The nations
represented here know how deeply the world has
changed in the six and a half decades since the United
Nations was formed; since the spirit of international
citizenship, of peoples and nations combining their
energies to solve our shared problems, gave birth to the
United Nations. Today, that spirit is needed more than
ever.
All of us have to respond to a world that is
profoundly altered. As a community of nations, we face
three profound challenges: a redrawing of the map of
power, including a big shift in economic power; the
globalization of problems, not least terrorism and
climate change; and increasingly fluid forms of identity
and the rapid circulation and potency of new ideas.
Taken together, these mean that we are in a new world.
All three demand matching responses. So we must
reform and renew our multilateral institutions in line
with the changing map of power, strengthen our actions
on international peacebuilding, climate change and
development, and promote liberal values and human
rights to win the conflict of ideas.
The truth is that in all three of these areas we are
not doing anything like as well as we must. The
effectiveness of multilateral approaches is in question
in the wake of the financial crisis, the failure of the
climate change talks in Copenhagen and the stalling of
the Doha Trade Round. And too many nations and
international institutions have been too reticent about
promoting enlightened human values. We need to inject
new life into our institutions and new confidence into
the expression of our ideals.
Turning first to the altered geography of power, it
is an often-stated fact that the old economic order is
being transformed and that what were once labelled
emerging economies are now, in many cases, global
economic players. The distribution of military power,
too, is altering, so power is being wielded in different
places and in different ways. This power shift requires
us to reform our international institutions, to reinforce
the rule of international law, and to free up
international trade.
In recent years, our multinational institutions
have sometimes struggled to adapt to the new
circumstances, so reform is essential. And a good place
to start is right here at the United Nations. The Security
Council must be reformed to reflect the new geography
of power. The United Kingdom is clear and
unambiguous in our support for permanent seats for
Brazil, India, Germany and Japan, and for African
representation. Put simply, the United Nations cannot
speak for the many if it only hears the voices of the
few. We welcome the priority that the President has
promised to give to the Assembly’s continuing
negotiations on this issue.
Closer cooperation on counter-terrorism is also
vital, and we welcome the Assembly’s affirmation of
the United Nations Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy.
We must stand shoulder to shoulder in the struggle
against terrorism.
The United Kingdom will always champion the
United Nations. If it did not exist, we would have to
invent it. But let us be frank. Without a radical
overhaul, the United Nations will not provide the
leadership the world seeks from it and needs from it. It
is also important that the vital role of the European
Union in promoting development and prosperity be
adequately represented in the Assembly.
The redrawing of the power map also makes it
even more important that the writ of international law
extend across the world. Laws are the solid
representation of our collective values. That is why it is
so important that we uphold and reinforce the
instruments of international justice, including the
International Criminal Court and specific tribunals,
such as those for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.
I strongly welcome the comments of President
Obama yesterday on the vital importance of the Middle
East peace process. I can assure the Assembly that the
United Kingdom is committed to helping lead to the
end of hostilities that have been so profoundly
damaging for all sides.
The prevention of nuclear-weapons proliferation
is another huge priority for the international
community. The United Kingdom welcomes the
success of the Review Conference of the Parties to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
this May, and I can assure the Assembly that we will
continue to play our part in making the world safer
from the threat of nuclear weapons.
I was ready today to welcome the progress made
in this week’s meeting of the E3+3 group on Iran. I
was ready to also straightforwardly reiterate our
27 10-54959
concerns about Iran’s nuclear programme. But instead,
once again, an issue of grave global concern has been
overshadowed by the bizarre, offensive and attention-
grabbing pronouncements by President Ahmadinejad
from this rostrum yesterday. His remarks were intended
to distract attention from Iran’s obligations and to
generate media headlines. They deserve to do neither.
The reshaped world of power also increases the
need to open our borders to free trade. A trading world
is a safer world. A world trade deal, which is within
reach, would be worth $170 billion annually to the
world economy. Two years ago we were very close, but
we failed to seal the deal. We simply cannot afford
protectionism. Today, we have to recognize that we
will need an even more ambitious deal than we
envisaged then if we are to get an agreement. Greater
access to markets, particularly for least developed
countries’ exports of agriculture, supports growth and
reduces poverty.
The second of the three big shifts we have to
adapt to is the globalization of many of our problems
and of many of the solutions to those problems. Our
economies are, of course, tied ever more closely
together, as recent events have dramatically proven.
Prosperity and poverty in one part of the world impact
on economic activity and security elsewhere.
Diseases can span the globe in a matter of days.
Terrorism is conducted by international networks
across the world. Environmental threats do not respect
borders. We are used to thinking about stateless people.
We have to get used to the idea of stateless problems,
too. Conflict takes place between, across and within
national boundaries, but wherever it takes place it can
threaten the interests of all nations. Conflict
undermines our collective prosperity and destroys
development. We must work harder to prevent conflict
by tackling the sources of violence. And where conflict
does break out, we must be ready to help resolve it.
So let me take this opportunity to acknowledge
the invaluable contribution of United Nations
peacekeepers to laying the foundations for sustainable
peace around the world. We owe them all, and the
Governments that provide them, a great debt of
gratitude. The United Kingdom, along with France and
other partners, has been at the forefront of supporting
and encouraging United Nations efforts to deliver more
strategic and effective peacekeeping. We will continue
to provide that support.
But peacekeeping alone is not the answer. We
need peacebuilding, too. The United Nations is
uniquely placed not only to keep the peace, but also to
make it last. Effective peacebuilding can address the
underlying causes of conflict and strengthen local,
regional and national capacity to contribute to long-
term stability in fragile States.
The coming year will see some significant
challenges to the United Nations efforts to promote
international peace, justice and security: in the Sudan,
where we will see a referendum on the future of
Southern Sudan, while continuing to look for progress
on justice in Darfur and more widely; in Somalia,
where the African Union peacekeeping mission is
playing a brave and crucial role, and where the
leadership of the United Nations could be decisive; and
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where much
progress has been made but where we have seen again
in recent weeks how much more remains to be done to
achieve real security and stability for many of its hard-
pressed people.
The United Kingdom remains fully committed to
the mission to bring peace and prosperity to
Afghanistan. Afghans are increasingly taking
responsibility for their own affairs. This year’s Kabul
Conference and, most recently, parliamentary elections
have demonstrated Afghan commitment. Challenges
remain, but progress is being made. The United
Kingdom will continue to work with its international
partners to support Afghans to build a better
Afghanistan.
The United Kingdom is wholehearted in our
support for international development. Like many
nations, we are having to take tough action to reduce
our financial deficits, but we are not budging a
millimetre from our commitment to development. We
are standing by our promise to devote 0.7 per cent of
gross national income to international development
assistance from 2013, and we will enshrine this
commitment in law.
When disaster strikes, we must respond quickly
and generously. Right now, Pakistan faces a
humanitarian disaster of unimaginable proportions. As
the Secretary-General has said, this is the largest
disaster in the 65-year history of the United Nations.
So we must ensure that the United Nations appeal is
properly funded to cover both humanitarian relief and
reconstruction, and we must ensure that there is enough
10-54959 28
support over the long term, not least in helping
Pakistan to achieve the levels of economic growth that
will allow the country to rebuild itself. I am very
proud, as the representative of a European Union (EU)
member State, that the EU has recently shown real
leadership in promising to look at improving trade
access for Pakistan in response to the disaster. I very
much hope that others can follow suit.
So, economic power has shifted and problems
have globalized, but at the same time the power of
ideas has grown enormously. Identities have become
more fluid. It is not possible to put people into neatly
labelled national boxes any more. This means that
winning the battle of ideas is as important as military
prowess.
The work of international institutions must
continue to be guided by the values on which those
institutions were founded: the rule of law, both
domestic and international; the right to freedom of
expression and belief; democracy; and equality before
the law. These values are sometimes described as
Western values, but only by people who do not know
their history. Four centuries ago, the great Mughal
emperor Akbar was legislating for religious freedom
and equality in what is now India, while in parts of
Europe heretics were being burned at the stake. The
truth is that these liberal values of equality, law and
self-determination cannot be claimed by any nation or
hemisphere. They are global values with global force.
They are also the values at the heart of the United
Nations Charter.
We should never apologize for promoting the idea
that women and men are equal; never flinch from
insisting that Governments chosen by their people are
better; never shy away from our insistence that nobody
should be silenced because of their religion or beliefs.
The United Kingdom will therefore continue to
push for human rights across the world. Since the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted in
1948, the United Nations has developed a global legal
framework of human rights standards. We want to see
the Human Rights Council do more to ensure that
States implement their obligations and use the 2011
review to improve the Council’s ability to respond
effectively to situations of concern, such as the
outrageous abuse of democracy and human rights in
Burma.
United Kingdom foreign policy will be shaped by
the three big challenges I have set out today: a power
shift, the globalization of problems, and the rapid
circulation and potency of ideas. The United Kingdom
Government will fearlessly promote our ideals and
interests while remaining realistic in our approach.
This is the spirit in which the United Kingdom
Government is conducting a root-and-branch review of
our own strategic defence and security policy. Our last
review took place in 1998, but the world has changed,
along with the character of the threats we face. This is
not to say that we did not face grave threats before, but
they were more fixed, more visible and more
predictable. Today, the threats to our security are not
rooted in specific States. They are more fluid and often
less visible: terrorism, organized crime, or attacks from
cyberspace. We must judge our security not by our
ability to deal with what we know, but how able we are
to respond to unpredictable threats.
The United Kingdom will also show leadership
by example. As fierce advocates of the international
rule of law, we will practice what we preach. No nation
can insist on the law and then act as though it is above
it. But our approach will also be hard-headed and
realistic. In recent years we have learned — in same
cases the hard way — that democracy cannot be
created by diktat. Freedom cannot be commanded into
existence.
The new coalition Government, now five-months
old, will restore Britain’s international reputation by
pursuing a hard-headed foreign policy based on liberal
values.
The world has changed, but the values that should
guide us have not. We have to renew our international
institutions in line with the new realities of world
power and influence, and fearlessly project the ideals
of democracy, equality and freedom. Great things are
demanded of us. Great things are necessary from us. It
falls to our generation of leaders to meet these
challenges together.