The Oklahoman

Senate confirms Biden's choice for UN ambassador

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON —The Senate confirmed President Joe Biden's choice to lead U.S. diplomacy at the United Nations on Tuesday. Linda Thomas-Greenfield's confirmati­on reflected the Bid en administra­tion' s determinat­ion to re engage with the world body and former President Donald Trump's diplomacy that often left the U.S. isolated internatio­nally.

Senators voted 78-20 to confirm Thomas-Greenfield to the post, which will be a Cabinetlev­el position.

Thomas-Greenfield, a retired 35-year veteran of the foreign service whore signed during the Trump administra­tion, will be the third African American, and the second African American woman, to hold the j ob. Her confirmati­on was hailed by Democrats and advocates of the United Nations, who had lamented the Trump administra­tion's unilateral approach to internatio­nal affairs.

“This confirmati­on sends a message that the United States is back and that our foreign service is back,” said Rep. Karen Bass, D-Cal if ., who chairs a House Foreign Affairs subcommitt­ee on Africa, global health and global human rights. “We as a country and as a world are safer with Linda Thomas-Greenfield serving as the United States ambassador to the United Nations.”

“We can count on Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield to work with internatio­nal partners to confront our collective challenges head on, and play an active role in ensuring the U.N. evolves with the demands of our era as an essential forum for collective problemsol­ving and catalyst for global progress ,” said Elizabeth Cousens, president of the United Nations Foundation, a private group that supports the world body's endeavors. “Hers is the leadership America needs at the UN at this critical moment for the U.S. and world.”

Republican­s who opposed her said she was soft on China and would not stand up for U.S. principles at the United Nations. Thomas-Greenfield had rejected those concerns during her confirmati­on hearing, telling senators that a 2019 speech she gave to the Chinese- funded Confucius Institute had been a mistake and was not intended to bean endorsemen­t of Chinese government policies.

In the speech, she had praised China's $1 trillion Belt and Road global infrastruc­ture program in Africa and called for “a win-win-win situation” where the U.S. and China would promote good governance and the rule of law.

She told senators that China is a strategic adversary and that “their actions threaten our security, they threaten our values and they threaten our way of life, and they are a threat to their neighbors and they are a threat across the globe.”

Thomas-Greenfield s poke of China's diplomatic inroads during the Trump administra­tion, which pursued an “America First” policy that weakened internatio­nal alliances. And she made clear there would be a change under Biden to reengage internatio­nally and promote American values.

She stressed that American leadership must be rooted in the country's core values — “support for democracy, respect for universal human rights, and the promotion of peace and security.” And she said that effective diplomacy means developing “robust relationsh­ips ,” finding common ground and managing difference­s, and“doing genuine, old-fashioned, peopleto-people diplomacy.”

 ??  ?? United States Ambassador to the United Nations nominee Linda Thomas-Greenfield smiles as she testifies during her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Jan. 27 on Capitol Hill in Washington. [GREG NASH/POOL VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
United States Ambassador to the United Nations nominee Linda Thomas-Greenfield smiles as she testifies during her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Jan. 27 on Capitol Hill in Washington. [GREG NASH/POOL VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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