Democrats pick on Bush's
choice for U.N. ambassador
Bolton once said wouldn't matter if
U.N. headquarters could lose 10 stories
INTERACTIVE |
WASHINGTON - President Bush’s choice as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, likely will face a tough Senate confirmation hearing before Democrats who argue that he has disdained the world body and Republicans who are wary of him.
Bolton, 56, once said it wouldn’t matter if 10 stories of the U.N.’s 38-story headquarters simply vanished.
He also has said he does not believe in diplomacy for its own sake, and keeps a model of a hand grenade on his desk at the State Department, where he is undersecretary of state for arms control.
Democrats are gathering an arsenal of material, much of it from Bolton’s own writings and speeches, and predicted a tough confirmation fight in the U.S. Senate.
Almost immediately after Monday's nomination, Democrats objected that Bush had chosen a vocal United Nations critic although they see a pressing need to repair international relations. Bolton has criticized the U.N.’s bureaucracy and some of its peacekeeping operations, among other objections he has raised over a decade.
Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, said he was surprised at the selection and that Bolton’s “stated attitude toward the United Nations gives me great pause.”
Key GOP senator mum
The Republican chairman of the committee, Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, told reporters: “I’m going to reserve any comments about the appropriateness or not of the president’s choice.”
Confirmation hearings are expected next month.
The appointment comes at a crucial time: U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan is going forward with plans to reform the world body, and U.S. opinion of the United Nations, particularly in Congress, is at a low.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, anticipating a possible fight over confirmation, said that “through our history some of our best ambassadors have been those with strong voices.” She singled out former U.N. ambassadors Jeanne Kirkpatrick and Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
In 2001, 43 Democratic senators opposed Bolton’s nomination for his current post. He was confirmed anyway.
During his tenure, Bolton has rankled lawmakers with his tough foreign policy talk. However, on Monday, he promised to work closely with Congress to advance Bush’s policies. “Working closely with others is essential to ensure a safer world,” he added.
If confirmed, Bolton, 56, would succeed former Sen. John Danforth, who retired in January.
At the United Nations, diplomats were optimistic.
“I hope that once he is here he will have a deeper perception of what the U.N. is about,” Chinese Ambassador Wang Guangya said.
Algerian ambassador Abdallah Baali said, “I think when he joins the United Nations he will certainly adapt his views to the United Nations, and I am sure we will work together in a very constructive way.”
Asked about Bolton’s past criticisms of the organization, Argentinian Ambassador Cesar Mayoral replied: “People change.”
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