问答题
My wife Nane and I are both extremely happy to be with you
today. I feel truly proud to belong to this extraordinary class of 2004, and I
am pleased to see that so many parents and family members were here today. The
day belongs to them, too. Without their constant support, understanding and
sacrifice, none of us could have achieved what we have. For me, to receive a
degree from Harvard is a very great honor indeed. There are few countries in the
world whose leaders in public life, business, science and the humanities have
not had some association with Harvard—and no country that has not benefited from
Harvard's outstanding contributions to human knowledge. // You
have invited me, I know, not as an individual, but as Secretary-General of the
United Nations. You are saying that the United Nations matters, and that you
want to hear what we have to say. Are you fight in believing that the UN
matters? I think you are, because the UN offers the best hope of a stable world
and a broadly equitable world order, based on generally accepted rules. That
statement has been much questioned in the past year. But recent events have
reaffirmed, and even strengthened, its validity. A rule-based system is in the
interest of all countries—especially today. Globalization has shrunk the world.
The very openness, which is such an important feature of today's most successful
societies, makes deadly weapons relatively easy to obtain, and terrorists
relatively difficult to restrain. // Today, the strong feel
almost as vulnerable to the weak as the weak feel vulnerable to the strong. So
it is in the interest of every country to have international rules and to abide
by them. And such a system can only work if, in devising and applying the rules,
the legitimate interests of all countries are accommodated, and decisions are
reached collectively. That is the essence of multilateralism, and the founding
principle of the United Nations. All great American leaders have understood
this. That is one of the things that make this country such a unique world
power. America feels the need to frame its policies, and exercise its
leadership, not just in the light of its own particular interests, but also with
an eye to international interests, and universal principles. //
Among the finest examples of this was the plan for reconstructing Europe after
World War Ⅱ, which General Marshall announced here at Harvard in 1947. That was
one part of a larger-scale and truly statesmanlike effort, in which Americans
joined with others to build a new international system—a system which worked, by
and large, and which survives, in its essentials, nearly 60 years later. During
those 60 years, the United States and its partners developed the United Nations,
built an open world economy, promoted human rights and decolonization, and
supported the transformation of Europe into a democratic, cooperative community
of states, such that war between them has become unthinkable. //