Response to Kofi Annan's Farewell Speech
A liar, a thief, a rapist, and a murderer. That’s not a man. Take it away.
Sean Bean as Richard Sharpe, regarding the deserter Obadiah Hakeswill.
While Kofi Annan is admittedly not a rapist or murderer, he is a
liar who may have knowingly tolerated theft, murder (genocide in Darfur
and Rwanda), and child rape during his tenure as Secretary-General. He
is not anything that a decent person would recognize as a man, and it
is high time for him to be taken away as well.
USA Today reports that Kofi Annan “blasted” the United States in his long-overdue farewell speech.
In the 61-year history of the U.N., no secretary-general
has ended his tenure by criticizing U.S. policies so sharply, said
Stanley Meisler, a historian of the United Nations and author of a new
biography of Annan.
It is incredible that this piece of gutter trash would open his
mouth to his civilized superiors, given the fact that his own
background stinks with the United Nations’ oil-for-food and
sex-for-food scandals. We remind our readers that both of these
happened on Annan’s watch. The same for the genocides in Darfur and
Rwanda, which Annan tolerated while looking for things to be wrong with
the United States and, of course, Israel.
The apple does not fall far from the tree, and the alleged conduct of Kojo Annan reflects his father’s character, ethics, and integrity.
It seems there’s a lot the U.N. managed not to be aware
of. But the information that Cotecna — while employing Kofi’s son in
any capacity — put in the lowest bid by far for the job of
authenticating Saddam’s Oil-for-Food imports, is not necessarily
reassuring. Cotecna, which got paid roughly $6 million for its services
during that first year (the U.N. will not release figures on Cotecna’s
fees over the following years) was bidding on work that empowered its
staff to inspect tens of billions worth of supplies inbound to a regime
much interested in smuggling, and evidently accustomed to dealing in
bribes and kickbacks as a routine part of business. The issue was never
solely whether the monitors were cheap, but whether they were
trustworthy.
…But what has to be clear by now is that the U.N. itself was either
corrupt, or so stunningly incompetent as to require total overhaul.
There are by now enough questions, there has been enough secrecy,
stonewalling, and rising evidence of graft all around the U.N. program
in Iraq, so that it is surely worth an independent investigation into
the U.N. itself — and Annan’s role in supervising this program. If Kofi
Annan will not exercise his authority to set a truly independent
inquiry in motion, it is way past time for the U.S., whose taxpayers
supply about a quarter of the U.N. budget, to call the U.N. itself to
account for Oil-for-Food — in dollar terms the biggest relief operation
it has ever run, and by many signs, one of the dirtiest.
The New York Sun adds,
It’s entirely possible that Mr. Annan has nothing to
hide. We’re not making accusations. But if one has nothing to hide, why
the secrecy? This is all the more the sad truth given that Mr. Annan’s
personal tenure has been scarred not only by oil-for-food but by
questions about his own financial integrity. His son, Kojo, was on the
payroll of a company that profited from the oil-for-food scandal.
There’s also the matter of the missing Mercedes that Annan junior
procured after falsely using his father’s name. Mr. Annan denied
knowledge of the car, despite wiring $15,000 to his son to help pay for
the vehicle.
All on the watch of Kofi Annan, just like the sex-for-food scandal
in which United Nations pedophiles, excuse us, peacekeepers, extorted
sex from starving teenage and preteen girls.

It is to be remembered that an admiral had to resign from the U.S.
Navy after the Tailhook scandal, simply because the conduct happened on
his watch. The conduct (sexual harassment as opposed to actual rape)
was less egregious, and the admiral probably did not even know about
it. It speaks reams about the United Nations’ moral fitness to pass
judgment on anything in this world that Kofi Annan was allowed to
continue as Secretary-General after his subordinates molested and even
raped young girls.

The New York Sun provides an outstanding summary of Kofi Annan’s tenure:
His term at the United Nations will be remembered only
for the oil-for-food scandal, the sex-for-food scandal in the Congo,
the massacres at Rwanda, Cambodia, and Srebrenica, and inaction in the
face of the genocide in Darfur — and establishing that deception,
secrecy, and patronage cannot be pierced by the reforms by which he
sought to rescue his reputation.
Or, in simpler terms, “That’s not a man. Take it away.” |