US President Donald Trump addresses the UN General Assembly in New York on September 25, 2018.  Photo: AFP / Bryan R. Smith
US President Donald Trump addresses the UN General Assembly in New York on September 25, 2018. Photo: AFP / Bryan R. Smith

When US President Donald Trump began his speech to the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, he started out in true fashion by touting his own record, saying, “My administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.”

But the bravado backfired, drawing audible laughter from the audience.

“I didn’t expect that reaction, but that’s OK,” the ruffled president said.

The crowd’s response highlighted UN members’ opposition to the US president and his attacks on the UN and many of its core missions and institutions.

Last year, before his first speech to the UN, Trump withdrew the US from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). This year, his administration pulled funding for the UN organization that offers health care and education to Palestinian refugees, boycotted a UN agreement on migration policy, and withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council.

Such unilateral moves have provoked the ire of UN officials grappling to confront global crises with cooperation among nations.

Earlier this week, former UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon criticized the US health-care system as morally wrong, and advocated for universal health care as a “human right.”

“It’s not easy to understand why such a country like the United States, the most resourceful and richest country in the world, does not introduce universal health coverage,” Ban told The Guardian. “Nobody would understand why almost 30 million people are not covered by insurance.”

Against such a backdrop of criticism and unease, Trump waltzed into the General Assembly on Tuesday to give his own nationalistic speech.

“America is governed by Americans,” he said. “We reject the ideology of globalism and accept the ideology of patriotism.”

Unsurprisingly, his wide-ranging speech was marked by antagonism toward nations around the world, and championed America’s own military might and exceptionalism.

“We have secured record funding for our military,” Trump declared, “$700 billion this year and $716 billion next year. Our military will soon be more powerful than it has ever been before.”

Indeed, the US military is the largest on the planet, roughly the size of the world’s next 11 largest national military budgets combined.

Trump went on to celebrate Saudi Arabia’s US-supported war on Yemen, which has produced catastrophic casualties. His saber-rattling against Iran and his promise further to undermine Venezuelan sovereignty point to future conflicts on the horizon.

In the midst of a global climate crisis, Trump stridently endorsed a dependence on fossil fuels. “We have become the largest energy producer anywhere on the face of the Earth,” he said. “The United States stands ready to export our abundant, affordable supply of oil, clean coal and natural gas.”

When discussing the Middle East, he made clear his administration’s ardent support for Israel’s war on Palestine. Trump exacerbated tensions in the Middle East this year when moving the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. The move was denounced throughout the world, and resulted in massive protests in Gaza and the West Bank in which more than 50 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces.

Taking exception to the ICC

Trump’s disdain for the International Criminal Court was also on full display at the UN.

“The United States will provide no support and recognition for the International Criminal Court. As far as we are concerned the ICC has no legitimacy or authority,” Trump said. “We will never surrender America’s sovereignty to an unelected, unaccountable body.”

The Trump administration’s attacks against the ICC seek to stop the court’s investigations into US war crimes in Afghanistan and Israeli crimes in Gaza in 2014. A 2016 ICC report alleges that the US committed serious crimes in Afghanistan, including “torture, cruel treatment, outrages upon personal dignity, and rape.”

Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton has been a harsh critic of the ICC. He said this month, “We will not cooperate with the ICC. We will provide no assistance to the ICC. We will not join the ICC. We will let the ICC die on its own.”

Bolton himself could be tried in the ICC for duping the American public into the 2003 launch of the US war on Iraq while he was serving in the George W Bush administration, according to University of Michigan history professor Juan Cole.

In 2002, while working as the undersecretary of state for arms control and international security under Bush, Bolton said, “We are confident that Saddam Hussein has hidden weapons of mass destruction and production facilities in Iraq.” The claims were proved wrong, but the Bush administration got its war.

These are grounds for an ICC investigation into Bolton, according to Cole. “The UN Charter forbids the initiation of a war except where a country is attacked and responds in self-defense or where the UN Security Council designates a government as a threat to world order,” he explains.

Such efforts against the ICC and other UN bodies point to the dangers of a militaristic, renegade presidency that is seeking to foment war, climate crises, and economic inequality worldwide.

As Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, the former UN high commissioner for human rights, told The New York Times, Trump is like a bus driver “careering down a mountain road with steep cliffs on either side.”

This article was produced by Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute, which provided it to Asia Times.

Benjamin Dangl has a PhD in Latin American history from McGill University in Montreal and has worked as a journalist throughout Latin America for more than a decade, writing for outlets such as The Guardian, Al Jazeera, The Nation and Vice. He is the author of several books and edits TowardFreedom.org, a progressive perspective on world events. He teaches journalism at Champlain College in Vermont.

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