressed the
United Nations General Assembly, highlighting how the United
States has partnered closely with other nations to address
global challenges. His visit to the UN highlights how the
United States has partnered closely with other nations to
address global challenges and how we have made remarkable
progress. The trip also provides an opportunity to highlight
how the UN can better address existing and emerging
challenges.
The UN And Other Multilateral Organizations
Must Continue To Actively Confront Terror
Multilateral
organizations must take an unequivocal moral stand against
terrorism. The vast majority of nations in the UN General
Assembly now agree that tactics like suicide bombing,
hostage-taking, and hijacking are never legitimate. The UN
Security Council has passed resolutions declaring terror
unlawful and requiring all nations to crack down on
terrorist financing. Earlier this month, Secretary General
Ban Ki-Moon held a conference to highlight victims of
terror, where he stated that terrorism can never be
justified. At their Summit this year in Toyako, Japan, G-8
leaders declared that all terrorist acts are criminal and
must be universally condemned.
- The nations of the
UN must continue to stand united in the fight against
terror. Members of the UN are sharing intelligence with one
another, conducting joint operations, and freezing terrorist
finances. While terrorists continue to carry out attacks
like the terrible bombing in Islamabad last week, we have
spared our citizens from many devastating
blows.
- Over the past seven years, Afghanistan
and Iraq have been transformed from regimes that actively
sponsor terror to democracies that fight terror. Libya has
renounced its support for terror and its pursuit of nuclear
weapons. Nations such as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are
actively pursuing the terrorists. A few nations – regimes
like Syria and Iran – continue to sponsor terror, yet
their numbers are growing fewer, and they are growing more
isolated from the world.
- We must continue
working to deny the terrorists refuge anywhere in the world,
including in ungoverned spaces. We must remain vigilant
against proliferation by fully implementing the terms of
Security Council Resolution 1540 and enforcing sanctions
against North Korea and Iran. Some suggest that these men
would pose less of a threat if we would only leave them
alone, but bringing terrorists to justice does not create
terrorism – it is the best way to protect our
people.
To Uphold The UN Charter's Promise Of
Peace And Security In The 21st Century, We Must Confront The
Ideology Of The Terrorists
The UN must challenge tyranny
as vigorously as we challenge terror.Nations in the UN have
supported the efforts of dissidents, reformers, and civil
society advocates in newly free societies through the new UN
Democracy Fund. As young democracies around the world
continue to make brave stands for liberty, multilateral
organizations like the UN must continue to stand with
them.
- In Afghanistan, a determined people are
working to overcome decades of tyranny and protect their
newly-free society. They have strong support from all 26
nations of the NATO Alliance. President Bush appreciates the
UN's decision this week to renew the mandate for the
International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan. The
UN also has an active civilian presence in Afghanistan,
where experts are doing important work helping to improve
education, facilitate humanitarian aid, and protect human
rights.
- In Iraq, the fight has been difficult,
yet daily life has improved thanks to a determined coalition
of nations, the courage of the Iraqi people, and a surge of
American troops. The UN has provided the mandate for
multinational forces in Iraq through this December and is
carrying out an ambitious strategy to strengthen Iraq's
democracy, including helping Iraqis prepare for their next
round of free elections. All should welcome this progress
toward stability and peace – and we should stand united in
helping Iraq's democracy succeed.
- We must stand
united in our support of the people of Georgia. The UN
Charter sets forth the "equal rights of nations large and
small." Russia's invasion of Georgia was a violation of
those words. Young democracies around the world are watching
to see how we handle this test.
- We must stand
united in our support of other young democracies. This
includes the people of Lebanon struggling for full national
sovereignty and true independence and the people of the
Palestinian Territories, who deserve a free and peaceful
state of their own.
Today, President and Mrs.
Bush are also hosting a lunch for democracy dissidents to
discuss how to advance the Freedom Agenda including the
protection of universally recognized human rights for all
people across the globe. The President has issued a National
Security Presidential Directive to institutionalize his
Freedom Agenda, offering a guidepost to future
administrations of policies and practices to promote freedom
and democratic institutions.
Extending The Reach Of
Political Freedom Is Essential To Prevailing In The Great
Struggle Of Our Time – But It Is Not Enough
Many in the
UN have answered the call to help alleviate hopelessness by
addressing its causes – poverty, disease, and ignorance.
Over the years, many nations have made well-intentioned
efforts to promote these goals. Yet the success of these
efforts must be measured by more than intentions – it must
be measured by results.
- The United States has
placed an insistence on results at the heart of our foreign
assistance programs. Under President Bush, the United States
has launched the Millennium Challenge Account, which directs
our help to countries that demonstrate their ability to
govern justly, pursue market-based economic policies, and
invest in their people. We urge other donors, including the
UN, to adopt a similar approach and insist on linking
performance to assistance.
- Lives in the
developing world depend on these programs, and all who have
made pledges to fight disease must follow through on their
commitments. Through institutions like the UN and the Global
Fund, many nations are working to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria,
and tuberculosis. To be most effective, development programs
must be based on a model of partnership, not paternalism.
This is the foundation of the President's Emergency Plan for
AIDS Relief: Every nation that receives U.S. support through
this initiative must develop its own plans for fighting
HIV/AIDS. So far, the results are inspiring. Five years ago,
only 50,000 people in sub-Saharan Africa were receiving
treatment for HIV/AIDS. Today that number is nearly 1.7
million. We are taking a similar approach to fighting
malaria – and so far, we have supported local efforts to
protect more than 25 million Africans.
Today,
President Bush is also attending a UN event on food security
and combating global hunger. The U.S. is providing
approximately $5.5 billion to fight global hunger in FY 2008
and 2009. Since mid-April, in response to President Bush's
request for additional resources, Congress has provided $1.6
billion in new emergency and development assistance to
combat the international food crisis. Including food aid
resources from the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, the
total "new" money available for food security programming in
FY 2008 and 2009 exceeds $1.8 billion.
Tomorrow, President
Bush is participating in a meeting on free trade with
leaders of Western Hemisphere nations. The leaders will
launch the Pathways to Prosperity in the Americas
initiative, which will provide a forum to work together to
ensure the benefits of trade are broadly shared throughout
societies, deepen the connections among regional markets,
and expand cooperation on development issues. The President
will stress the importance of congressional approval of the
pending free trade agreements and of Western Hemisphere
nations' working together to reach a successful Doha Round
agreement as soon as possible.
In The 21st Century, The
World Needs A Confident, Effective UN
The UN is an
organization of extraordinary potential. As the UN rebuilds
its headquarters, it must also open the door to a new age of
transparency, accountability, and seriousness of purpose.
Where there is inefficiency and corruption, it must be
corrected. Where members fail to uphold their obligations,
there must be strong action:
- There should be an
immediate review of the Human Rights Council, which has
routinely protected violators of human
rights.
- There should be a stronger effort to
help the people of Burma live free of the repression they
have suffered for too long.
- All nations,
especially members of the Security Council, must act
decisively to ensure that the government of Sudan upholds
its commitment to address the violence in
Darfur.
ENDS