Bush Administration Defends U.N. Leader Annan
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Thursday, Dec. 9, 2004
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UNITED NATIONS – The United States expressed confidence in
Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Thursday and said he should remain
at the helm of the United Nations, an abrupt turnaround from its
refusal to back him last week after a U.S. senator called for his
resignation.
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The statement from U.S. Ambassador John Danforth, who said he
was speaking on behalf of the Bush administration, aligned the
United States with the 190 other members of the United Nations.
"We are not suggesting or pushing for the resignation of the
secretary-general," Danforth said. "We have worked well with him
in the past and look forward to working with him for some time in
the future."
The call for Annan's resignation last week by Sen. Norm Coleman
made headlines worldwide and led to an outpouring of support for
Annan. The leaders of Britain, France, Russia, Germany and other
countries telephoned the secretary-general to give him
their backing.
President Bush twice refused to support the secretary-general,
stressing that he wanted a thorough, impartial investigation of
allegations of fraud and corruption in the U.N. oil-for-food
program for Iraq. Danforth took the same position but said Tuesday
he had "great confidence" in Annan.
In his statement Thursday, Danforth said, "essentially it is a
criminal investigation" and investigators must determine whether
anyone is guilty of bribery, payoffs and corruption.
"There is a cloud over the U.N. There is no doubt about that.
And the only way to dispel that cloud is let the sunlight in,"
Danforth said.
"We are not using the whole thing to push out the
secretary-general," he stressed.
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