Cancel Ahmadinejad's Visa
By By Michael D. EvansShould the president of a country who repeatedly calls for the annihilation of another country be given the right to share his genocidal views with the General Assembly of the United Nations?
If Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is allowed to incite the genocide of Israel at the U. N. podium next week, this will be more than another bizarre appearance by a dictator at New York's theater of the absurd – it will mean the denial of the very purpose of the United Nations.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 in the spirit of universal horror and revulsion at the Holocaust, by war-torn nations hoping to at last establish a foundation for world peace based on human rights. Since 2005, Ahmadinejad has at the same time been denying that the Holocaust ever happened while declaring that Israel "must be wiped out from the map of the world.”| “"Ahmadinejad has rejected dialogue in favor of annihilation. He has repudiated the mission of the United Nations and it would add insult to injury for him to appear before it."” |
Last June, U.N. Secretary-General Ban mildly criticized Ahmadinejad's remark that the world would soon see Israel's destruction. At the time, Ban said he was "shocked and dismayed…Under the United Nations Charter, all members have undertaken to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state."
If the U.S. government were to summon the courage to revoke Ahmadinejad's visa, it would not be the first time America kept out a hatemongering supporter of terrorism. In 1988 the Reagan administration denied then PLO chairman Yasser Arafat a visa, citing his "associations with terrorism." True to form, the General Assembly quickly voted to hold a special session in Geneva, which Arafat addressed.
Ahmadinejad has rejected dialogue in favor of annihilation. He has repudiated the mission of the United Nations and it would add insult to injury for him to appear before it.
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