Obama Issues Strong Condemnation of Russia in UN Speech
President Obama issued a strong condemnation of Russian President
Vladimir Putin's use of force in Ukraine in an address to the United
Nations General Assembly on Monday, warning world leaders of
"dangerous currents" that stand to threaten international stability.
"We cannot stand by when the sovereignty and territorial integrity
of a nation is flagrantly violated," Obama told world leaders at the
70th annual session at the United Nations.
"Imagine if instead Russia had engaged in true diplomacy and worked
with Ukraine and the international community to ensure its interests
were protected," Obama said. "That would be better for Ukraine, but
also better for Russia and better for the world. This is why we
continue to press for this crisis to be resolved."
Posted Sept 28, 2015
Transcript
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Mr. President, Mr. Secretary
General, fellow delegates, ladies and gentlemen: Seventy years after
the founding of the United Nations, it is worth reflecting on what,
together, the members of this body have helped to achieve.
Out of the ashes of the Second World War, having
witnessed the unthinkable power of the atomic age, the United States
has worked with many nations in this Assembly to prevent a third
world war -- by forging alliances with old adversaries; by
supporting the steady emergence of strong democracies accountable to
their people instead of any foreign power; and by building an
international system that imposes a cost on those who choose
conflict over cooperation, an order that recognizes the dignity and
equal worth of all people.
That is the work of seven decades. That is the
ideal that this body, at its best, has pursued. Of course, there
have been too many times when, collectively, we have fallen short of
these ideals. Over seven decades, terrible conflicts have claimed
untold victims. But we have pressed forward, slowly, steadily, to
make a system of international rules and norms that are better and
stronger and more consistent.
It is this international order that has
underwritten unparalleled advances in human liberty and prosperity.
It is this collective endeavor that’s brought about diplomatic
cooperation between the world’s major powers, and buttressed a
global economy that has lifted more than a billion people from
poverty. It is these international principles that helped constrain
bigger countries from imposing our will on smaller ones, and
advanced the emergence of democracy and development and individual
liberty on every continent.
This progress is real. It can be documented in
lives saved, and agreements forged, and diseases conquered, and in
mouths fed. And yet, we come together today knowing that the march
of human progress never travels in a straight line, that our work is
far from complete; that dangerous currents risk pulling us back into
a darker, more disordered world.
Today, we see the collapse of strongmen and
fragile states breeding conflict, and driving innocent men, women
and children across borders on an epoch scale. Brutal networks of
terror have stepped into the vacuum. Technologies that empower
individuals are now also exploited by those who spread
disinformation, or suppress dissent, or radicalize our youth. Global
capital flows have powered growth and investment, but also increased
risk of contagion, weakened the bargaining power of workers, and
accelerated inequality.
How should we respond to these trends? There are
those who argue that the ideals enshrined in the U.N. charter are
unachievable or out of date -- a legacy of a postwar era not suited
to our own. Effectively, they argue for a return to the rules that
applied for most of human history and that pre-date this
institution: the belief that power is a zero-sum game; that might
makes right; that strong states must impose their will on weaker
ones; that the rights of individuals don’t matter; and that in a
time of rapid change, order must be imposed by force.
On this basis, we see some major powers assert
themselves in ways that contravene international law. We see an
erosion of the democratic principles and human rights that are
fundamental to this institution’s mission; information is strictly
controlled, the space for civil society restricted. We’re told that
such retrenchment is required to beat back disorder; that it’s the
only way to stamp out terrorism, or prevent foreign meddling. In
accordance with this logic, we should support tyrants like Bashar
al-Assad, who drops barrel bombs to massacre innocent children,
because the alternative is surely worse.
The increasing skepticism of our international
order can also be found in the most advanced democracies. We see
greater polarization, more frequent gridlock; movements on the far
right, and sometimes the left, that insist on stopping the trade
that binds our fates to other nations, calling for the building of
walls to keep out immigrants. Most ominously, we see the fears of
ordinary people being exploited through appeals to sectarianism, or
tribalism, or racism, or anti-Semitism; appeals to a glorious past
before the body politic was infected by those who look different, or
worship God differently; a politics of us versus them.
The United States is not immune from this. Even as
our economy is growing and our troops have largely returned from
Iraq and Afghanistan, we see in our debates about America’s role in
the world a notion of strength that is defined by opposition to old
enemies, perceived adversaries, a rising China, or a resurgent
Russia; a revolutionary Iran, or an Islam that is incompatible with
peace. We see an argument made that the only strength that matters
for the United States is bellicose words and shows of military
force; that cooperation and diplomacy will not work.
As President of the United States, I am mindful of
the dangers that we face; they cross my desk every morning. I lead
the strongest military that the world has ever known, and I will
never hesitate to protect my country or our allies, unilaterally and
by force where necessary.
But I stand before you today believing in my core
that we, the nations of the world, cannot return to the old ways of
conflict and coercion. We cannot look backwards. We live in an
integrated world -- one in which we all have a stake in each other’s
success. We cannot turn those forces of integration. No nation in
this Assembly can insulate itself from the threat of terrorism, or
the risk of financial contagion; the flow of migrants, or the danger
of a warming planet. The disorder we see is not driven solely by
competition between nations or any single ideology. And if we cannot
work together more effectively, we will all suffer the consequences.
That is true for the United States, as well.
No matter how powerful our military, how strong
our economy, we understand the United States cannot solve the
world’s problems alone. In Iraq, the United States learned the hard
lesson that even hundreds of thousands of brave, effective troops,
trillions of dollars from our Treasury, cannot by itself impose
stability on a foreign land. Unless we work with other nations under
the mantle of international norms and principles and law that offer
legitimacy to our efforts, we will not succeed. And unless we work
together to defeat the ideas that drive different communities in a
country like Iraq into conflict, any order that our militaries can
impose will be temporary.
Just as force alone cannot impose order internationally, I believe
in my core that repression cannot forge the social cohesion for
nations to succeed. The history of the last two decades proves that
in today’s world, dictatorships are unstable. The strongmen of today
become the spark of revolution tomorrow. You can jail your
opponents, but you can’t imprison ideas. You can try to control
access to information, but you cannot turn a lie into truth. It is
not a conspiracy of U.S.-backed NGOs that expose corruption and
raise the expectations of people around the globe; it’s technology,
social media, and the irreducible desire of people everywhere to
make their own choices about how they are governed.
Indeed, I believe that in today’s world, the measure of strength is
no longer defined by the control of territory. Lasting prosperity
does not come solely from the ability to access and extract raw
materials. The strength of nations depends on the success of their
people -- their knowledge, their innovation, their imagination,
their creativity, their drive, their opportunity -- and that, in
turn, depends upon individual rights and good governance and
personal security. Internal repression and foreign aggression are
both symptoms of the failure to provide this foundation.
A politics and solidarity that depend on
demonizing others, that draws on religious sectarianism or narrow
tribalism or jingoism may at times look like strength in the moment,
but over time its weakness will be exposed. And history tells us
that the dark forces unleashed by this type of politics surely makes
all of us less secure. Our world has been there before. We gain
nothing from going back.
Instead, I believe that we must go forward in
pursuit of our ideals, not abandon them at this critical time. We
must give expression to our best hopes, not our deepest fears. This
institution was founded because men and women who came before us had
the foresight to know that our nations are more secure when we
uphold basic laws and basic norms, and pursue a path of cooperation
over conflict. And strong nations, above all, have a responsibility
to uphold this international order.
Let me give you a concrete example. After I took
office, I made clear that one of the principal achievements of this
body -- the nuclear non-proliferation regime -- was endangered by
Iran’s violation of the NPT. On that basis, the Security Council
tightened sanctions on the Iranian government, and many nations
joined us to enforce them. Together, we showed that laws and
agreements mean something.
But we also understood that the goal of sanctions
was not simply to punish Iran. Our objective was to test whether
Iran could change course, accept constraints, and allow the world to
verify that its nuclear program will be peaceful. For two years, the
United States and our partners -- including Russia, including China
-- stuck together in complex negotiations. The result is a lasting,
comprehensive deal that prevents Iran from obtaining a nuclear
weapon, while allowing it to access peaceful energy. And if this
deal is fully implemented, the prohibition on nuclear weapons is
strengthened, a potential war is averted, our world is safer. That
is the strength of the international system when it works the way it
should.
That same fidelity to international order guides
our responses to other challenges around the world. Consider
Russia’s annexation of Crimea and further aggression in eastern
Ukraine. America has few economic interests in Ukraine. We recognize
the deep and complex history between Russia and Ukraine. But we
cannot stand by when the sovereignty and territorial integrity of a
nation is flagrantly violated. If that happens without consequence
in Ukraine, it could happen to any nation gathered here today.
That’s the basis of the sanctions that the United States and our
partners impose on Russia. It's not a desire to return to a Cold
War.
Now, within Russia, state-controlled media may describe these events
as an example of a resurgent Russia -- a view shared, by the way, by
a number of U.S. politicians and commentators who have always been
deeply skeptical of Russia, and seem to be convinced a new Cold War
is, in fact, upon us. And yet, look at the results. The Ukrainian
people are more interested than ever in aligning with Europe instead
of Russia. Sanctions have led to capital flight, a contracting
economy, a fallen ruble, and the emigration of more educated
Russians.
Imagine if, instead, Russia had engaged in true
diplomacy, and worked with Ukraine and the international community
to ensure its interests were protected. That would be better for
Ukraine, but also better for Russia, and better for the world --
which is why we continue to press for this crisis to be resolved in
a way that allows a sovereign and democratic Ukraine to determine
its future and control its territory. Not because we want to isolate
Russia -- we don't -- but because we want a strong Russia that’s
invested in working with us to strengthen the international system
as a whole.
Similarly, in the South China Sea, the United
States makes no claim on territory there. We don't adjudicate
claims. But like every nation gathered here, we have an interest in
upholding the basic principles of freedom of navigation and the free
flow of commerce, and in resolving disputes through international
law, not the law of force. So we will defend these principles, while
encouraging China and other claimants to resolve their differences
peacefully.
I say this, recognizing that diplomacy is hard;
that the outcomes are sometimes unsatisfying; that it's rarely
politically popular. But I believe that leaders of large nations, in
particular, have an obligation to take these risks -- precisely
because we are strong enough to protect our interests if, and when,
diplomacy fails.
I also believe that to move forward in this new
era, we have to be strong enough to acknowledge when what you’re
doing is not working. For 50 years, the United States pursued a Cuba
policy that failed to improve the lives of the Cuban people. We
changed that. We continue to have differences with the Cuban
government. We will continue to stand up for human rights. But we
address these issues through diplomatic relations, and increased
commerce, and people-to-people ties. As these contacts yield
progress, I’m confident that our Congress will inevitably lift an
embargo that should not be in place anymore. (Applause.) Change
won’t come overnight to Cuba, but I’m confident that openness, not
coercion, will support the reforms and better the life the Cuban
people deserve, just as I believe that Cuba will find its success if
it pursues cooperation with other nations.
Now, if it’s in the interest of major powers to
uphold international standards, it is even more true for the rest of
the community of nations. Look around the world. From Singapore to
Colombia to Senegal, the facts shows that nations succeed when they
pursue an inclusive peace and prosperity within their borders, and
work cooperatively with countries beyond their borders.
That path is now available to a nation like Iran,
which, as of this moment, continues to deploy violent proxies to
advance its interests. These efforts may appear to give Iran
leverage in disputes with neighbors, but they fuel sectarian
conflict that endangers the entire region, and isolates Iran from
the promise of trade and commerce. The Iranian people have a proud
history, and are filled with extraordinary potential. But chanting
“Death to America” does not create jobs, or make Iran more secure.
If Iran chose a different path, that would be good for the security
of the region, good for the Iranian people, and good for the world.
Of course, around the globe, we will continue to
be confronted with nations who reject these lessons of history,
places where civil strife, border disputes, and sectarian wars bring
about terrorist enclaves and humanitarian disasters. Where order has
completely broken down, we must act, but we will be stronger when we
act together.
In such efforts, the United States will always do
our part. We will do so mindful of the lessons of the past -- not
just the lessons of Iraq, but also the example of Libya, where we
joined an international coalition under a U.N. mandate to prevent a
slaughter. Even as we helped the Libyan people bring an end to the
reign of a tyrant, our coalition could have and should have done
more to fill a vacuum left behind. We’re grateful to the United
Nations for its efforts to forge a unity government. We will help
any legitimate Libyan government as it works to bring the country
together. But we also have to recognize that we must work more
effectively in the future, as an international community, to build
capacity for states that are in distress, before they collapse.
And that’s why we should celebrate the fact that
later today the United States will join with more than 50 countries
to enlist new capabilities -- infantry, intelligence, helicopters,
hospitals, and tens of thousands of troops -- to strengthen United
Nations peacekeeping. (Applause.) These new capabilities can prevent
mass killing, and ensure that peace agreements are more than words
on paper. But we have to do it together. Together, we must
strengthen our collective capacity to establish security where order
has broken down, and to support those who seek a just and lasting
peace.
Nowhere is our commitment to international order
more tested than in Syria. When a dictator slaughters tens of
thousands of his own people, that is not just a matter of one
nation’s internal affairs -- it breeds human suffering on an order
of magnitude that affects us all. Likewise, when a terrorist group
beheads captives, slaughters the innocent and enslaves women, that’s
not a single nation’s national security problem -- that is an
assault on all humanity.
I’ve said before and I will repeat: There is no room for
accommodating an apocalyptic cult like ISIL, and the United States
makes no apologies for using our military, as part of a broad
coalition, to go after them. We do so with a determination to ensure
that there will never be a safe haven for terrorists who carry out
these crimes. And we have demonstrated over more than a decade of
relentless pursuit of al Qaeda, we will not be outlasted by
extremists.
But while military power is necessary, it is not
sufficient to resolve the situation in Syria. Lasting stability can
only take hold when the people of Syria forge an agreement to live
together peacefully. The United States is prepared to work with any
nation, including Russia and Iran, to resolve the conflict. But we
must recognize that there cannot be, after so much bloodshed, so
much carnage, a return to the pre-war status quo.
Let’s remember how this started. Assad reacted to
peaceful protests by escalating repression and killing that, in
turn, created the environment for the current strife. And so Assad
and his allies cannot simply pacify the broad majority of a
population who have been brutalized by chemical weapons and
indiscriminate bombing. Yes, realism dictates that compromise will
be required to end the fighting and ultimately stamp out ISIL. But
realism also requires a managed transition away from Assad and to a
new leader, and an inclusive government that recognizes there must
be an end to this chaos so that the Syrian people can begin to
rebuild.
We know that ISIL -- which emerged out of the
chaos of Iraq and Syria -- depends on perpetual war to survive. But
we also know that they gain adherents because of a poisonous
ideology. So part of our job, together, is to work to reject such
extremism that infects too many of our young people. Part of that
effort must be a continued rejection by Muslims of those who distort
Islam to preach intolerance and promote violence, and it must also a
rejection by non-Muslims of the ignorance that equates Islam with
terror. (Applause.)
This work will take time. There are no easy
answers to Syria. And there are no simple answers to the changes
that are taking place in much of the Middle East and North Africa.
But so many families need help right now; they don’t have time. And
that’s why the United States is increasing the number of refugees
who we welcome within our borders. That’s why we will continue to be
the largest donor of assistance to support those refugees. And today
we are launching new efforts to ensure that our people and our
businesses, our universities and our NGOs can help as well --
because in the faces of suffering families, our nation of immigrants
sees ourselves.
Of course, in the old ways of thinking, the plight
of the powerless, the plight of refugees, the plight of the
marginalized did not matter. They were on the periphery of the
world’s concerns. Today, our concern for them is driven not just by
conscience, but should also be drive by self-interest. For helping
people who have been pushed to the margins of our world is not mere
charity, it is a matter of collective security. And the purpose of
this institution is not merely to avoid conflict, it is to galvanize
the collective action that makes life better on this planet.
The commitments we’ve made to the Sustainable Development Goals
speak to this truth. I believe that capitalism has been the greatest
creator of wealth and opportunity that the world has ever known. But
from big cities to rural villages around the world, we also know
that prosperity is still cruelly out of reach for too many. As His
Holiness Pope Francis reminds us, we are stronger when we value the
least among these, and see them as equal in dignity to ourselves and
our sons and our daughters.
We can roll back preventable disease and end the
scourge of HIV/AIDS. We can stamp out pandemics that recognize no
borders. That work may not be on television right now, but as we
demonstrated in reversing the spread of Ebola, it can save more
lives than anything else we can do.
Together, we can eradicate extreme poverty and
erase barriers to opportunity. But this requires a sustained
commitment to our people -- so farmers can feed more people; so
entrepreneurs can start a business without paying a bribe; so young
people have the skills they need to succeed in this modern,
knowledge-based economy.
We can promote growth through trade that meets a higher standard.
And that’s what we’re doing through the Trans-Pacific Partnership --
a trade agreement that encompasses nearly 40 percent of the global
economy; an agreement that will open markets, while protecting the
rights of workers and protecting the environment that enables
development to be sustained.
We can roll back the pollution that we put in our
skies, and help economies lift people out of poverty without
condemning our children to the ravages of an ever-warming climate.
The same ingenuity that produced the Industrial Age and the Computer
Age allows us to harness the potential of clean energy. No country
can escape the ravages of climate change. And there is no stronger
sign of leadership than putting future generations first. The United
States will work with every nation that is willing to do its part so
that we can come together in Paris to decisively confront this
challenge.
And finally, our vision for the future of this
Assembly, my belief in moving forward rather than backwards,
requires us to defend the democratic principles that allow societies
to succeed. Let me start from a simple premise: Catastrophes, like
what we are seeing in Syria, do not take place in countries where
there is genuine democracy and respect for the universal values this
institution is supposed to defend. (Applause.)
I recognize that democracy is going to take
different forms in different parts of the world. The very idea of a
people governing themselves depends upon government giving
expression to their unique culture, their unique history, their
unique experiences. But some universal truths are self-evident. No
person wants to be imprisoned for peaceful worship. No woman should
ever be abused with impunity, or a girl barred from going to school.
The freedom to peacefully petition those in power without fear of
arbitrary laws -- these are not ideas of one country or one culture.
They are fundamental to human progress. They are a cornerstone of
this institution.
I realize that in many parts of the world there is
a different view -- a belief that strong leadership must tolerate no
dissent. I hear it not only from America’s adversaries, but
privately at least I also hear it from some of our friends. I
disagree. I believe a government that suppresses peaceful dissent is
not showing strength; it is showing weakness and it is showing fear.
(Applause.) History shows that regimes who fear their own people
will eventually crumble, but strong institutions built on the
consent of the governed endure long after any one individual is
gone.
That's why our strongest leaders -- from George
Washington to Nelson Mandela -- have elevated the importance of
building strong, democratic institutions over a thirst for perpetual
power. Leaders who amend constitutions to stay in office only
acknowledge that they failed to build a successful country for their
people -- because none of us last forever. It tells us that power is
something they cling to for its own sake, rather than for the
betterment of those they purport to serve.
I understand democracy is frustrating. Democracy
in the United States is certainly imperfect. At times, it can even
be dysfunctional. But democracy -- the constant struggle to extend
rights to more of our people, to give more people a voice -- is what
allowed us to become the most powerful nation in the world.
(Applause.)
It's not simply a matter of principle; it's not an
abstraction. Democracy -- inclusive democracy -- makes countries
stronger. When opposition parties can seek power peacefully through
the ballot, a country draws upon new ideas. When a free media can
inform the public, corruption and abuse are exposed and can be
rooted out. When civil society thrives, communities can solve
problems that governments cannot necessarily solve alone. When
immigrants are welcomed, countries are more productive and more
vibrant. When girls can go to school, and get a job, and pursue
unlimited opportunity, that’s when a country realizes its full
potential. (Applause.)
That is what I believe is America’s greatest
strength. Not everybody in America agrees with me. That's part of
democracy. I believe that the fact that you can walk the streets of
this city right now and pass churches and synagogues and temples and
mosques, where people worship freely; the fact that our nation of
immigrants mirrors the diversity of the world -- you can find
everybody from everywhere here in New York City -- (applause) -- the
fact that, in this country, everybody can contribute, everybody can
participate no matter who they are, or what they look like, or who
they love -- that's what makes us strong.
And I believe that what is true for America is
true for virtually all mature democracies. And that is no accident.
We can be proud of our nations without defining ourselves in
opposition to some other group. We can be patriotic without
demonizing someone else. We can cherish our own identities -- our
religion, our ethnicity, our traditions -- without putting others
down. Our systems are premised on the notion that absolute power
will corrupt, but that people -- ordinary people -- are
fundamentally good; that they value family and friendship, faith and
the dignity of hard work; and that with appropriate checks and
balances, governments can reflect this goodness.
I believe that’s the future we must seek together.
To believe in the dignity of every individual, to believe we can
bridge our differences, and choose cooperation over conflict -- that
is not weakness, that is strength. (Applause.) It is a practical
necessity in this interconnected world.
And our people understand this. Think of the
Liberian doctor who went door-to-door to search for Ebola cases, and
to tell families what to do if they show symptoms. Think of the
Iranian shopkeeper who said, after the nuclear deal, “God willing,
now we’ll be able to offer many more goods at better prices.” Think
of the Americans who lowered the flag over our embassy in Havana in
1961 -- the year I was born -- and returned this summer to raise
that flag back up. (Applause.) One of these men said of the Cuban
people, “We could do things for them, and they could do things for
us. We loved them.” For 50 years, we ignored that fact.
Think of the families leaving everything they’ve
known behind, risking barren deserts and stormy waters just to find
shelter; just to save their children. One Syrian refugee who was
greeted in Hamburg with warm greetings and shelter, said, “We feel
there are still some people who love other people.”
The people of our United Nations are not as
different as they are told. They can be made to fear; they can be
taught to hate -- but they can also respond to hope. History is
littered with the failure of false prophets and fallen empires who
believed that might always makes right, and that will continue to be
the case. You can count on that. But we are called upon to offer a
different type of leadership -- leadership strong enough to
recognize that nations share common interests and people share a
common humanity, and, yes, there are certain ideas and principles
that are universal.
That's what those who shaped the United Nations 70
years ago understood. Let us carry forward that faith into the
future -- for it is the only way we can assure that future will be
brighter for my children, and for yours.
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