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4 United Nations News: Report on the United Nations and Its Related Agencies 1 (1949)

handle is hein.unl/unnews0004 and id is 1 raw text is: SPECIAL GENERAL ASSEMBLY ISSUE

Unite d

Nations

News

REPORT ON THE UNITED NATIONS AND ITS RELATED AGENCIES
Published by the

WOODROW

WILSON FOUNDATION, 45 EAST 65TH STREET, NEW YORK 2I, N. Y.
in cooperation with
THE CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE

Vol. IV, No. 1                                 JANUARY, 1949                                        $3.00 a year

THE HUMAN RIGHTS ASSEMBLY''

ACCORDING to one estimate, over seventeen million
words were spoken during the meetings of the Gen-
eral Assembly in Paris between September 21 and Decem-
ber 12. What did these words add up to? What did the
Assembly do?
Its most significant achievement was the adoption of a
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and also a con-
vention outlawing genocide or the destruction of entire
human groups. This Assembly will undoubtedly be re-
membered in the future as the Human Rights Assembly.
On the political side, it had few positive accomplish-
ments. It dealt indecisively with Palestine, leaving the
future of that troubled country to be decided by direct
negotiations, with the help of a new commission. It also
discussed a number of the questions which had been de-
bated at length last year: the Balkans, Korea, atomic en-
ergy, the Little Assembly, disarmament, the use of the
veto, and the admission of new members to the U.N. On
these matters it heard charges ranging from the flaunt-
ing of U.N. decisions to bad faith, deceit and hypocrisy.
It heard countercharges. It passed resolutions favored
by the majority and opposed by the Soviet minority.
Whereas last year's Assembly deliberately chose not to
state that Greece's northern neighbors were guilty of
aiding the guerrillas, this year's Assembly endorsed the
Balkan committee's conclusion that the guerrillas received
aid from Albania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. On atomic
energy, forty nations voted endorsement of the majority
plan of control, which had previously received the support
of fourteen of the seventeen nations which have been mem-
bers of the smaller Atomic Energy Commission at one
time or another. Thus, Assembly discussions lined up
twenty-six more nations behind the majority plan.*
*The Assembly's discussion of atomic energy and disarma-
ment was covered in the November issue of the United Nations
News, the discussion of the Balkan problem in the December
issue. All resolutions are summarized on pages 5-8 of this issue.

But in the very nature of things, these resolutions
could not heal the breach between the East and the West.
On the contrary, that breach became sharper than ever
before. Fewer of the smaller and medium-sized countries
voted with the Soviet bloc on any issue. Fewer abstained
from voting. In this sense, the United States and the
Western Powers have clearly won a propaganda victory
within the United Nations. The United States delegate,
John Foster Dulles, hailed this as a real achievement. He
said, Debates here have revealed increasing unity among
the great majority of Member states. They have also
helped to eliminate those dangers to peace which arise
from miscalculation. It is perfectly clear that an aggressor
can no longer hope to vanquish his victims one by one.
Any aggressor will have to count on solid-not divided
resistance. That is a deterrent to war. . . .
Whether Mr. Dulles' interpretation of psychology is
correct remains to be seen. Unfortunately, individuals
and groups which feel themselves isolated in a world
arrayed solidly against them, usually react with increas-
ing hostility and defiance,-rather than with a sober ex-
amination of their own share in the blame, or with a
reasoned calculation of the probable results of changing
their ways.
Like last year and the year before, the Assembly wrestled
impotently with the problem of how to admit new mem-
bers which the Security Council had failed to recommend
either because of a Soviet veto or because the states in
question had not mustered the necessary seven votes.
Argentina made an extreme suggestion: that the Assem-
bly ignore the veto and forthwith admit every state which
received seven or more votes in the Security Council
in spite of the fact that the Charter clearly states that ap-
plicants must be recommended by the Security Council.
To justify this proposal, the Argentine delegate made
an elaborate legal argument which, however, none of
the major powers supported. Instead, the Assembly again

Reproduction by Permission of Buffalo & Erie County Public Library Buffalo, NY

Use of any part of the contents of the UNITED NATIONS NEWS, with or without credit, is invited.
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