It is my honour to address the
Assembly for the first time as the forty-fourth
President of the United States. I come before you
humbled by the responsibility that the American people
have placed upon me, mindful of the enormous
challenges of our moment in history and determined to
act boldly and collectively on behalf of justice and
prosperity at home and abroad.
I have been in office for just nine months, though
some days it seems a lot longer. I am well aware of the
expectations that accompany my presidency around the
world. Those expectations are not about me. Rather
they are, I believe, rooted in a discontent with the
status quo that has allowed us to be increasingly
defined by our differences and outpaced by our
problems. But they are also rooted in hope — the hope
that real change is possible and the hope that America
will be a leader in bringing about such change.
I took office at a time when many around the
world had come to view America with scepticism and
distrust. A part of that was due to misperceptions and
misinformation about my country. Part was due to
opposition to specific policies and a belief that on
certain critical issues America had acted unilaterally,
without regard for the interests of others. That has fed
an almost reflexive anti-Americanism, which too often
has served as an excuse for collective inaction.
Like all of you, my responsibility is to act in the
interests of my nation and my people, and I will never
apologize for defending those interests. But it is my
deeply held belief that in the year 2009, more than at
any point in human history, the interests of nations and
peoples are shared. The religious convictions that we
hold in our hearts can forge new bonds among people,
or they can tear us apart. The technology we harness
can light the path to peace, or forever darken it. The
energy we use can sustain our planet, or destroy it.
What happens to the hope of a single child, anywhere,
can enrich our world, or impoverish it.
In this Hall, we come from many places, but we
share a common future. No longer do we have the
luxury of indulging our differences to the exclusion of
the work that we must do together. I have carried this
message from London to Ankara, from Port-of-Spain to
Moscow, from Accra to Cairo, and it is what I will
speak about today.
Because the time has come for the world to move
in a new direction, we must embrace a new era of
engagement based on mutual interests and mutual
respect, and our work must begin now. We know the
future will be forged by deeds, and not simply words.
Speeches alone will not solve our problems. It will take
persistent action.
So for those who question the character and cause
of my nation, I ask you to look at the concrete actions
we have taken in just nine months.
On my first day in office I prohibited, without
exception or equivocation, the use of torture by the
United States of America. I ordered the prison at
Guantanamo Bay closed, and we are doing the hard
work of forging a framework to combat extremism
within the rule of law.
Every nation must know that America will live its
values, and we will lead by example. We have set a
clear and focused goal to work with all members of
this body to disrupt, dismantle and defeat Al-Qaida and
its extremist allies — a network that has killed
thousands of people of many faiths and nations and has
plotted to blow up this very building. In Afghanistan
and Pakistan, we and many nations here are helping
those Governments to develop the capacity to take the
lead in this effort, while working to advance
opportunity and security for their people.
In Iraq we are responsibly ending a war. We have
removed American combat brigades from Iraqi cities
and set a deadline of next August to remove all our
combat brigades from Iraqi territory. I have made clear
that we will help Iraqis make the transition to full
responsibility for their future and keep our
commitment to remove all American troops by the end
of 2011.
I have outlined a comprehensive agenda to seek
the goal of a world without nuclear weapons. In
Moscow, the United States and Russia announced that
we would pursue substantial reductions in our strategic
warheads and launchers. In the Conference on
Disarmament we agreed on a workplan to negotiate an
end to the production of fissile materials for nuclear
weapons. And this week, my Secretary of State will
become the first senior American representative to the
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annual members’ conference of the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty.
Upon taking office, I appointed a special envoy
for Middle East peace, and America has worked
steadily and aggressively to advance the cause of two
States — Israel and Palestine — in which peace and
security take root and the rights of both Israelis and
Palestinians are respected.
To confront climate change we have invested
$80 billion in clean energy. We have substantially
increased our fuel efficiency standards. We have
provided new incentives for conservation, launched an
energy partnership across the Americas and moved
from being a bystander to being a leader in
international climate negotiations.
To overcome an economic crisis that touches
every corner of the world, we worked with the Group
of 20 nations to forge a coordinated international
response of over $2 trillion in stimulus to bring the
global economy back from the brink. We mobilized
resources that help prevent the crisis from spreading
further to developing countries, and we joined with
others to launch a $20 billion global food security
initiative that will lend a hand to those who need it
most and help them build their own capacity.
We have also re-engaged the United Nations. We
have paid our bills. We have joined the Human Rights
Council. We have signed the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities. We have fully embraced the
Millennium Development Goals, and we address our
priorities here in this institution, for instance through the
Security Council meeting on nuclear non-proliferation
and disarmament that I will chair tomorrow and
through the issues that I will discuss today.
That is what we have already done, but it is just a
beginning. Some of our actions have yielded progress;
some have laid the groundwork for progress in the
future. But make no mistake: this cannot solely be
America’s endeavour. Those who used to chastise
America for acting alone in the world cannot now
stand by and wait for America to solve the world’s
problems alone. We have sought, in word and deed, a
new era of engagement with the world, and now is the
time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for
a global response to global challenges.
If we are honest with ourselves, we need to admit
that we are not living up to that responsibility.
Consider the course that we are on if we fail to
confront the status quo: extremists sowing terror in
pockets of the world, protracted conflicts that grind on
and on, genocide, mass atrocities, more nations with
nuclear weapons, melting ice caps and ravaged
populations, persistent poverty and pandemic disease.
I say this not to sow fear, but to state a fact. The
magnitude of our challenges has yet to be met by the
measure of our actions. This body was founded on the
belief that the nations of the world could solve their
problems together. Franklin Roosevelt, who died
before he could see his vision for this institution
become a reality, put it this way:
“The structure of world peace cannot be the work
of one man, or one party, or one nation. It cannot
be a peace of large nations or of small nations. It
must be a peace which rests on the cooperative
effort of the whole world.”
The cooperative effort of the whole world —
those words ring even more true today when it is not
simply peace, but our very health and prosperity that
we hold in common. Yet, we also know that this body
is made up of sovereign States and that, sadly but not
surprisingly, this body has often become a forum for
sowing discord instead of forging common ground, a
venue for playing politics and exploiting grievances
rather than solving problems. After all, it is easy to
walk up to this podium and point fingers and stoke
divisions. Nothing is easier than blaming others for our
troubles and absolving ourselves of responsibility for
our choices and our actions. Anybody can do that.
Responsibility and leadership in the twenty-first
century demand more.
In an era when our destiny is shared, power is no
longer a zero-sum game. No one nation can or should
try to dominate another nation. No world order that
elevates one nation or group of people over another
will succeed. No balance of power among nations will
hold. The traditional divisions between nations of the
South and the North make no sense in an
interconnected world, nor do alignments of nations
rooted in the cleavages of a long-gone cold war.
The time has come to realize that the old habits
and the old arguments are irrelevant to the challenges
faced by our peoples. They leave nations to act in
opposition to the very goals that they claim to pursue
and to vote, often in this body, against the interests of
their own people. They build up walls between us and
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the future that our peoples seek, and the time has come
for those walls to come down. Together we must build
new coalitions that bridge old divides — coalitions of
different faiths and creeds, of North and South, East,
West, black, white and brown.
The choice is ours. We can be remembered as the
generation that chose to drag the arguments of the
twentieth century into the twenty-first, and that put off
hard choices, refused to look ahead, and failed to keep
pace because we defined ourselves by what we were
against instead of what we were for; or we can be a
generation that chooses to see the shoreline beyond the
rough waters ahead, that comes together to serve the
common interests of human beings, and finally gives
meaning to the promise imbedded in the name given to
this institution — the United Nations. That is the future
America wants — a future of peace and prosperity that
we can reach only if we recognize that all nations have
rights. But all nations have responsibilities as well.
That is the bargain that makes this work. That must be
the guiding principle of international cooperation.
Today, let me put forward four pillars that I
believe are fundamental to the future that we want for
our children: non-proliferation and disarmament, the
promotion of peace and security, the preservation of
our planet, and a global economy that advances
opportunity for all people.
First, we must stop the spread of nuclear weapons
and seek the goal of a world without them. This
institution was founded at the dawn of the atomic age
in part because man’s capacity to kill had to be
contained. For decades, we averted disaster, even under
the shadow of a super-Power stand-off. But today the
threat of proliferation is growing in scope and
complexity. If we fail to act, we will invite nuclear
arms races in every region and the prospect of wars and
acts of terror on a scale that we can hardly imagine.
A fragile consensus stands in the way of this
frightening outcome, and that is the basic bargain that
shapes the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (NPT). It says that all nations have the right
to peaceful nuclear energy, and that nations with
nuclear weapons have a responsibility to move towards
disarmament and those without them have the
responsibility to forsake them. The next 12 months
could be pivotal in determining whether this compact
will be strengthened or will slowly dissolve.
America intends to keep our end of the bargain.
We will pursue a new agreement with Russia to
substantially reduce our strategic warheads and
launches. We will move forward with ratification of the
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty and work
with others to bring the Treaty into force, so that
nuclear testing is permanently prohibited. We will
complete a nuclear posture review that opens the door
to deeper cuts and reduces the role of nuclear weapons,
and we will call upon countries to begin negotiations in
January on a treaty to end the production of fissile
material for weapons.
I will also host a summit next April that reaffirms
each nation’s responsibility to secure nuclear material
on its territory and to help those who cannot, because
we must never allow a single nuclear device to fall into
the hands of a violent extremist. And we will work to
strengthen the institutions and initiatives that combat
nuclear smuggling and theft.
All of this must support efforts to strengthen the
NPT. Those nations that refuse to live up to their
obligations must face consequences. Let me be clear:
This is not about singling out individual nations. It is
about standing up for the rights of all nations that do
live up to their responsibilities, because a world in
which International Atomic Energy Agency inspections
are avoided and the United Nations demands are
ignored will leave all people less safe and all nations
less secure.
In their actions to date, the Governments of North
Korea and Iran threaten to take us down this dangerous
slope. We respect their rights as members of the
community of nations. I have said before and I will
repeat: I am committed to diplomacy that opens a path
to greater prosperity and more secure peace for both
nations if they live up to their obligations. But if the
Governments of Iran and North Korea choose to ignore
international standards; if they put the pursuit of
nuclear weapons ahead of regional stability and the
security and opportunity of their own people; if they
are oblivious to the dangers of escalating nuclear arms
races in both East Asia and the Middle East, then they
must be held accountable. The world must stand
together to demonstrate that international law is not an
empty promise and that treaties will be enforced. We
must insist that the future does not belong to fear.
That brings me to the second pillar for our future:
the pursuit of peace. The United Nations was born of
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the belief that the people of the world can live their
lives, raise their families and resolve their differences
peacefully. Yet we know that in too many parts of the
world this ideal remains an abstraction — a distant
dream. We can either accept that outcome as inevitable
and tolerate constant and crippling conflict, or we can
recognize that the yearning for peace is universal and
reassert our resolve to end conflicts around the world.
That effort must begin with an unshakeable
determination that the murder of innocent men, women
and children will never be tolerated. On this, there can
be no dispute.
The violent extremists who promote conflict by
distorting faith have discredited and isolated
themselves. They offer nothing but hatred and
destruction. In confronting them, America will forge
lasting partnerships to target terrorists, share
intelligence, coordinate law enforcement and protect
our people. We will permit no safe haven for Al-Qaida
to launch attacks from Afghanistan or any other nation.
We will stand by our friends on the front lines, as we
and many nations will do in pledging support for the
Pakistani people tomorrow. And we will pursue
positive engagement that builds bridges among faiths
and new partnerships for opportunity.
Our efforts to promote peace, however, cannot be
limited to defeating violent extremists, for the most
powerful weapon in our arsenal is the hope of human
beings — the belief that the future belongs to those
who would build and not destroy; the confidence that
conflicts can end and a new day can begin. And that is
why we will strengthen our support for effective
peacekeeping, while energizing our efforts to prevent
conflicts before they take hold.
We will pursue a lasting peace in Sudan, through
support for the people of Darfur and the implementation
of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, so that we
secure the peace that the Sudanese people deserve.
And in countries ravaged by violence, from Haiti to
Congo to East Timor, we will work with the United
Nations and other partners to support an enduring peace.
I will also continue to seek a just and lasting
peace between Israel, Palestine and the Arab world. We
will continue to work on that issue. Yesterday I had a
constructive meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu
and President Abbas. We have made some progress.
Palestinians have strengthened their efforts on security.
Israelis have facilitated greater freedom of movement
for the Palestinians. As a result of these efforts on both
sides, the economy in the West Bank has begun to
grow.
But more progress is needed. We continue to call
on Palestinians to end incitement against Israel. And
we continue to emphasize that America does not accept
the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.
The time has come to re-launch negotiations —
without preconditions — that address the permanent-
status issues: security for Israelis and Palestinians,
borders, refugees and Jerusalem. The goal is clear: two
States living side by side in peace and security: a
Jewish State of Israel, with true security for all Israelis,
and a viable, independent Palestinian State with
contiguous territory that ends the occupation that began
in 1967 and realizes the potential of the Palestinian
people. As we pursue this goal, we will also pursue
peace between Israel and Lebanon, Israel and Syria,
and a broader peace between Israel and its many
neighbours. In pursuit of that goal, we will develop
regional initiatives with multilateral participation,
alongside bilateral negotiations.
Now, I am not naive. I know this will be difficult.
But all of us — not just the Israelis and the
Palestinians, but all of us — must decide whether we
are serious about peace, or whether we will only lend it
lip-service. To break the old patterns — to break the
cycle of insecurity and despair — all of us must say
publicly what we would acknowledge in private. The
United States does Israel no favours when we fail to
couple an unwavering commitment to its security with
an insistence that Israel respect the legitimate claims
and rights of the Palestinians. And nations within this
body do the Palestinians no favours when they choose
vitriolic attacks against Israel over a constructive
willingness to recognize Israel’s legitimacy and its
right to exist in peace and security.
We must remember that the greatest price of this
conflict is not paid by us. It is not paid by politicians.
It is paid by the Israeli girl in Sderot who closes her
eyes in fear that a rocket will take her life in the middle
of the night. It is paid by the Palestinian boy in Gaza
who has no clean water and no country to call his own.
These are all God’s children. And after all the politics
and all the posturing, this is about the right of every
human being to live with dignity and security. That is a
lesson embedded in the three great faiths that call one
small slice of Earth the Holy Land. And that is why —
13 09-52179
even though there will be setbacks, and false starts, and
tough days — I will not waiver in my pursuit of peace.
Thirdly, we must recognize that in the twenty-
first century there will be no peace unless we take
responsibility for the preservation of our planet. And I
thank the Secretary-General for hosting the summit on
climate change yesterday.
The danger posed by climate change cannot be
denied. Our responsibility to meet it must not be
deferred. If we continue down our current course,
every member of this Assembly will see irreversible
changes within its borders. Our efforts to end conflicts
will be eclipsed by wars over refugees and resources.
Development will be devastated by drought and
famine. Land that human beings have lived on for
millennia will disappear. Future generations will look
back and wonder why we refused to act — why we
failed to pass on an environment that was worthy of
our inheritance.
And that is why the days when America dragged
its feet on this issue are over. We will move forward
with investments to transform our energy economy,
while providing incentives to make clean energy the
profitable kind of energy. We will press ahead with
deep cuts in emissions to reach the goals that we set for
2020, and eventually 2050. We will continue to
promote renewable energy and efficiency — and share
new technologies — with countries around the world.
And we will seize every opportunity for progress to
address this threat in a cooperative effort with the
entire world.
Those wealthy nations that did so much damage
to the environment in the twentieth century must
accept our obligation to lead. But responsibility does
not end there. While we must acknowledge the need for
differentiated responses, any effort to curb carbon
emissions must include the fast-growing carbon
emitters who can do more to reduce their air pollution
without inhibiting growth. And any effort that fails
both to help the poorest nations to adapt to the
problems that climate change has already wrought and
to help them travel a path of clean development simply
will not work.
It is hard to change something as fundamental as
how we use energy. I know that. It is even harder to do
so in the midst of a global recession. Certainly, it will
be tempting to sit back and wait for others to move
first. But we cannot make this journey unless we all
move forward together. As we head into Copenhagen,
let us resolve to focus on what each of us can do for
the sake of our common future.
This leads me to the final pillar that must fortify
our future: a global economy that advances opportunity
for all people.
The world is still recovering from the worst
economic crisis since the Great Depression. In
America, we see the engine of growth beginning to
churn, and yet many still struggle to find a job or pay
their bills. Across the globe, we find promising signs,
but little certainty about what lies ahead. And far too
many people in far too many places live through the
daily crises that challenge our humanity: the despair of
an empty stomach; the thirst brought on by dwindling
water supplies; the injustice of a child dying from a
treatable disease or a mother losing her life as she
gives birth.
In Pittsburgh, we will work with the world’s
largest economies to chart a course for growth that is
balanced and sustained. That means vigilance to ensure
that we do not let up until our people are back to work.
That means taking steps to rekindle demand, so that
global recovery can be sustained. And that means
setting new rules of the road and strengthening
regulation for all financial centres, so that we put an
end to the greed and the excess and the abuse that led
us into this disaster, and prevent a crisis like this from
ever happening again.
At a time of such interdependence, we have a
moral and pragmatic interest, however, in broader
questions of development: the questions of development
that existed even before this crisis happened. And so
America will continue our historic effort to help people
feed themselves. We have set aside $63 billion to carry
forward the fight against HIV/AIDS, to end deaths
from tuberculosis and malaria, to eradicate polio and to
strengthen public health systems. We are joining with
other countries to contribute H1N1 vaccines to the
World Health Organization. We will integrate more
economies into a system of global trade. We will
support the Millennium Development Goals and
approach next year’s summit with a global plan to
make them a reality. And we will set our sights on the
eradication of extreme poverty in our time.
Now is the time for all of us to do our part.
Growth will not be sustained or shared unless all
nations embrace their responsibilities. That means that
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wealthy nations must open their markets to more goods
and extend a hand to those with less, while reforming
international institutions to give more nations a greater
voice. And developing nations must root out the
corruption that is an obstacle to progress, for
opportunity cannot thrive where individuals are
oppressed and businesses have to pay bribes. That is
why we will support honest police and independent
judges, civil society and a vibrant private sector. Our
goal is simple: a global economy in which growth is
sustained and opportunity is available to all.
Now, the changes that I have spoken about today
will not be easy to make, and they will not be realized
simply by leaders like us coming together in forums
like this, as useful as that may be. For, as in any
assembly of members, real change can only come
through the people we represent. That is why we must
do the hard work to lay the groundwork for progress in
our own capitals. That is where we will build the
consensus to end conflicts and to harness technology
for peaceful purposes, to change the way we use
energy and to promote growth that can be sustained
and shared.
I believe that the people of the world want this
future for their children. And that is why we must
champion those principles that ensure that
Governments reflect the will of the people. These
principles cannot be afterthoughts. Democracy and
human rights are essential to achieving each of the
goals that I have discussed today, because
Governments of the people and by the people are more
likely to act in the broader interests of their own
people, rather than the narrow interest of those in
power.
The test of our leadership will not be the degree
to which we feed the fears and old hatreds of our
people. True leadership will not be measured by the
ability to muzzle dissent or to intimidate and harass
political opponents at home. The people of the world
want change. They will not long tolerate those who are
on the wrong side of history.
This Organization’s Charter commits each of us
“to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the
dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal
rights of men and women”.
Among those rights is the freedom to speak your
mind and worship as you please, the promise of
equality of the races and the opportunity for women
and girls to pursue their own potential, and the ability
of citizens to have a say in how you are governed and
to have confidence in the administration of justice. For,
just as no nation should be forced to accept the tyranny
of another nation, no individual should be forced to
accept the tyranny of their own people.
As an African-American, I will never forget that I
would not be here today without the steady pursuit of a
more perfect union in my country. That guides my
belief that no matter how dark the day may seem,
transformative change can be forged by those who
choose to side with justice. And I pledge that America
will always stand with those who stand up for their
dignity and their rights — for the student who seeks to
learn, the voter who demands to be heard, the innocent
who longs to be free and the oppressed who yearns to
be equal.
Democracy cannot be imposed on any nation
from the outside. Each society must search for its own
path, and no path is perfect. Each country will pursue a
path rooted in the culture of its people and in its past
traditions. And I admit that America has too often been
selective in its promotion of democracy. But that does
not weaken our commitment; it only reinforces it.
There are basic principles that are universal. There are
certain truths that are self-evident, and the United
States of America will never waiver in our efforts to
stand up for the right of people everywhere to
determine their own destiny.
Sixty-five years ago, a weary Franklin Roosevelt
spoke to the American people in his fourth, and final,
inaugural address. After years of war, he sought to sum
up the lessons that could be drawn from the terrible
suffering and enormous sacrifice that had taken place.
We have learned, he said, to be citizens of the world,
members of the human community. The United Nations
was built by men and women like Roosevelt from
every corner of the world — from Africa and Asia,
from Europe to the Americas. These architects of
international cooperation had an idealism that was
anything but naive. It was rooted in the hard-earned
lessons of war, rooted in the wisdom that nations could
advance their interests by acting together instead of
splitting apart.
Now it falls to us, for this institution will be what
we make of it. The United Nations does extraordinary
good around the world, in feeding the hungry, caring
for the sick and mending places that have been broken.
15 09-52179
But it also struggles to enforce its will and to live up to
the ideals of its founding. I believe that those
imperfections are not a reason to walk away from this
institution; they are a calling to redouble our efforts.
The United Nations can be a place where we either
bicker about outdated grievances or forge common
ground; a place where we focus on what drives us apart
or what brings us together; a place where we indulge
tyranny or a source of moral authority. In short, the
United Nations can be an institution that is
disconnected from what matters in the lives of our
citizens or it can be an indispensable factor in
advancing the interests of the people we serve.
We have reached a pivotal moment. The United
States stands ready to begin a new chapter of
international cooperation, one that recognizes the
rights and responsibilities of all nations. And so, with
confidence in our cause and with a commitment to our
values, we call on all nations to join us in building the
future that our people so richly deserve.