Tuesday 2 November 2010

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Conversations with Ban Ki-moon What The United Nations Is Really Like: The View From The Top (Giants of Asia Series) (Conversations with Gi

Conversations with Ban Ki-moon What The United Nations Is Really Like: The View From The Top (Giants of Asia Series) (Conversations with Gi



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Conversations with Ban Ki-moon What The United Nations Is Really Like: The View From The Top (Giants of Asia Series) (Conversations with Gi

Exclusive interviews with the UN General Secretary, now in his second term at the UN. Only eight people have been privileged to hold the job of Secretary General since the United Nations founding in 1945. And only one of them has ever told the inside story of the UN while still holding that special office. That man is Ban Ki-moon, the veteran diplomat and former star foreign minister of South Korea now in his second term as SG. Because he understands that the UN is in crisis and because he fears the reasons for this are not widely understood he believes it is time to unveil the truth about the organization and explain why its failure would be a catastrophe. The result, via unprecedented conversations with American journalist Tom Plate, is a deeply revealing book about the kinds of issues and challenges whose resolutions (or lack thereof) will in fact determine the future of the world

  • Sales Rank: #3650263 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2012-09-15
  • Released on: 2014-04-02
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Review
... I have very much enjoyed [Tom Plate s] previous Giants of Asia books .... Ban Ki-Moon ... is known to be candid about the UN s problems.... His conversations with Ban Ki-moon are equally interesting and informative. - Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger

This excellent and highly readable book by Tom Plate humanizes the head of the world's premier governmental organization while also reminding us what is at stake. Author Plate stands out among Western journalists. Not only has this former editorial director of the Los Angeles Times, syndicated columnist and Loyola Marymount University professor relentlessly chronicled the most important story of our era -- the rise of Asia -- but he has done so through his rare personal access to the key leaders in the region. Now, the latest in his series profiles United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (whose) lasting impact on the world, not much covered by less far-minded journalists, promises to be immense. - Globalization expert and columnist Nathan Gardels in The Huffington Post

... American journalist and academic Tom Plate has been writing books called Giants of Asia. Now it is Ban Ki-moon s turn .... The formats of all the Giants books are ... built almost entirely on taped conversations .... But in this case the subject is different. In numerous interviews with Plate that moved from the secretary-general s residence to restaurants and clubs around New York .... Ban knew that he was not a glittering celebrity. In one of the most revealing passages in the book, Ban said: The first year, there were, I think, some misunderstandings about me (at the UN) .... But in the end, during the last four-and-a-half years ... I think they now understand, clearly, that Asian values are also one of the very important values, and cultures, which should be respected, and Asian countries ... they re doing well now. And that s why people have been saying that the 21st century will be led by the Asia-Pacific. --Former Polk Award Winner and New York Times UN Correspondent Barbara Crossette

This excellent book, which patiently uncovers the mind behind the image, shows that what the UN chief lacks in charisma, he more than makes up for in his dedication to the fate of the world's most vulnerable peoples.... This is what the South Korean UN chief has been trying to do since he took office on Jan 1, 2007 and was re-elected unanimously in June 2011 to a second term that will take him to the end of 2016.
Mr Ban's challenges are the motifs of Mr Plate's book ... a part of Mr Plate's Giants Of Asia series, which has featured Mr Lee Kuan Yew and Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, among others....In dealing with them, Mr Ban, a career diplomat who rose to become his country's foreign minister before helming the UN, is all too familiar with the grey areas that shade so much of international politics. He is accustomed to breaking bread with leaders of different political systems, but he draws the line firmly at assaults on the idea of humanity. The international community has to intervene when these occur, he says unambiguously --Asad Latif, The Straits Times (Singapore)

I have known Ban Ki-moon since we were both foreign ministers. I feel that I understand him even more now after I have read this unique book. The book takes the readers deep inside the inner thoughts of a man who has described his job as the most impossible job in the world. It also offers a rare look at the inner workings of the United Nations. This combination makes the book a must read for students of multilateral diplomacy. He is willing to take physical risks in remote parts of the world in his determination to improve the quality of life for people in need.
This book is not a public relations exercise for anyone. Tom Plate is a tough and experienced interviewer, with a gentle touch. --Professor Kantathi Suphamongkhon is the 39th Minister of Foreign Affairs of Thailand. He is a Senior Fellow at the Burkle Center for International Relations at the University of California at Los Angeles UCLA

About the Author
Tom Plate is an experienced writer, journalist and syndicated columnist. He is director of the Pacific Perspectives Media Center in Beverley Hills, a non-profit organisation that syndicates high-end op-eds. He is currently Distinguished Scholar of Asian and Pacific Studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles and also a Visiting Professor at United Emirates University in Dubai.

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Inspiring Time Out with Ban
By TravellerThruKalpas
As the great Hammarskjold once said in regard to inhabiting the role of UN Secretary General: either you get very cynical - or very serious. This book offers meaningful behind-the-scenes interviews, conducted in 2012 by journalist Tom Plate, with the current UNSG in his second term, revealing someone who is not only very serious but clearly born for diplomacy, examples of which are plentiful throughout these talks. And while Ban is candid enough on most issues here, Mr. Plate's sometimes presumptuous remarks have a tendency to steer and push for something a bit more provocative than Ban wants to transmit, and is smart to avoid.

Throughout his responses, Ban displays much knowledge about the necessity of balancing policy and human rights issues with a heartfelt and humble perspective, inside a more demanding and rigorous arena of international politics, one increasingly defined by inherently problematic ethical prerogatives. But he brings something unique to these kinds of challenges, and displays a discipline and maturity rare among world leaders. In the discussion around his Asian cultural background, there emerges someone whose values were also conditioned by a life dedicated to public service in South Korean government and diplomacy. It soon becomes clear that for Ban, diplomacy is not just the art of skillful talking, as opposed to deployed action.

Importantly up front, Ban clearly understands the status of negotiation as crucial action in itself - in a world which has treated it as a weak or ineffective precursor to 'real' action - as when nation states, when not actively waging wars, also fund them directly and indirectly, or deploying various sanctions, in order to ostensibly benefit a sovereignty seen as perpetually challenged. In these exchanges the question of sovereignty does come up of course, since it is fundamentally built into the UN Charter as an important principle, and Ban once again deflects Plate's tendency to try pinning him down to obtain some glimpse of final resolution to the perceived problems of disunity within the UN. However, when Plate reminds him that the Westphalian prerogative of nation-state sovereignty has remained the same over time, in effect blocking action, Ban intriguingly agrees, saying that the "international community works normally on a consensus basis, whether it is a regional, small organization or large one. But the true meaning of consensus is that one or two different countries should not block a decision. Consensus should not be confused with unanimity."

But for member states to remain at the table - as long as necessary, to avoid going on to more embattled positions, including intervention - is a primary goal for the UNSG, and Ban Ki-moon shows he has the stamina serious enough for the enterprise. He says, "What I have is only moral power - moral authority and convening power, and raising an agenda." Also of apparent benefit is his lack of the requisite charisma to qualify for media attention, since the absence of such pandering and cynical hoopla can allow more space for focused work and accomplishment.

It is worth remembering that the roles of the UN and its SG are works in progress in any case, and are fully deserving of our support. And as this book makes clear, Ban's current record, which includes effective shuttle diplomacy as well as victory on women's rights policy making, will continue to evolve and impress. Also worth mentioning is the recently published volume of his speeches selected by Ban himself, which therefore provides a more direct indication of his work: Building a Better Future for All: Selected Speaches of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon 2007-2012.

Kamsahamnida!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
A great book about a truly amazing leader
By Haig
If you want a very easy and light read about one of the world's most dedicated and determined world leaders, then Conversations with Ban Ki-Moon is without a doubt the book for you. The book is a dialogue between the esteemed scholar and journalist Professor Tom Plate and Secretary General of the UN Security Council. As you read through the chapters, you begin to understand the staunch attitude Ban has to the mission of cooperation not only between member states of the Security Council, but between all nations in the world. He knows he is no Superman, and he acknowledges that in his book time and time again, but he sure works like he is! When he's not in an interview or political social, Ban's on a plane to a country undergoing trouble of some kind to show that the UN will stand by them. If not that, he's reading speeches and resolutions for the United Nations in the middle of the night. It almost seems as though that Ban does all of this work because no one else will especially with the many conflicts of interest between the members of the Security Council. On the contrary, he desires support and cooperation between the member states and works to move them in the direction of cooperation. After all, his main motto is to "lead by example" which he does time and time again in his time as SG. The man is an inspiration. And as a student who desires to help in the process to alleviate conflicts at an international level, this book reinforced my belief that a man with a passion and sense of mission has no limits.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
An English Major's Take on a Poli Sci Book
By Future Mrs. Lippert
I’m currently taking Professor Plate’s Future of the United Nations course, and this book is required reading. I’m also an English major who knows next to nothing in regards to political science. I took the class precisely because I wanted to know more about how the UN works. If you are like me and enjoy reading books that aren’t convoluted and dry, look no further. The title, “Conversations with Ban Ki-Moon,” is certainly not a misnomer. It reads as if you are sitting down having tea with Plate and Ban, yet covers a vast variety of subjects that go on every day at the UN. The last chapter in particular struck me so hard that I actually read it twice. In this world, many of the things we care about do not matter in the long run. One of these things for me is Hollywood gossip. In his last chapter, Plate recounts how Ban was nervous about speaking at an event for the stars. One of Ban’s aides reassures him by saying, “…When a Hollywood movie shows a scene where heads are blown off and blood is everywhere and bodies lie on the side of the street…and then the film’s director yells ‘cut,’ what happens? The actors get up, dust themselves off, take a shower, and go home. But in the movie that is the UN and its secretary general, that never happens. Those bodies never get up…to live and to act another day, much less go home…The difference is that ‘you are real and they are not and they know it and they will be in awe of you.’” This bit of dialogue made me realize that the real celebrities are the people who devote their lives to trying to make this world a better place. Thank you, professor, for helping me see why the world needs not only Ban Ki-Moon, but the UN as well.

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