NOTE:  President Obama will be speaking at the opening of  this year’s United Nations’ General Assembly.  The General Assembly is the main deliberative body of the UN. Decisions on important questions, such as those on peace and security, admission of new members and budgetary matters, require a two-thirds majority. Decisions on other questions are by simple majority. Each country has one vote.

(by Dave Boyer, WashingtonTimes.com) – A year after President Obama largely defused a diplomatic showdown at the United Nations over Palestinian statehood, his difficulties with the Muslim world are multiplying rapidly as he prepares to address the U.N. General Assembly today.

Across the Middle East and beyond, protesters have stormed U.S. diplomatic posts, killing four Americans in Libya in a terrorist attack on Sept. 11 and clashing with security forces elsewhere in a wave of violence against the U.S. A Pakistani government minister issued a fatwa Sunday against the U.S. producer of an anti-Islam movie blamed by some for the worldwide outburst against America, and the leader of Egypt’s largest ultra-orthodox Islamist party called on Muslim leaders to demand that the U.N. criminalize contempt of Islam as a religion.

In Syria, the slaughter of anti-government demonstrators continues despite the Obama administration’s diplomatic efforts. …

In Afghanistan, the number of “insider” killings of NATO forces by Afghan troops has increased so much that NATO has suspended most mutual training missions, cooperation that the Obama administration views as the key to turning over security of the country to the Afghans.

In Iran, work on a suspected nuclear weapons program continues as Israel grows increasingly [concerned] at what it perceives as Mr. Obama’s failure to take strong enough action against the Iranians.

The broader range of crises in the Arab world this year is especially uncomfortable to address for Mr. Obama, who has built his foreign policy approach to Muslim countries on a more-moral philosophy that emphasizes encouragement for pro-democracy movements and puts less focus on military solutions.

“The president faces a much more difficult challenge now,” said Stewart Patrick, a senior fellow on national security and global governance at the Council on Foreign Relations. “It’s all well and good to promote human rights, and the United States should do that, but the reality is that it’s going to be a long, painful process. The president may have built up some unrealistic expectations with some of his statements.”

A spokesman for the president’s National Security Council said that as Mr. Obama prepares to deliver his speech to the United Nations, “the United States is in a stronger position than we were when he took office,” spokesman Tommy Vietor said.  “Any time the president goes to the U.N. General Assembly, he has an opportunity to set the agenda on the world stage as the leader of the world’s most powerful nation.  He does so with the credibility of strengthening our alliances, ending the war in Iraq, devastating al Qaeda, and rallying international action on challenges like securing nuclear materials and stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.”

This year, too, Mr. Obama needs to aim his message at U.S. voters in the midst of his re-election bid, with Republican rival Mitt Romney accusing him of apologizing to Islamic extremists and failing to stand strongly enough with Israel. …

Although there has been virtually no progress in the so-called [U.S. led] “peace process” [between Israel and the Palestinians], analysts generally credit Mr. Obama with tamping down the furor over the Palestinians last year at the United Nations. There was also the U.S.-led NATO action in Libya that helped topple the regime of dictator Moammar Gadhafi without the loss of any U.S. troops. …

With protests of the U.S. roiling the Middle East, several analysts said they expect Mr. Obama will have to walk a fine line by defending a filmmaker’s right to free speech while rejecting the anti-Islam message of his film.

“Islamic leaders in the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and even Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan have all announced a push to criminalize speech that offends Muslims,” said Michael Rubin, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “It is essential that Obama remember his roots as a law lecturer and give an impassioned defense of the importance of free speech. Free speech ­— the basic right upon which centuries of progress has been based — is under unprecedented assault. It’s time for Obama to stand up and lead rather than merely react with platitudes and apologies.”

Mr. Rubin also said Mr. Obama should take a more clear-eyed view of the Arab Spring revolution.  “What we now see is the Islamist extremists making their push,” he said. “We are witnessing the Middle Eastern equivalent of the Reign of Terror supplanting the French Revolution, or the Bolsheviks defeating the Mensheviks. One thing is clear: The Muslim Brotherhood has seen its shadow leading to six more decades of violence.”

Mr. Obama, borrowing a line from Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, has said in the wake of the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya that “we cannot replace the tyranny of a dictator with the tyranny of a mob.” Mr. Vietor said the president will “put forward a vision of U.S. leadership” in the Middle East.

“I would certainly expect the president to address the recent unrest in the Muslim world, and the broader context of the democratic transitions in the Arab World,” Mr. Vietor said. “The president will make it clear that we reject the views in this video, while also underscoring that violence is never acceptable…. He will also send a clear message that the United States will never retreat from the world, will bring justice to those who harm Americans and will stand strongly for our democratic values abroad.”

Mr. Patrick said the president also may need to explain to the Muslim world why the United States doesn’t simply arrest the movie producer, Nakouly Basseley Nakoula, who was taken in for questioning by authorities in Los Angeles and then released.

“There are limited things that the United States can do in the age of global information when some [fool] in the United States can put together a crude video attacking [Muhammad],” Mr. Patrick said. “Then suddenly, it’s beamed all over the world and taken advantage of by extremist groups to mobilize major protests. It’s very hard to know what any president could do in that situation to try to tamp down things.”

Emad Abdel Ghaffour, the head of Egypt’s Salafist Nour Party, told Reuters in an interview that the U.N. should pass a resolution to criminalize contempt of Islam and the Prophet Muhammad.  …

Copyright 2012 The Washington Times, LLC.   From the Associated Press.  Reprinted from the Washington Times for educational purposes only.  Visit the website at washingtontimes.com.

Questions

1.  a) Who is Emad Abdel Ghaffour?
b)  What is Mr. Ghaffour (and other Islamic leaders) demanding that the U.N. do?
 
2.  What is President Obama’s foreign policy approach in Muslim countries, which differs from that of recent presidents?
 
3.  a) How does President Obama’s National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor view the President’s speech to the UN?
b)  Do you agree that, as Mr. Vietor says, “the U.S. is in a stronger position than we were when President Obama took office”?  Explain your answer.
c)  Ask a parent the same question.
 
4.  a) What must President Obama do in his speech to the UN General Assembly, according to Michael Rubin?
b)  Do you agree with Mr. Rubin’s admonishment?  Explain your answer.
c)  Ask a parent the same question.
 
5.  What does Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor say the President will talk about in his speech to the UN General Assembly?
 
6.  Watch President Obama’s speech.  In your opinion, how successful was Mr. Obama in underscoring that violence is never acceptable?  Did he send a strong message that the United States will stand up for its citizens’ right to free speech,  bring justice to those who harm Americans and stand strongly for our democratic values abroad?  Explain your answer.

Background

ISLAMIST DEMANDS TO THE U.N.:

“We call for legislation or a resolution [by the United Nations] to criminalize contempt of Islam as a religion and its Prophet,” said Emad Abdel Ghaffour, one of four permanent assistants to the Egyptian president, on Saturday.

Leaders and their entourages from the 193-nation United Nations General Assembly descend on U.N. headquarters in New York for the world body’s annual “general debate” from September 25-October 1.

Egypt’s President Mursi will make his Assembly debut along with the new leaders of Libya, Yemen and Tunisia, countries where Islamist parties have won control of government. (from reuters)

PRESIDENT OBAMA SKIPS MEETINGS WITH WORLD LEADERS:

President Obama, in an unusual move, has no plans to sit down one-on-one with world leaders in New York for the annual meeting of the United Nations General Assembly.
 
With 43 days until the election, the president is bucking precedent and skipping the formal bilateral meetings, leaving Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to take on many of those conversations. By comparison, last year Obama scheduled a dozen official meetings.
 
He will make time for “The View,” a TV talk show more likely to reach voters than Obama would with the diplomacy he is skipping at the United Nations.
 
Unlike his predecessors, Obama is skipping the face-to-face meetings with counterparts where much of the U.N. work gets done, leaving Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to pick up more of those sessions herself.
 
Both Presidents George W. Bush in 2004 and Bill Clinton in 1996 held a series of meetings with foreign leaders during U.N. visits in their re-election years. 
 
The Obama White House opted instead to have the secretary of state meet with the presidents of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, Tunisia, Yemen and Myanmar as well as the king of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Those meetings will be critical to Obama’s foreign policy as Washington deals with the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, the fallout from the Arab Spring and a delicate time in U.S.-Israeli relations, as officials in Israel continue to speak of a military strike on Iran.
(from abcnews and csmonitor)

Resources

 Watch President Obama’s 2012 speech to the UN General Assembly live at approximately 10 am (Eastern) at:  http://webtv.un.org/#

Below is a partial list of speakers set to deliver remarks and meetings scheduled at the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, Sept. 25:
9 a.m. ET
Opening of the General Debate
10 a.m. ET (approximately)
President Obama address
12:00 p.m. ET (approximately)
François Hollande, President of the French Republic
5:15 p.m. ET (approximately)
Asif Ali Zardari, President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan

(The existing practice at the sessions of the U.N. General Assembly designate a voluntary 15-minute time limit for each speaker during the general debate.) The full schedule for Tuesday, September 25 beginning at 9 am ET:

1. Report of the Secretary-General on the work of the Organization: presentation by the Secretary-General of his annual report
2. Opening of the general debate 
3. Dilma Rousseff, President of the Federative Republic of Brazil 
4. Barack Obama, President of the United States of America 
5. Tomislav Nikolić, President of the Republic of Serbia 
6. Boni Yayi, President of the Republic of Benin 
7. Sauli Niinistö, President of the Republic of Finland 
8. Demetris Christofias, President of the Republic of Cyprus 
9. Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, Amir of the State of Qatar 
10. Rosen Plevneliev, President of the Republic of Bulgaria
11. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, President of the Republic of Indonesia 
12. Mikheil Saakashvili, President of Georgia 
13. Danilo Medina Sánchez, President of the Dominican Republic 
14. François Hollande, President of the French Republic 
15. Dalia Grybauskaitė, President of the Republic of Lithuania 
16. Porfirio Lobo Sosa, President of the Republic of Honduras
17. Hifikepunye Pohamba, President of the Republic of Namibia 

The general debate will continue at 3 p.m. in the 7th plenary meeting:
1. Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda
2. Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, President of the Swiss Confederation
3. Cristina Fernández, President of the Argentine Republic
4. Macky Sall, President of the Republic of Senegal
5. Jacob Zuma, President of the Republic of South Africa
6. Ricardo Martinelli Berrocal, President of the Republic of Panama
7. Abdullah II Bin Al Hussein, King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
8. János Áder, President of Hungary
9. Asif Ali Zardari, President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
10. Carlos Mauricio Funes Cartagena, President of the Republic of El Salvador
11. Joseph Kabila Kabange, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
12. Ali Bongo Ondimba, President of the Gabonese Republic 

The general debate will continue at 6 p.m. in the 8th plenary meeting:
13. Ivan Gašparovič, President of the Slovak Republic
14. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
15 Christopher Jorebon Loeak, President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands
16. Sprent Arumogo Dabwido, President of the Republic of Nauru
17. Václav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic
18. Hâmid Karzai, President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
19. Continuation of the general debate [item 8]Edward Kiwanuka Ssekandi, Vice-President of the Republic of Uganda
Mariano Rajoy Brey, President of the Government of the Kingdom of Spain
Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão, Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste

From www.un.org/Docs/journal/En/lateste.pdf

Get Free Answers

Daily “Answers” emails are provided for Daily News Articles, Tuesday’s World Events and Friday’s News Quiz.