Leaders of almost 60 European, Latin America and Caribbean nations said Friday they want the United Nations to remain the premier organization to resolve international conflicts, and they called for U.N. reforms to make that possible.
Although it didn't specifically mention the United States, it was clear the summit's draft document was critical of Washington's foreign policy and the allegations of torture and abuse of prisoners in Iraq. The meeting was a signal to the Bush administration to shed its go-it-alone tendency and return to the U.N. fold.
But our "liberal" media will continue to laugh at Kerry's assertion that foreign leaders would prefer him to Bush...
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