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IPFS News Link • United Nations

Zelensky Should Have Stayed Home

• http://ronpaulinstitute.org, by philip giraldi

Nevertheless, in spite of the torrent of words and the lack of any real program, it is always interesting to watch and listen to the UN's annual General Assembly meeting, which is held in New York during September. This year's meeting was particularly interesting as it came complete with a major war blazing in Eastern Europe as well as political turmoil in Africa and rising tension with China. It also features the rumblings coming from a new emerging global economic movement, the so-called BRICS developing as a champion of a multipolar-world currency challenge to the US-European dollar dominated international monetary and banking system.

And with economic union, there is also some political realignment, with China strengthening its ties to the developing world and Russia entering into defense arrangements with Iran. President Xi Jinping and Russian president Vladimir Putin will be meeting in Beijing later this month to discuss common concerns. And, as usual, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu showed up to vent his hostility towards Iran with demands that that country's alleged "nuclear program" be confronted militarily and the sooner the better, just as he has been claiming for the past twenty years.

Indeed, several back stories playing out during this year's meeting made it more than usually interesting. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky had hoped to turn the gathering into an anti-Russian hate fest, but though there was much complaining about Moscow's attack on Ukraine coming from the Baltic States and others, the ground continues to be shifting against Zelensky over concerns that the war has become an unwinnable money pit that could easily escalate into a nuclear exchange. Speaking before a UN Security Council session, Zelensky was reduced to harshly criticizing the UN itself for failing to prevent or resolve conflicts before calling for Moscow to be stripped of its veto power on the Security Council. 


www.universityofreason.com/a/29887/KWADzukm