A Peep Obama’s UN Speech: US President Barack Obama Seeks The World To Join The Battle Against The Islamic State

By Staff Reporter | Sep 25, 2014 01:51 PM EDT

TEXT SIZE    

On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama delivered a speech before the United Nations. He sought the world to join the battle against the Islamic State terror group.

Barack Obama, current president of the United States, chronicled a powerful progression for his nation in a tempestuous realm. He voiced a brusquely articulated speech in the United Nations General Assembly that the US military forces would work with allies to disassemble the Islamic State's "network of death" and cautioned Russia that retributions are on its way for the intimidation of Ukraine.

Days after assembling airstrikes on several insurgents' targets in Syria, US President Obama pursued an ardent plea to arm against the Islamic State. The formerly averse fighter now ostensibly resolved instigating a sundown struggle against Islamic intemperance for the remains of his term of office.

In his UN discourse, US President Barack Obama sought to reinforce an international coalition that he said would train and prepare troops to combat the group, also known as ISIL, starve it of monetary means and cease the flow of overseas recruits to its positions.

Snippets of President Obama's UN Speech, "Today, I ask the world to join in this effort. Those who have joined ISIL should leave the battlefield while they can.  For we will not succumb to threats, and we will demonstrate that the future belongs to those who build, not those who destroy."

Forewarning the retributions and reprisals to come, Obama said that the inhumaneness of the militants "forces us to look into the heart of darkness." He added that the peril from the Islamic State was only the most exigent of a blitzkrieg of worldwide encounters that have set the US no choice but to take the leading light.

President Obama's speech before the UN General Assembly also accentuated Russia's aggression against Ukraine, organizing a response to the West African EBOLA outbreak; from brokering a new unanimity government in Afghanistan and to establish a new campaign that defies climate change. President Obama spoke more resembling a wartime trailblazer, reiterating his fortitude to work with other nations but leaving slight hesitation that the US would act as the vital underwriter of an intercontinental order that he said was beneath severe anxiety.  

The 39-minute UN speech of President Obama was also noteworthy for what he did not say.  The speech was the flagship of a frantic three days of international relations for the president. He seemed to make forays in expanding the alliance against the Islamic State.

pre post  |  next post
More Sections