By Alan
Caruba
I don’t know who looked more pathetic
when President Obama addressed the United Nations Assembly on Tuesday; him or
the assembled ambassadors, many from nations where human rights, justice, and
liberty don’t exist. Like the League of Nations before it, the United Nations
has long since demonstrated how useless it is.
Founded in 1945, by 2003 just before
the U.S. received the UN blessing to invade Iraq there had been 291 wars
resulting in 22 million deaths at that point. We would stay in Iraq until 2011.
Since 2003, there have been conflicts
in the Central African Republic, Yemen, an insurgency in South Thailand, a civil
war in Chad from 2005 to 2010, a conflict between the Palestinian factions of
Fatah and Hamas, a war in Somalia from 2006-2009, and in 2008 Russia invaded
Georgia, seizing part of its territory. In 2010-11 there was an Ivorian civil
war. Et cetera!
In the years since 2003, the largest
war of all has been the effort to eradicate the global Islamic
jihad.
The U.S., while not engaged
militarily, has been in a technical state of war with Iran since our diplomats
were seized in 1979 and there has been no formal resolution to the war between
North and South Korea, only a ceasefire. The Israelis have fought several wars
since its founding in 1948 and remains in a state of war with Gaza; territory it
ceded to the Palestinians in a fruitless quest called “land for peace.”
Listening to the President request
that the UN Security Council pass a resolution threatening “consequences”
against the Syrian regime if it does not give up its chemical weapons, I was
struck by how weak the once greatest superpower, America, has become. To his
credit, Obama said, “If we cannot agree even on this, then it will show that the
United Nations is incapable of enforcing the most basic international
laws.”
True. But the UN has a long history of
not enforcing its own Charter or its Declaration of Human Rights.
As 2013 began, fifty UN member states
had yet to have paid their dues for its 2012 budget. The United States, the
largest contributor, had been assessed $568 million. Nine nations contribute
about 70% of the budget. They include Japan, Germany, United Kingdom, France,
Italy, Canada, Spain, and China.
There is nothing the UN does that
cannot be done by individual and independent international organizations. In so
many ways, the UN either does not solve problems or is an integral part of them.
For example the UN has maintained the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA),
created in 1949 exclusively for Palestinian refugees. Several generations later,
the support it provides does not take into account the refusal of the
Palestinians to cease from demanding the destruction of the Israeli state.
When not ignoring various conflicts,
the UN keeps busy creating various treaties whose purpose is to centralize power
in the UN. It is hard to say which one is the worst, but the Convention of the
Seas deserves to be high on the list as an attack on national sovereignty.
There’s a treaty that would take away everyone’s guns—like that’s going to
happen—and one intended to get people to stop
smoking.
The UN has been a congenial gathering
place for many of the world’s dictators and some of their nations have served on
its Human Rights Council, turning it into a complete mockery of human rights.
Its Middle East clique of nations wants to make it an international crime to say
anything critical about Islam.
I would be remiss if I did not mention
that the greatest hoax of the modern era, global warming, was directed from the
UN via its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. One cannot even begin to
calculate the billions wasted since the 1980s, nor the man-hours of serious
scientific research that was diverted to it since then.
In addition to the President’s
devotion to the lies about “climate change”, Obama’s address to the General
Assembly only demonstrated how delusional about international affairs he has
been before and since assuming office in 2009.
“Together we’ve
also worked to end a decade of war. Five years ago nearly 180,000 Americans were
serving in harm’s way, and the war in Iraq was the dominant issue in our
relationship with the rest of the world,” Obama said. “Today, all of our troops
have left Iraq. Next year, an international coalition will end its war in
Afghanistan, having achieved its mission of dismantling the core of Al Qaida
that attacked us on 9/11.” Both nations are in the process of
imploding.
Given the past
week’s events in Nairobi, Kenya, the church bombing in Pakistan, and the
continuing attacks on U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan, does anyone
believe that the mission of dismantling the core of al Qaeda has been achieved?
This is, after
all, a President who could only manage to get France to support his original
intention to bomb Syria by way of achieving regime change. None of our
traditional allies expressed any support and the UN remains stranded on the
sidelines.
No one wants to
follow the Commander-in-Chief into battle and with good reason. He has a record
of retreating from combat. He still wants to close Guantanamo.
“We’re no
longer in a Cold War”, he told the delegates, but what we have learned over the
past five years is that, just because he believes his own delusions, that
doesn’t mean they’re reflect reality. We are in Cold War 2.0 with Russia even if
he doesn’t think so. Putin went out of his way to mock him. Prospects for any
successful negotiations with Iran don’t exist, but don’t tell Obama
that.
Thanks to his
speech writers, Obama always manages to say the “right things.” What we know,
however, is that while he can talk-the-talk, he cannot walk-the-walk.
What we know
about the United Nations is that it should be told to leave the U.S. and its
headquarters turned into condominiums. We are surely not getting any value for
the money we have pumped into the UN.
© Alan Caruba,
2013
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