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July 21, 2006
Ambassador
Bolton up for Renomination
Politics trump policy in this week's Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on Bolton
Washington DC –
On Thursday, July 27, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
will host a hearing to discuss the potential renomination of Ambassador Bolton.
Bolton, who received a presidential recess appointment last year on August 1,
2005, presently serves as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. To find out
why Citizens for Global Solutions opposes a renomination of Ambassador Bolton,
read the following statement:
At a moment when the world is coming together to meet major global challenges
like nuclear weapons proliferation and genocide, President Bush and his allies
in the Senate have decided that the single most important foreign policy issue
facing the U.S. is getting John Bolton confirmed. The White House’s decision to
reopen Mr. Bolton’s confirmation battle seems to have more to do with electoral
politics and less to do with foreign policy.
The decision as to whether Mr. Bolton should remain ambassador should not be
conducted in a partisan manner. Debating the nomination prior to the election, a
debate which Senator Voinovich inaugurated in a recent Washington Post op-ed
titled “Why I’ll Vote for Bolton,” guarantees that partisanship will trump the
need for a substantive policy discussion.
President Bush has said on numerous occasions that the United States needs the
U.N. and that the international body must play an essential role in helping
America and its allies find solutions to the multiple crises we face today.
Unfortunately, Bolton has seriously damaged the United States’ 60-year working
relationship with the U.N. with less-than-diplomatic tactics; the results of
which have led to a further diminution of American influence.
If President Bush insists on moving forward with a new confirmation battle, he
should at least encourage a serious discussion about the future of U.S.-U.N.
relations – the kind of debate that senators like Voinovich so courageously
demanded last year and so sadly now seek to stifle.
In this increasingly interconnected world, we need real leadership and diplomacy
at the U.N., not scare tactics and intimidation, the likes of which Ambassador
Bolton is prone to employ. The diplomacy that characterized the office of the
U.S. Mission to the U.N. prior to Bolton’s arrival is what is needed now more
than ever. A Bolton renomination will not only fail to restore the legacy of our
nation’s 60-year relationship with the U.N. but will undermine it even further.
It is time for a new ambassador.
+ Click Here to
learn more about the un campaign
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Notes to Editors:
Citizens for Global Solutions is a non-partisan membership organization that
envisions a future in which nations work together to abolish war, protect our
rights and freedoms, and solve the problems facing humanity that no one nation
can solve alone.
Updated July 21, 2006
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Contact:
Howard Salter
Director of Communications
202 546 3950 ext 112
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