U.S. terms NAM outdated, irrelevant

September 19, 2009 09:20 am | Updated November 17, 2021 06:43 am IST - Washington

U.S. Ambassador to U.N. Susan Rice speaks to reporters in the White House briefing room in Washington on Friday ahead of President Barack Obama's trip to the United Nations.

U.S. Ambassador to U.N. Susan Rice speaks to reporters in the White House briefing room in Washington on Friday ahead of President Barack Obama's trip to the United Nations.

America’s top envoy to the United Nations said that Non-Aligned Movement and other cold war era groupings are “outdated and irrelevant” and they do not serve the interests of their member countries.

“These sorts of blocs and divisions are outdated. They often don’t serve the national interest of the countries that participate in these blocs,” Susan Rice told a press conference here.

“Part of what we are beginning to see and certainly what we think is essential, to tackle the challenges that I described at the outset, is for countries to move beyond those traditional reflexive bloc affiliations and look at ways to step up individually and collectively to meeting 21st century security threats,” she argued.

In response to a question, Ms. Rice said NAM is part of a phenomenon where activity in the U.N. General Assembly has in the past often broken down in the form of bloc politics.

Ms. Rice’s comment on NAM came while she was responding to a question on China’s role in the U.N. A permanent member of the Security Council, China has a big stake and is playing large already at the U.N., she said. “It acts in that role very much in an active way. China is one of the countries with which we work quite closely on the Security Council,” she said.

China, she said, is also a major player in the General Assembly, where it has traditionally come to work with and sometimes on behalf of the NAM.

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