Posted on 04/06/2002 6:33:48 AM PST by Jean S
The United Nations, which sat on its collective hands after the September 11 terrorist attacks, is exploiting the memory of more than 3,000 people who were brutally murdered that day to shakedown the United States for cold, hard cash.
Only six months later, the UN is trying to capitalize on the tragedy by rewriting historysuggesting those lives might have been saved had only the United States paid the price of protection. And what is that price? For starters, $70 billion.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan is not satisfied with the $304 million the United States pays in UN dues25% of the regular UN budgetand is not content with the $375 million Americans give to such UN programs as War Crimes Tribunals, the World Health Organization and the Universal Postal Union. It doesnt matter to Annan that the United States contributes $500 million to the UN for peacekeeping costs, or that the Pentagon has spent upwards of $8 billion in recent years to fulfill peacekeeping duties worldwide.
No, Annan wants more.
His demand: The United States must turn over 0.7% of our gross national productroughly $70 billionto the UN Office of Development Assistance to ostensibly fight poverty around the world. And this is just the beginninga minimum threshold as far as the UN is concerned.
Presumably, such payments will mollify terrorists to the point that they will stop flying planes into American buildings. Believe it or not, that was the message I encountered during the UNs International Conference on Financing for Development, held March 18-22 in Monterrey, Mexico.
Siphoning-American Wealth
Everywhere in Monterrey you heard the money grubbers mantra: "Poverty = Terrorism." It was on posters, lapel buttons, fliers and in meeting rooms. The theme was reinforced in many of the speeches made by representatives of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), finance ministers and heads of state.
Annan warned that "no one in this world can feel comfortable, or safe, while so many are suffering and deprived."
Jan Kavan, minister of foreign affairs for the Czech Republic, said that poverty and terrorism "share a common base," and that "extreme poverty . . . creates fertile soil . . . for terrorist behavior." James Wolfensohn, the president of the World Bank who is from the United States, declared that aid is an "insurance policy against terrorism." Romano Prodi, president of the European Commission, instructed the conference that the world faces two choices: "poverty and . . . war" or "peace and prosperity."
S. I. Kolotukhin, deputy minister of finance for Russia, said Annans goal of getting 0.7% of U.S. GNP will be a "determining factor" for a world "free from terrorist threat." King Abdullah II of Jordan said, "For too long, deep pockets of poverty and desperation have served as breeding grounds for conflict and division."
Suggesting that poverty breeds terrorism is disingenuous at best. Hatred breeds terrorism. By all accounts, Osama bin Laden, who grew up in privileged circumstances as the son of a Saudi billionaire, is a very wealthy manhow else could he self-finance a global terrorist network and elude the worlds most powerful military and law enforcement agencies for over six months? If poverty caused terrorism, Saddam Hussein would be standing in line at a Baghdad soup kitchen. The terrorist FARC wreaks havoc in Colombia even though it controls a multi-billion drug-trafficking empire.
Dubious Logic
In Mexico, India, Africa and even Communist China, some of the most impoverished people in the world are more likely to live saintly lives than lives of terrorism. They are more likely to treasure Bibles than "Terrorism 101" manuals. To commit acts of terror like those perpetrated against the Pentagon, the World Trade Center, the USS Cole, and various American embassies, one must have evil in his heart and money in the bank.
That is why it was so disappointing to hear President Bush placate the delegates delusions when he said in Monterrey on March 22 that "we fight against poverty because hope is an answer to terror." Helping the impoverished people of the world to lift themselves out of destitution is a noble and worthy goal. But it should not be undertaken for the wrong reasons. Only a week before his speech in Monterrey, at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, D.C., the President had made an accurate diagnosis. "Poverty does not cause terrorism," he said. "Being poor doesnt make you a murderer. Most of the plotters of September 11 were raised in comfort."
Mr. Kilgannon is the executive director of Freedom Alliance, an educational and charitable foundation dedicated to preserving American sovereignty. He attended the U.N. International Conference on Financing for Development held in Monterrey, Mexico, from March 18-22.
Where is the UN investigation of the burnings of synagogues in Europe this week ("Never again"?)
The very Honorable Ms. Laura Bush and Ms. Koffi Annan.
Further clarification may get the UN-ites a tad upset.
Hey, Kofi..........up yours!
This dog never hunted. Now it's gone rabid.
So where does poverty come in?
Oh yeah! The suiciders! [Yeah, uh - huh, the dumb-asses!]
And it was really published in The Onion, not Human Events, right?
...right...?
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