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At U.N., Global Leaders to Speak After Trump Takes Center Stage At U.N., Global Leaders to Speak After Trump Takes Center Stage
(about 1 hour later)
Global leaders will address the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, after a memorable first day. Global leaders are addressing the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, after a memorable first day when President Trump delivered a pointed first address at the assembly and vowed to “totally destroy” North Korea if it threatened the United States or its allies.
On Tuesday, President Trump delivered a pointed first address at the assembly and vowed to “totally destroy” North Korea if it threatened the United States or its allies. He went on to call Iran a “rogue nation” and denounced the nuclear deal with Tehran. Mr. Trump went on to call Iran a “rogue nation” and denounced the nuclear deal with Tehran, a stance echoed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, who said in his own speech that Mr. Trump had “rightly called the nuclear deal with Iran an embarrassment.”
Looming over the assembly this year in addition to North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and the nuclear deal with Iran are the plight of the Rohingya minority in Myanmar and the debate over climate change. Iran will has own chance to respond on Wednesday as President Hassan Rouhani takes to the lectern at the General Assembly.
President Hassan Rouhani of Iran is set to speak on Wednesday, as is a representative from Myanmar. Amid the anxiety over the risk of a nuclear conflict between North Korea and the United States, much of the rest of the world is embracing a treaty that bans nuclear weapons. It was opened for formal signature on Wednesday morning.
• Amid the anxiety over the risk of a nuclear conflict between North Korea and the United States, much of the rest of the world is embracing a treaty that bans nuclear weapons. It was opened for formal signature on Wednesday morning. Brazil was the first of dozens of countries expected to sign..
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President Trump returned on Tuesday to the combative bombast he employed during his election campaign, declaring in his first address to the General Assembly, “We will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea” if the United States were forced to defend itself or its allies. President Trump is devoting his third day of international diplomacy in New York to a series of individual meetings with foreign leaders on Wednesday, mainly from the Arab world, as he seeks to rally a coalition in the Middle East against Iran.
He denounced North Korea and its leader, Kim Jong-un, saying the nation “threatens the entire world with unthinkable loss of life” as a result of its nuclear weapons program. “Rocket Man is on a suicide mission for himself,” he said, using a mocking nickname for Mr. Kim. He started on Wednesday morning by getting together with King Abdullah II of Jordan, who has met with Mr. Trump several times already, including an encounter shortly after the inauguration when the king attended a Washington prayer breakfast to lobby the president not to move the United States embassy to Jerusalem.
After condemning North Korea, Mr. Trump pivoted to the next “rogue nation” Iran. He called the nuclear deal with Tehran “an embarrassment” that is “one of the worst and most one-sided transactions the United States has ever entered into.” The two expressed friendship on Wednesday. Mr. Trump praised the king for hosting so many Syrian refugees in his country and for combating terrorism. “He’s a very fine gentleman, a very nice man,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the start of the meeting. “He’s also a great, great fighter.”
Mr. Trump has long portrayed Iran as a sponsor of terrorism and has suggested that the United States may abandon the 2015 deal negotiated by the Obama administration and five other major powers that limited Iran’s nuclear activities. The king expressed solidarity. “We’re both fighting together,” he said, adding that terrorism “is a scourge” around the world. “Jordan will always stand beside you and your country.”
So far, Mr. Trump has grudgingly accepted the agreement, even as he has described it as a disgrace. “It is time for the entire world to join us in demanding that Iran’s government end its pursuit of death and destruction,” he said. Mr. Trump will meet later in the day with Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain and President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt. He also will host a luncheon with African leaders.
—RICK GLADSTONE and MEGAN SPECIA PETER BAKER
President Trump’s threat to destroy North Korea provoked a debate among scholars of international law about whether he had violated a tenet of the United Nations Charter.
Article 2(4) of the Charter says countries should “refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force” against another country, and grants exceptions only for instances sanctioned by the Security Council or acts of self-defense.
In this case, there was no authorization from the Security Council, so the question is: Was Mr. Trump justified on the basis of self-defense?
John B. Bellinger III, who served as a legal adviser in the administration of George W. Bush, said that despite his “colorful” choice of words, Mr. Trump was on solid ground, invoking the self-defense argument.
“His threat to destroy North Korea did not violate the U.N. Charter because he said that the United States would use force only ‘if the United States is forced to defend itself or its allies,’ ” Mr. Bellinger said by email. “The Charter specifically allows a U.N. member to use force in self-defense.”
Kevin Jon Heller, a law professor at the University of London, said he believed that Mr. Trump had overstepped.
“The problem is that self-defense must always be proportionate to the armed attack, and Trump clearly threatened disproportionate force,” Mr. Heller argued. “Had he said a nuclear attack would require wiping North Korea off the face of the earth, that might have been a lawful threat. But he did not qualify the threat in any way; on the contrary, he suggested North Korea would have to be destroyed in response to any armed attack on the U.S. or its allies. That is an unlawful threat that violates Art. 2(4).” — SOMINI SENGUPTA
When negotiators representing two-thirds of the General Assembly celebrated in July as they finalized a treaty that would outlaw nuclear weapons, the world’s nine nuclear-armed states were not among them. And none of those states attended a formal signing ceremony on Wednesday at the United Nations.When negotiators representing two-thirds of the General Assembly celebrated in July as they finalized a treaty that would outlaw nuclear weapons, the world’s nine nuclear-armed states were not among them. And none of those states attended a formal signing ceremony on Wednesday at the United Nations.
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, as it is officially known, will enter into legal force 90 days after ratification by 50 countries.The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, as it is officially known, will enter into legal force 90 days after ratification by 50 countries.
“The treaty is an important step toward the universally held goal of a world free of nuclear weapons,” Secretary General António Guterres, who supported the negotiations, said in remarks at the ceremony held in the Trusteeship Council chamber.“The treaty is an important step toward the universally held goal of a world free of nuclear weapons,” Secretary General António Guterres, who supported the negotiations, said in remarks at the ceremony held in the Trusteeship Council chamber.
President Michel Temer of Brazil was the first to formally sign the treaty, as other leaders and diplomats in the chamber applauded.President Michel Temer of Brazil was the first to formally sign the treaty, as other leaders and diplomats in the chamber applauded.
The United States and the other nuclear-armed states not only boycotted the negotiations, they sharply criticized the treaty’s premise and urged other countries not to sign it.The United States and the other nuclear-armed states not only boycotted the negotiations, they sharply criticized the treaty’s premise and urged other countries not to sign it.
The Americans in particular ridiculed the treaty, arguing that North Korea and any other rogue entity in possession of nuclear weapons would ignore its provisions, rendering the prohibition meaningless.The Americans in particular ridiculed the treaty, arguing that North Korea and any other rogue entity in possession of nuclear weapons would ignore its provisions, rendering the prohibition meaningless.
In a statement issued before the signing ceremony, NATO denounced the treaty, saying it “disregards the realities of the increasingly challenging security environment.”In a statement issued before the signing ceremony, NATO denounced the treaty, saying it “disregards the realities of the increasingly challenging security environment.”
Proponents of the treaty said they had no expectation that nuclear-armed states would accept it at first. Rather, supporters said, they hoped that widespread acceptance of the treaty elsewhere would eventually increase the stigma of possessing such weapons because of their destructive power.Proponents of the treaty said they had no expectation that nuclear-armed states would accept it at first. Rather, supporters said, they hoped that widespread acceptance of the treaty elsewhere would eventually increase the stigma of possessing such weapons because of their destructive power.
Like the treaties that banned chemical weapons, land mines and cluster munitions, the nuclear weapons treaty could change perceptions, supporters contend.Like the treaties that banned chemical weapons, land mines and cluster munitions, the nuclear weapons treaty could change perceptions, supporters contend.
“This treaty is a clear indication that the majority of the world no longer accepts nuclear weapons and do not consider them legitimate weapons, creating the foundation of a new norm,” the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons said in a statement.“This treaty is a clear indication that the majority of the world no longer accepts nuclear weapons and do not consider them legitimate weapons, creating the foundation of a new norm,” the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons said in a statement.
The treaty would outlaw the use, threat of use, testing, development, production, possession, transfer and stationing in a different country of nuclear weapons. RICK GLADSTONE The treaty would outlaw the use, threat of use, testing, development, production, possession, transfer and stationing in a different country of nuclear weapons.
— RICK GLADSTONE
President Trump’s threat to destroy North Korea provoked a debate among scholars of international law about whether he had violated a tenet of the United Nations Charter.
Article 2(4) of the Charter says that countries should “refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force” against another country, and grants exceptions only for instances sanctioned by the Security Council or acts of self-defense.
In this case, there was no authorization from the Security Council, so the question is: Was Mr. Trump justified on the basis of self-defense?
John B. Bellinger III, who served as a legal adviser in the administration of George W. Bush, said that despite his “colorful” choice of words, Mr. Trump was on solid ground, invoking the self-defense argument.
“His threat to destroy North Korea did not violate the U.N. Charter because he said that the United States would use force only ‘if the United States is forced to defend itself or its allies,’ ” Mr. Bellinger said by email. “The Charter specifically allows a U.N. member to use force in self-defense.”
Kevin Jon Heller, a law professor at the University of London, said he believed that Mr. Trump had overstepped.
“The problem is that self-defense must always be proportionate to the armed attack, and Trump clearly threatened disproportionate force,” Mr. Heller argued. “Had he said a nuclear attack would require wiping North Korea off the face of the earth, that might have been a lawful threat. But he did not qualify the threat in any way; on the contrary, he suggested North Korea would have to be destroyed in response to any armed attack on the U.S. or its allies. That is an unlawful threat that violates Art. 2(4).” — SOMINI SENGUPTA
President Trump returned on Tuesday to the combative bombast he employed during his election campaign, declaring in his first address to the General Assembly, “We will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea” if the United States were forced to defend itself or its allies.
He denounced North Korea and its leader, Kim Jong-un, saying the nation “threatens the entire world with unthinkable loss of life” as a result of its nuclear weapons program. “Rocket Man is on a suicide mission for himself,” he said, using a mocking nickname for Mr. Kim.
After condemning North Korea, Mr. Trump pivoted to the next “rogue nation” — Iran. He called the nuclear deal with Tehran “an embarrassment” that is “one of the worst and most one-sided transactions the United States has ever entered into.”
Mr. Trump has long portrayed Iran as a sponsor of terrorism and has suggested that the United States may abandon the 2015 deal negotiated by the Obama administration and five other major powers that limited Iran’s nuclear activities.
So far, Mr. Trump has grudgingly accepted the agreement, even as he has described it as a disgrace. “It is time for the entire world to join us in demanding that Iran’s government end its pursuit of death and destruction,” he said.
—RICK GLADSTONE and MEGAN SPECIA