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Some diplomats walk out during Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on Thursday.
Some diplomats walk out during Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on Thursday.
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UNITED NATIONS — American diplomats led a walkout at the U.N. General Assembly on Thursday as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad fiercely attacked the U.S. and major Western European nations as “arrogant powers” ruled by greed and eager for military adventurism.

The two U.S. diplomats, who specialize in the Middle East, were followed out of the chamber by diplomats from more than 30 countries. They included the 27 European Union members, Australia, New Zealand, Somalia, Liechtenstein, Mon aco, San Marino and Macedonia, a U.N. diplomat said. Israel boycotted the speech.

Ahmadinejad’s fiery anti-U.S. and anti-Israel rhetoric has been a staple of the General Assembly’s ministerial meetings.

Last year, Ahmadinejad provoked a walkout by the U.S., the European Union and others when he said a majority of people in the U.S. and around the world believe the American government staged the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in an attempt to ensure Israel’s survival. The provocative comments prompted the U.S. delegation to walk out of Ahmadinejad’s U.N. speech, in which he also blamed the U.S. as the power behind U.N. Security Council sanctions against Iran for its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, a technology that can be used as fuel for electricity generation or to build nuclear weapons.

Ahmadinejad’s speech Thursday pitted the poverty and unhappiness of most countries against the riches and power of the U.S. and unnamed European nations that he accused of perpetuating wars, causing the current global economic crisis and infringing on “the rights and sovereignty of nations.”

He attacked the U.S. and European colonial powers for abducting tens of millions of Africans and making them slaves; for their readiness “to drop thousands of bombs on other countries”; and for dominating the U.N. Security Council. He singled out the U.S. for using a nuclear bomb against Japan in World War II and imposing and supporting military dictatorships and totalitarian regimes in Asia, Africa and Latin America.

“It is as lucid as daylight that the same slave masters and colonial powers that once instigated the two world wars have caused widespread misery and disorder with far-reaching effects across the globe since then,” Ahmadinejad said. “Do these arrogant powers really have the competence and ability to run or govern the world?”

The Iranian president called for “the shared and collective management of the world in order to put an end to the present disorders, tyranny and discriminations worldwide.”

Last year, he said “the future belongs to Iran” and challenged the U.S. to accept that his country has a major role in the world.

Ahmadinejad made no mention of his disputed re-election in June 2009, when security forces systematically crushed opposition protests, the current internal political turmoil that has sharply diminished his power, or Iran’s nuclear program, which the U.S. and its allies believe is aimed at producing nuclear weapons.

“While President Ahmadinejad is lecturing the world from the U.N. podium,” Human Rights Watch U.N. director Philippe Bolopion said, “dissent is still being crushed ruthlessly in Iran and basic rights demanded by millions in the Arab world are brutally denied to Iranians who are demanding the same.

“The world assembly should take with a grain of salt the remarks of a leader who said nothing about the public hanging yesterday of a 17-year- old in his own country.”

Ahmadinejad accused the U.S. of threatening to place sanctions on anyone who questions the Holocaust and 9/11.

Without naming the United States, he asked: “Who imposed, through deceits and hypocrisy, the Zionism and over 60 years of war, homelessness, terror and mass murder on the Palestinian people and on countries in the region?”

Mark Kornblau, spokesman for the U.S. Mission to the United Nations, said: “Mr. Ahmadinejad had a chance to address his own people’s aspirations for freedom and dignity, but instead he again turned to abhorrent anti-Semitic slurs and despicable conspiracy theories.”

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