How I would love to see that headline in major American newspapers.
The United Nations is fighting for relevancy after being profoundly embarrassed in Iraq. We?ve been through 17 resolutions over 12 years and a 15-day deadline in 1991 that still had not been enforced in 2003 ? all part of the U.N. record of abject failure. After 12 years of inaction it takes less than a month for the U.S. to solve the Saddam Hussein problem and serve notice on the rest of the world that out-of-control, maniacal dictators are not going to be permitted to develop weapons programs that can be used to terrorize the world.
Now the U.N. wants back in. In an amazing display of arrogance the ponderous Hans Blix has announced that the U.N. weapons inspectors should be allowed back into Iraq immediately to finish their job. To his credit, George Bush has said no. There are coalition troops there and they will be able to do the job, thank you very much.
The U.N. is trying to regain its credibility in the post-Iraq era. We need to remember that the U.N. has been and remains an essentially anti-American institution. Three months ago we were being told that the United States had no right to act against Iraq without the approval of the U.N. There is nothing the world would like better than to see the one superpower out there relegated to nothing more than a political sub-state of the grand and glorious United Nations.
Right now President Bush is trying, for lack of a better expression, to put the U.N. in its place. He needs the American people behind him on this one. It?s time for Americans to put aside their knee-jerk support for the U.N. and to start looking more closely at the structure and history of this dangerous organization.
The United Nations is fighting for relevancy after being profoundly embarrassed in Iraq. We?ve been through 17 resolutions over 12 years and a 15-day deadline in 1991 that still had not been enforced in 2003 ? all part of the U.N. record of abject failure. After 12 years of inaction it takes less than a month for the U.S. to solve the Saddam Hussein problem and serve notice on the rest of the world that out-of-control, maniacal dictators are not going to be permitted to develop weapons programs that can be used to terrorize the world.
Now the U.N. wants back in. In an amazing display of arrogance the ponderous Hans Blix has announced that the U.N. weapons inspectors should be allowed back into Iraq immediately to finish their job. To his credit, George Bush has said no. There are coalition troops there and they will be able to do the job, thank you very much.
The U.N. is trying to regain its credibility in the post-Iraq era. We need to remember that the U.N. has been and remains an essentially anti-American institution. Three months ago we were being told that the United States had no right to act against Iraq without the approval of the U.N. There is nothing the world would like better than to see the one superpower out there relegated to nothing more than a political sub-state of the grand and glorious United Nations.
Right now President Bush is trying, for lack of a better expression, to put the U.N. in its place. He needs the American people behind him on this one. It?s time for Americans to put aside their knee-jerk support for the U.N. and to start looking more closely at the structure and history of this dangerous organization.

