Come to think of it, it's a wonder that the UN came out with an any reaction at all:
The United Nations Security Council is expected Friday to formally condemn the sinking of a South Korean warship, with a carefully worded statement that avoids directly blaming North Korea or imposing penalties on it.Yeah, some 'condemnation'.
The product of a month of wrangling, the statement bears China's imprint, according to diplomats familiar with the negotiations. But it appears to represent a late-hour linguistic, if not diplomatic, victory for the United States.
The statement, which is to be read by the council president at a open meeting at the U.N. on Friday morning, will "condemn" the sinking of South Korea's Cheonan warship near the North Korean border in March.
"The Security Council deplores the attack" and "determines that such an incident endangers peace and security in the region and beyond," says the statement, which was reviewed by the The Wall Street Journal.
A U.S. official said Washington was pleased with the statement because it was a "clear condemnation" of the March 26 attack that killed 46 South Korean sailors.
But I guess they had to call it that because deploration, while a word, sounds weird.
Technorati Tag: North Korea and UN.
Oh dear.... I thought it was Israel. But its interesting the UN couldn't muster the same kind of moral outrage when it comes to North Korea.
ReplyDeleteAnd it took them all of three months to finally "deplore" it.
Go figure!
I thought it was Israel
ReplyDeleteI did too--that's why I used the same headline that the original article did.
When it comes to investigating Israel, it will be interesting to see if the UN-sponsored investigation will ignore video documentation to the degree that Goldstone did.