The article that follows records one of the ever growing number of examples of how international state players opposed to American interests are manipulating and playing Barack Obama. To date, the President is no match in the game.
The United Nations is a fully corrupted, anti-American organization that stalls or opposes virtually anything that the United States brings forward that would accrue to the benefit of not only our nation but legitimate democratic nations around the globe.
The bad actors amongst the international community know exactly how to play the UN game. Naive political idealists like Obama have no chance to makeover such a failed institution into a force for the benefit of those who need it's support. Yet he wastes his political capital along with American power on an organization that is no longer meaningful or relevant.
The fact is that the UN has morphed into less of a force for good and more of a vehicle for malfeasance and unsavory agenda driven outcomes. The forces of evil are far more influential there on the shores of the Hudson that the interests of the greater good.
Obama is stuck in 1960's doctrine relative to the usefulness of such an awful institution. He cannot reinvent it and it will not respond positively to any American advocacy. The President is lost as often is the case in foreign affairs.
North Korea, Iran, Russia, China and a host of others will smile in his face while urinating on his shoes. Obama and his team are Utopians who are being played by state realists. He will not succeed.
North Korea Crisis Tests Obama's Reliance on U.N.
By JOE LAURIA
UNITED NATIONS -- The Security Council stalemate over North Korea's rocket launch is turning into an early test of the Obama administration's U.N.-focused multilateralism.
Six days after U.S. President Barack Obama called for swift punishment of North Korea, the Security Council hasn't acted.
While Japan is pressing for a quick response, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice has tried to downplay expectations of immediate progress.
China and Russia have resisted a draft Security Council resolution, put forth by the U.S. and Japan, that would at a minimum enforce military and financial sanctions imposed on North Korea after its underground nuclear weapons test in October 2006.
The sanctions were never fully implemented in deference to six-party talks among Russia, China, the U.S., Japan and the two Koreas to dismantle Pyongyang's nuclear-weapons program. China and Russia say reviving the talks is the ultimate goal -- which shouldn't be jeopardized by punishment for the launch.
Pyongyang says its launch was an attempt to launch a satellite and not a U.N.-banned ballistic missile test as Washington contends. Before the launch, North Korea warned it wouldn't resume the six-party talks -- on hold since December -- if the Security Council acts against the country.
Japan's foreign minister arrived in New York on Thursday, saying he will join the U.N. negotiations for as long as necessary to break the stalemate.
For Mr. Obama, who pledged renewed reliance on the U.N. during his presidential campaign, the North Korean crisis presents hard choices, analysts say.
Among the possible scenarios they suggest are walking away from the U.N. and six-party talks, and working with Congress to punish North Korea with more U.S.-only sanctions. Or, President Obama might consider forcing Russia and China to veto or abstain on a resolution -- and risk Pyongyang abandoning negotiations. The president also could compromise with a watered-down U.N. statement that could save the talks but lose face.
U.S. officials declined to comment on the administration's thinking or on details of U.N. talks with Russia and China.
Joseph Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, a liberal think tank, said Mr. Obama's foreign-policy team had "no illusions about how long this would take" with Russia and China. "They are looking for sustained collective action, not an immediate slap on the wrist," he said.
Ted Galen Carpenter, an analyst at the conservative Cato Institute, sees U.S. foreign policy reverting to "the style of the Clinton administration," which believed in operating multilaterally when possible and unilaterally when necessary. "For the Bush administration it was exactly the opposite," he added.
Bush-administration unilateralists, some analysts say, regarded the U.N. as an obstacle to American foreign policy.
Although thwarted in seeking U.N. backing for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration proceeded anyway. But on North Korea, Bush officials went from a rejection of the six-party talks to a decision that multilateral participation was the only way to end Pyongyang's nuclear-weapons ambition.
Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Saturday, April 11, 2009
OBAMA NO MATCH FOR COMMITTED ENEMIES
Posted by
James
at
8:28 AM
Labels: Foreign Affairs, Government, International trends, State Terrorism
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6 comments:
"The UN no longer relevant"...
I hear this bandied about quite a bit by people who oppose the UN.
The sad truth is the political leadership of the United States kow tows to the UN. You don't selected for president or VP unless you're willing to treat the UN as the government of the world. We're being sold out at this level and have been for decades.
Clinton bombed Serbia and delivered Milosevic to the kangaroo Court of Justice; Bush spend 18 months hat in hand before the Security Council asking for permission and now it's merely a formality for a Marxist ideologue like Obama to deliver as much of our sovereignty as possible in one feel swoop.
Just wait until the day the UNSC declares war on the US. Don't be surprised to see Congress vote to "pay our fair share of UN dues" in the same week.
How pathetic!
SoCalMike-
Nice point about voting to pay our fair share in the same week. The UN seeks to put an end to the US.
The mainstream media wouldn’t do it. So we are trying to get your important messages to the American people. This post is a suggested read at, http://aresay.blogspot.com/ 2
Patrick-
Your site keeps getting better. Keep growing.
Utter right wing fascist trash, but when the blogger here is a regular at virtual toilets like PJM, what else should I expect.
Funny, but I don't remember the your little redneck fundie war hero GW doing a heck of a lot about NK or Somalia either, but why bring up inconvenient facts like that.
Almost all anti-UN people are bigots or morons, not that it is a perfect body, but these types need to take a look at their own crap before pointing fingers
Basically, I think you are all stupid reactionary fools, like the Palin and Plumber admirers you are.
Jakester-
Those who have no compelling arguments simply resort to name calling.
Your vitriol tells anyone interested all they need to know about your intellectual depth.
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