UN Meeting that held recently has now come to its conclusions. This year’s UN General Assembly meeting started with invitations for multilateralism and cooperation, a confirmation that the urgency for countries to embrace “has rarely been greater.” It settled with a parade of divisive complaints that sounded when the final gavel fell. Leaders in their speeches that were delivered virtually emphasized the importance of working together to drive the coronavirus outbreak and the challenges that lie beyond it.
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As Germany’s foreign minister said, "Covid-19 shows that international cooperation is neither an ideology nor an end in itself. On the contrary, it delivers results, far beyond the actual pandemic. Words, though, are not results. Though the UN and most of its member states largely envision a multilateral world, the underlying issues and challenges that divide nations sat squarely in the spotlight, as the “right of reply” at the end of the closing session demonstrated vividly." One by one all came forward from lower-level diplomats tasked with replying to leaders’ speeches with intense responses.
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Iran went after Israel over the speech by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who claimed that the Islamic Republic would have “enough enriched uranium in a few months for two nuclear bombs” after it recently began exceeding limits set by the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. An Iranian diplomat accused Israel of disregarding UN resolutions on negotiating a two-state solution with the Palestinians and countered that Israel “poses the most serious warnings to the protection of the states in the Middle East” because of its widely reported nuclear program, which Israel has never acknowledged.
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