Letters from an American - September 24, 2024
Episode Date: September 25, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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September 24th, 2024. This morning, President Joe Biden spoke to the United Nations General
Assembly in New York City. Earlier in the day, Secretary General António Gutiérrez of Portugal
warned that our world is in a whirlwind and having lost the hotlines,
red lines, and guardrails of the Cold War is dangerous and adrift. In contrast, Biden,
in his final speech before the body, offered optimism. The president noted that when he was
first elected senator in 1972, the world was also in a time of tension and uncertainty.
The Cold War simmered, the Middle East was headed toward war, and the U.S. was in one in Vietnam.
The United States was divided and angry, and there were questions about our staying power and our future.
about our staying power and our future. The U.S. and the world made it through that moment,
he recalled, but it wasn't easy or simple or without significant setbacks. Nonetheless,
the world went on to reduce the threat of nuclear weapons, end the Cold War, forge a historic peace between Israel and Egypt, and end the war in Vietnam. Last year, Biden noted, the U.S. and Vietnam
elevated their partnership to the highest level, a testament to the resilience of the human spirit
and the capacity for reconciliation, proof that even from the horrors of war, there is a way
forward, he said. Biden's message continued to be one of optimism as he recalled the world
history he has seen. In the 1980s, he said, the racist regime of apartheid in South Africa fell.
In the 1990s, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic was prosecuted for war crimes after presiding over chaos and mass murder in southeastern Europe.
At home, Biden recalled, although there is more to do, he wrote and passed the Violence Against
Women Act to end the scourge of violence against women and girls, not only in America, but across
the world. Then, after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. brought the attack's mastermind,
Osama bin Laden, to justice. Turning to his own presidency, Biden noted that it, too, began in
crisis and uncertainty. Afghanistan had replaced Vietnam as America's longest war,
and after four American presidents had had to decide whether to withdraw,
Biden was determined not to leave it to the fifth.
Biden says he thinks every day of the 13 Americans who lost their lives,
along with hundreds of Afghans in a suicide bombing.
The 2,461 U.S. military deaths and 20,744 American personnel wounded over the 20 years of that war,
and the service personnel of other countries who died there.
Biden said that he came to office determined to rebuild the alliances and partnerships of the U.S.
He worked to rebuild the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or NATO, and NATO allies and
partners in more than 50 nations supported Ukraine's resistance to Russia's February 2022
invasion. Now NATO is bigger, stronger, and more united than ever with two new members, Finland
and Sweden, he noted. Biden also worked to strengthen new partnerships like
the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, known as the Quad, which brings together the U.S., Japan,
Australia, and India, and whose leaders met last week in Delaware to affirm their commitment to
the partnership. Biden listed the many crises around the world today. From Ukraine to Gaza to Sudan
and beyond, he said, we see war, hunger, terrorism, brutality, record displacement of people,
a climate crisis, democracy at risk, strains within our societies, the promise of artificial intelligence, and its significant risks.
In 1919, Biden recalled, Irish poet William Butler Yeats described a world where
things fall apart, the center cannot hold, mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.
But, Biden said, in our time, the center has held. Leaders and people around the world have stood together to turn the page on COVID, defend the Charter of the United Nations, and ensure the survival of Ukraine in the face of the 2022 Russian invasion.
will always be forces that pull our countries apart and the world apart. Aggression, extremism,
chaos, and cynicism. A desire to retreat from the world and go it alone, Biden said. Our task, our test, is to make sure that the forces holding us together are stronger than those that are
pulling us apart. That the principles of partnership that we came here each year to uphold
can withstand the challenges that the center holds once again. Biden reiterated the themes
of his administration's foreign policy, urging the countries in the United Nations to continue
to stand with Ukraine and to manage competition with China responsibly so that competition does He noted that the U.S. and China are working together to combat the flow of deadly synthetic narcotics around the world,
but said the U.S. will continue to push back against unfair economic competition and the military coercion of other nations in the South China Sea,
while strengthening a network of
alliances and partnerships across the Indo-Pacific. Turning to the Middle East, Biden reiterated the
horrors of October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists invaded Israel and killed more than 1,200 people,
including 46 Americans, and pointed out that innocent civilians in Gaza
are also going through hell. Thousands and thousands killed, including aid workers.
Too many families dislocated, crowding into tents, facing a dire humanitarian situation.
They didn't ask for this war that Hamas started. Biden noted that the U.S., Qatar, and Egypt have
put forward a ceasefire and hostage deal that was endorsed by the U.N. Security Council
and urged Israel and Hamas to finalize it. Even as the situation has escalated, Biden said,
a diplomatic solution is still possible. Indeed, he said, a two-state solution where Israel enjoys
security and peace and full recognition and normalized relations with all its neighbors,
where Palestinians live in security, dignity, and self-determination in a state of their own,
remains the only path to lasting security.
Progress toward peace in the Middle East will put countries in a stronger position to deal with the
ongoing threat posed by Iran, Biden said, to deny oxygen to the terrorists Iran supports,
and to ensure that Iran will never, ever obtain a nuclear weapon.
Gaza is not the only conflict that deserves our outrage, Biden said.
In Sudan, a bloody civil war has put 8 million people on the brink of famine
and caused death and atrocities.
The U.S. has led the world in providing humanitarian aid, Biden said, and is leading diplomatic talks to avert a wider famine.
The U.S. stands behind the idea that people need the chance to live in dignity, protected from the ravages of climate change, hunger, and disease, Biden said.
Biden said, and he noted that during his presidency, the U.S. has invested more than $150 billion in sustainable development, including $20 billion for food security and more than $50 billion for
global health, and has mobilized billions in private sector investment. These principles
were laid down in the 1950s by Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
who feared that impoverished populations would be easy prey for religious or political demagogues
who could use them to start wars. Biden did not acknowledge that a Trump presidency,
devoted to isolationism, would almost certainly abandon them.
would almost certainly abandon them. Biden did note that the U.S. worked to repair the damage of Trump's administration by rejoining the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
It also passed the most ambitious climate legislation in history, is on track to cut
emissions in half by 2030, and has promised to quadruple climate financing to developing nations, investing
$11 billion so far this year. The U.S. also rejoined the World Health Organization and
donated almost 700 million doses of COVID vaccine to 117 countries. Biden vowed to address the
outbreak of MPOCs in Africa and urged other countries to join the effort.
He noted that the U.S., the Group of Seven Industrialized Democracies, or G7,
and partners have launched an initiative to finance infrastructure in the developing world.
Biden took office warning that the international institutions set up after World War II had concentrated wealth and power among the hands of a few, and thus people left behind around the globe were losing faith in democracy.
That sentiment is shared at the UN, and today he sided with those countries calling for an expanded UN Security Council, greater youth engagement, and stronger
measures against climate change. At length, Biden urged the UN to take advantage of the possibilities
and manage the risks of artificial intelligence, or AI, which can both usher in scientific progress
and push disinformation and create bioweapons. We must make certain that
the awesome capabilities of AI will be used to uplift and empower everyday people, not to give
dictators more powerful shackles on the human spirit, he said. So far, Biden's speech was a
retrospective of the changes he had seen in the world in more than 50 years in public service, and how he had tried to approach present-day changes by reinforcing and expanding America's engagement with the world.
But in his last address to the United Nations, he also had something personal to say.
Even as we navigate so much change, he said, we must never forget who we're here to
represent. We the people, he said. The first words of the U.S. Constitution and the words that
inspired the opening words of the U.N. Charter, which begins, we the peoples of the United Nations, determined to save succeeding generations
from the scourge of war. Biden noted that he made the preservation of democracy the central
cause of my presidency. He recalled the difficulty of deciding to step away, concluding that, as much as I love the job, I love my country more.
My fellow leaders, let us never forget, some things are more important than staying in power.
It's your people that matter the most.
Never forget we are here to serve the people, not the other way around.
Because the future will be won by those who unleash the full potential of their people
to breathe free, to think freely, to innovate, to educate, to live and love openly without fear.
That's the soul of democracy. It does not belong to any one country. It lives in the brave men and women who ended apartheid, brought down the Berlin Wall,
fight today for freedom and justice and dignity, he said. It's in Venezuela, where millions voted
for change, in Uganda, where LGBTQ activists demand safety and recognition of their humanity,
in citizens from Ghana to India to South Korea, peacefully
choosing their leaders. Every age faces its challenges, Biden said. I saw it as a young man.
I see it today. But we are stronger than we think. We're stronger together than alone.
We're stronger together than alone.
And what the people call impossible is just an illusion.
As Nelson Mandela taught us, it always seems impossible until it's done.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.