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In our May 19 cover story ("What Did We Win?"), THE NEW AMERICAN observed that "the war in Iraq did achieve something previously unthinkable: It has united the 'mainstream' American right behind the proposition that the United Nations--or a successor organization--must have the military power to disarm rogue nations. Where 'mainstream' conservatives once warned that the UN sought the power to rule the world, the 'respectable' conservative position now dictates that the UN is to be mocked for its supposed impotence."
Referring to various proposals made by conservative academies and pundits to update the UN into a more effective body, THE NEW AMERICAN warned: "Reform proposals of [this] kind ... promote the creation of a world government strong enough to disarm rogue states. In time, the same world government would be strong enough to disarm us as well."
Recent comments made by President Bush and UN Secretary-General Kofi Anuan suggest that radical reform of the world body may be in the offing.
In an October 17 Tokyo conversation with George W. Bush, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi offered the president some advice on international ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Time to upgrade to United Nations 2.0?(Insider Report)