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United Nations Foundation/Partnership for a Secure America
Release Date: November 19, 2008
Leaders outline policy priorities for strengthening UN, addressing global challenges
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For Immediate Distribution
Washington, D.C. (November 19, 2008) – A bipartisan coalition of over three dozen senior foreign policy leaders in the United States issued a public statement today urging the incoming Obama Administration to help lead a new era of international cooperation by strengthening the U.S.-UN relationship. The signatories include four former Cabinet Secretaries, eight former Senators, four former UN Ambassadors, three former National Security Advisors and two former Governors. The statement was released by the United Nations Foundation and Partnership for a Secure America.
“President-elect Obama has the opportunity to engage with the world and renew American leadership at the United Nations, the world’s platform for finding shared solutions to global problems,” said Timothy E. Wirth, president of the United Nations Foundation. “The challenges we face are immense. But working together with other nations ensures that we don’t have to shoulder all of the burdens or take all of the risks to make the world a safer and better place.”
The leaders’ statement identifies nine specific steps the new Administration can take to bolster international cooperation and address global problems through the United Nations. The statement will appear in a full-page advertisement in tomorrow’s New York Times and reads:
In today's rapidly changing world of interdependence, globalization, and transnational threats, the United States must balance a strong military with creative diplomacy to secure America's interests. We must recognize that the United Nations is a critical platform and partner for advancing international cooperation on today's global threats and challenges, such as poverty and disease, nuclear proliferation, terrorism, and climate change.
The UN cannot succeed without strong U.S. leadership and support. The next President has a unique opportunity to revitalize the U.S.-UN relationship as a symbol of America's commitment to constructive international cooperation. This investment will pay off substantially by helping to enhance our standing internationally and strengthen our ability to keep America safe and strong.
Accordingly, we, the undersigned, believe that the incoming Obama Administration should:
- Make an early and visible statement on the United Nations that expresses American commitment to international cooperation through the UN;
- Lead on UN efforts on nuclear proliferation, counterterrorism, climate change and the Millennium Development Goals;
- Play a constructive role in UN reform efforts and updating the UN's management and budgetary systems;
- Pay our debts on time, work to remove Congressional caps, and alter the schedule of U.S. payments so that we are in a position to honor our treaty obligations;
- Engage with the UN on the shared interests of stabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan and supporting effective democratic governments in those countries;
- Obtain a seat on the faltering Human Rights Council and work to influence it from within;
- Underscore our commitment to the system of international agreements and treaties by seeking Senate consent for key treaties signed but not ratified;
- Place well-qualified Americans in open positions at the UN;
- Help manage the growing workload assigned to UN peacekeeping by providing logistical and management expertise and other support needed to enhance UN capacities.
The signatories to the statement are:
Madeleine Albright Secretary of State 1997-2001 Gen. Brent Scowcroft National Security Advisor 1974-77, 1989-93 Lee Hamilton US Congressman (D-IN) 1965-99 Warren Rudman US Senator (R-NH) 1980-92 Howard Baker US Senator (R-TN) 1967-85 Samuel Berger National Security Advisor, 1997-2001 Gen. Charles G. Boyd Pres., Business Executives for National Security Harold Brown Secretary of Defense 1977-81 Zbigniew Brzezinski National Security Advisor 1977-81 Warren Christopher Secretary of State 1993-97 John Danforth US Senator (R-MO) 1976-95 Kenneth M. Duberstein White House Chief of Staff 1988-89 Slade Gorton US Senator (R-WA) 1981-87, 1989-2001 Gary Hart US Senator (D-CO) 1975-87 Rita Hauser Chair, International Peace Academy 1992-present Carla Hills US Trade Representative 1989-93 Karl F. Inderfurth Assistant Secretary of State 1997-2001 Nancy Kassebaum Baker US Senator (R-KS) 1978-97
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Thomas Kean Governor (R-NJ), 1982-90 Richard Leone President, The Century Foundation Amb. William Luers President, UN Association of the USA Donald McHenry Ambassador to UN 1979-81 Joseph Nye University Distinguished Service Professor, Harvard University Edward Perkins Ambassador to UN 1992-93 William Perry Secretary of Defense 1994-97 Thomas Pickering Undersecretary of State, 1997-2000 Alan Simpson US Senator (R-WY) 1979-97 Nancy Soderberg Representative for Special Political Affairs at the UN 1997-2001 Theodore Sorensen White House Special Counsel 1961-63 Strobe Talbott Deputy Secretary of State 1994-2001 Ted Turner Founder and Chairman, UN Foundation John Whitehead Deputy Secretary of State 1985-88 Christine Todd Whitman Governor (R-NJ) 1994-2001 Timothy E. Wirth US Senator (D-CO) 1987-93 Frank Wisner Undersecretary of State 1992-93 James D. Wolfensohn World Bank President, 1995-2005 Gen. Anthony C. Zinni, USMC (Ret.) |
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About the UN Foundation The UN Foundation, a public charity, was created in 1998 with entrepreneur and philanthropist Ted Turner’s historic $1 billion gift to support UN causes and activities. The UN Foundation is an advocate for the UN and a platform for connecting people, ideas and resources to help the United Nations solve global problems.
About Partnership for a Secure America PSA was created in 2005 by Rep. Hamilton and Sen. Rudman to foster bipartisan, consensus driven solutions to the major national security and foreign policy challenges facing our country. More information on PSA and bios of our distinguished bipartisan Advisory Board, can be found at www.PSAonline.org.
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