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Biden said the right things at the UN. That won’t be enough

The world has noticed that Biden is on a weak footing both domestically and on the Ukraine front. Too many political rifts within America are one reason multilateralism is on the defensive and “minilateralism” is on the rise, in the form of smaller blocs that compete with one another

September 20, 2023 / 10:17 IST
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US President Joe Biden struck all the right notes in New York as he addressed the 193 nations gathered in the General Assembly of the United Nations.

Figuratively and literally, the US  was once again talking to the world in its customary roles as host, leader and force for good — or at least champion against misery and evil. President Joe Biden struck all the right notes in New York as he addressed the 193 nations gathered in the General Assembly of the United Nations. And yet, his appeals will be far from enough to hold the world together.

In some ways this session, the UN’s 78th, could and should have highlighted America’s role as the only plausible ward — or “hegemon”
— over whatever remains of the liberal international order built after World War II. The leaders of the other four permanent members of the UN Security Council — Russia, China, France and the UK — didn’t show up. Biden had the P-5 stage to himself.

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The world must resist the brutal onslaught of one UN member, Russia, against another, Ukraine, Biden repeated, as he said at the same podium a year ago. After all, the Kremlin’s war of aggression violates national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and thus the foundational principles of the UN Charter adopted in San Francisco in 1945. As a sign of his resolve to keep backing Kyiv, Biden will also host Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in the White House this week.

Biden paid homage to the daunting problems shared by all humanity, which the UN as the planet’s main forum for international cooperation is meant to solve. Those are the 17 SDGs, or “sustainable development goals” — what a pity that existential threats have to get such bureaucratic labels. These targets range from slowing climate change to alleviating hunger, ending poverty, eliminating tuberculosis, educating girls and more.

In a nod to the many delegates from the “Global South” who are frustrated that countries in Africa, Asia and South America play such peripheral roles in the UN system, Biden even renewed his offer to reform its institutions. The Security Council, he suggested, should expand to look more like geopolitics in the 21st century rather than the middle of the 20th. On he went, each assertion sounding eminently plausible and reasonable.