The Delaware Gazette

Obama summons world leaders to reject extremism

Pres­i­dent Barack Obama addresses the 67th ses­sion of the United Nations Gen­eral Assem­bly at U.N. head­quar­ters Tues­day. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

BEN FELLER, NANCY BENAC

Asso­ci­ated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Con­fronting global tumult and Mus­lim anger, Pres­i­dent Barack Obama exhorted world lead­ers Tues­day to stand fast against vio­lence and extrem­ism, argu­ing that pro­tect­ing reli­gious rights and free speech must be a uni­ver­sal respon­si­bil­ity and not just an Amer­i­can obligation.

“The impulse towards intol­er­ance and vio­lence may ini­tially be focused on the West, but over time it can­not be con­tained,” Obama warned the U.N. Gen­eral Assem­bly in an urgent call to action under­scored by the high stakes for all nations.

The gloomy back­drop for Obama’s speech — a world riven by deadly protests against an anti-Islamic video, by war in Syria, by ris­ing ten­sion over a nuclear Iran and more — marked the dra­matic shifts that have occurred in the year since the Gen­eral Assembly’s last min­is­te­r­ial meet­ing, when demo­c­ra­tic upris­ings in the Arab world cre­ated a sense of excite­ment and opti­mism. Obama had tough words for Iran and con­demned anew the vio­lence in Syria as Bashar al-Assad tries to retain power.

Six weeks before the U.S. pres­i­den­tial elec­tion, an unmis­tak­able cam­paign ele­ment framed Obama’s speech as well: The president’s Repub­li­can rival, Mitt Rom­ney, has tried to cast him as a weak leader on the world stage, too quick to apol­o­gize for Amer­i­can values.

Rom­ney, speak­ing at a Clin­ton Global Ini­tia­tive forum just miles from the U.N., avoided direct crit­i­cism of Obama in def­er­ence to the apo­lit­i­cal set­tings of the day, but he said he hoped to return a year later “as pres­i­dent, hav­ing made sub­stan­tial progress” on demo­c­ra­tic reforms.

Obama, like­wise, avoided direct pol­i­tick­ing in his speech but offered a pointed con­trast to his GOP opponent’s caught-on-tape com­ment that there is lit­tle hope for peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

“Among Israelis and Pales­tini­ans,” Obama said, “the future must not belong to those who turn their backs on a prospect of peace.”

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s open­ing state-of-the-world speech to the Gen­eral Assembly’s pres­i­dents, prime min­is­ters and mon­archs sketched the cur­rent time as one when “too often, divi­sions are exploited for short-term polit­i­cal gain” and “too many peo­ple are ready to take small flames of indif­fer­ence and turn them into a bonfire.”

The lead­ers are assem­bled here as anger still churns over a made-in-America video that mocked the Prophet Muham­mad. The video helped touch off protests through­out the Mus­lim world that have left at least 40 peo­ple dead, includ­ing the U.S. ambas­sador to Libya.

Obama, a one­time pro­fes­sor of con­sti­tu­tional law, deliv­ered what amounted to a lec­ture on what he pre­sented as the bedrock impor­tance of free speech, even if it comes at a price.

He stressed that just as the “cruel and dis­gust­ing” video did not reflect U.S. val­ues, the back­lash against it did not rep­re­sent the views of most Mus­lims. Still, he said, “the events of the last two weeks speak to the need for all of us to address hon­estly the ten­sions between the West and the Arab world that is mov­ing towards democracy.”

Obama said the notion of con­trol­ling infor­ma­tion is obso­lete in the Inter­net age, “when any­one with a cell­phone can spread offen­sive views around the world with the click of a but­ton.” But he said lead­ers must be swift to respond to those who would answer hate­ful speech with vio­lence and chaos.

In his last inter­na­tional address before the Novem­ber elec­tions, the pres­i­dent had strong words for the lead­ers in Iran and Syria but broke no new ground on any actions the U.S. might take.

He warned that while there is still hope of resolv­ing the dis­pute over Iran’s nuclear pro­gram through diplo­macy, “that time is not unlim­ited.” With­out lay­ing out specifics, he added: “The United States will do what we must to pre­vent Iran from obtain­ing a nuclear weapon.”

Iran­ian Pres­i­dent Mah­moud Ahmadine­jad, in an inter­view with The Asso­ci­ated Press, dis­missed the ques­tion of Iran’s nuclear ambi­tions and claimed that despite West­ern sanc­tions his coun­try was bet­ter off than it was when he took office in 2005. And he said a new world order needs to emerge, away from Amer­i­can “bul­ly­ing” and domination.

“God will­ing, a new order will come together and we’ll do away with every­thing that dis­tances us,” Ahmadine­jad said. “Now even ele­men­tary school kids through­out the world have under­stood that the United States gov­ern­ment is fol­low­ing an inter­na­tional pol­icy of bullying.”

“Bul­ly­ing must come to an end. Occu­pa­tion must come to an end,” he said in a wide-ranging inter­view on the side­lines of the U.N. Gen­eral Assembly.

As for the ris­ing vio­lence in Syria, Obama told the U.N. del­e­gates, “The future must not belong to a dic­ta­tor who mas­sacres his peo­ple. If there is a cause that cries out for protest in the world today, it is a regime that tor­tures chil­dren and shoots rock­ets at apart­ment build­ings. We must remain engaged to assure that what began with cit­i­zens demand­ing their rights does not end in a cycle of sec­tar­ian violence.”

In the AP inter­view, Ahmadine­jad said Iran was one of nearly a dozen coun­tries form­ing a new con­tact group to try to end the 18-month-old civil war in Syria. The group would include 10 or 11 coun­tries in the Mid­dle East and else­where and meet in New York “very soon,” Ahmadine­jad said.

Obama’s defense of free speech was respect­fully received by world lead­ers. Yet it was clear that dif­fer­ent under­stand­ings abound on the proper exer­cise of free expression.

The for­eign min­is­ter of Indone­sia, home to the world’s largest Mus­lim pop­u­la­tion, said Obama’s speech was a “clar­ion call” for all nations to reject intol­er­ance, call­ing it “an issue that gal­va­nizes all of us.” But For­eign Min­is­ter Marty Natale­gawa added that free­dom of expres­sion should be exer­cised with con­sid­er­a­tion to moral­ity and pub­lic order.

Dina Zakaria, a spokesman for the Mus­lim Brotherhood’s polit­i­cal party Free­dom and Jus­tice, said cul­tural dif­fer­ences between the U.S. and the Mus­lim and Arab world over the lim­i­ta­tions of free­dom of expres­sion will persist.

“No one can argue against free­dom of expres­sion, but the West­ern under­stand­ing of it is dif­fer­ent from ours,” she said. “Will this free­dom allow for con­tempt of reli­gion? For us it is dif­fer­ent. For us it is a red line as Mus­lims and Chris­tians as well.”

Obama did not hes­i­tate to under­line some of the hope­ful devel­op­ments in the world under his watch.

“The war in Iraq is over, and our troops have come home,” he said. “We have begun a tran­si­tion in Afghanistan, and Amer­ica and our allies will end our war on sched­ule in 2014. Al-Qaida has been weak­ened, and Osama bin Laden is no more. Nations have come together to lock down nuclear mate­ri­als, and Amer­ica and Rus­sia are reduc­ing our arsenals.”

In one lighter moment in a somber speech, Obama drew laugh­ter from the Assem­bly with one com­ment in his remarks on free speech: “I accept that peo­ple are going to call me awful things every day.”

AP News Posted by on Sep 25 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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