Background
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar was born in Lima, Peru, on January 19, 1920. His businessman father died when Pérez de Cuéllar was four years old.
(El judío internacional es un libro del empresario estadou...)
El judío internacional es un libro del empresario estadounidense Henry Ford publicado por primera vez en 1920, que tuvo gran influencia en la expansión mundial del antisemitismo, y en particular en la formación de la ideología nazi. El libro fue publicado en 1920 bajo el título completo de The international jew: the world's foremost problem (El judío internacional: el primer problema del mundo), por The Dearborn Independent, un semanario antisemita de derecha dirigido por el secretario privado de Ford, Ernest G. Liebold. El periódico había publicado también, y difundido ampliamente en los Estados Unidos, Los Protocolos de los Sabios de Sion. PRIMERA PARTE I. Los judíos: carácter individual y actividad productiva de los mismos II. Cómo se defiende Alemania contra los hebreos III. Historia de los hebreos en los Estados Unidos de Norte América IV. ¿Es real o imaginaria la cuestión del judaísmo? V. ¿Arraigará en los Estados Unidos el antisemitismo? VI. Abrase vía libre en las revistas la cuestión judía. VII. Arthur Brisbane, defensor del judaísmo VIII. ¿Existe un programa judaico universal determinado? IX. Fundamentos históricos de la aspiración judía por la hegemonía universal X. Introducción a los "Protocolos judíos" o "de los sabios de Sión" XI. Apreciación judía sobre la naturaleza humana del no-judío XII. Requieren los "Protocolos Judíos" su cumplimiento en parte XIII. Plan judío para socavar, mediante "ideas", la sociedad humana XIV. ¿Previeron los judíos la conflagración mundial? XV. ¿Es idéntico el "Kahal" judío al actual soviet ruso? XVI. Influencia de la cuestión judía sobre la agricultura XVII. ¿Predomina el judaísmo en el periodismo mundial? XVIII. ¿Cómo se explica el poder político hebreo? XIX. La U.R.S.S. (Rusia Comunista) hechura del Panjudaísmo XX. Un testimonio hebreo en favor del bolcheviquismo SEGUNDA PARTE Del prefacio personal del señor Henry Ford I. Mixtifican los judíos en Estados Unidos su numero y poderío II. ¿Forman los judíos una Nación? III. Judíos contra no-judíos en la alta finanza de Nueva York IV. La curva ascendente del poderío financiero hebreo V. Baruch, el "Disraelí Norteamericano" y "Procónsul de Judá en Norte América" VI. El predominio israelita en el teatro Norteamericano VII. El primer trust teatral israelita VIII. El aspecto semita del problema cinematográfico IX. La preponderancia semita en el mundo cinematográfico X. Nueva York bajo el "Kahal" hebreo XI. Critica de los "derechos hebreos" XII. La orden universal de los "B'nai B'rith" XIII. Como caracteriza Disraelí a los hebreos XIV. El jefe de Estado que debió inclinarse ante el judío internacional XV. Historia de Bennett, editor periodístico independiente XVI. El informe de Morgenthau sobre Polonia XVII. Polonia encadenada con la conferencia de la paz XVIII. Panorama presente de la "Cuestión Hebrea" XIX. Intermedio literario: ¿Qué es el Jazz? XX. Los viveros del bolcheviquismo en los Estados Unidos XXI. Confesiones de un superior de la orden de B'nai B'rith XXII. Kuhn, Loeb y Cia., de Nueva York, y M. M. Warburg y Cia., de Hamburgo XXIII. La sed de oro norteamericana bajo el control financiero de los hebreos XXIV. La influencia hebrea en la vida intelectual norteamericana XXV. Planes financieros de los hebreos internacionales
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/153347463X/?tag=2022091-20
( Javier Perez de Cuellar served as the Secretary General...)
Javier Perez de Cuellar served as the Secretary General of the United Nations from 1982-1991, a period in which some of the most dramatic and politically significant events of the late 20th century occurred. In this book, he shares his impressions of some of the powerful world leaders who he worked with, of the roles they played in these events, and of his impressions of them.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0312164866/?tag=2022091-20
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar was born in Lima, Peru, on January 19, 1920. His businessman father died when Pérez de Cuéllar was four years old.
He received his primary and secondary education in private schools and enrolled in the law program at Lima's Catholic University.
To support his studies the young man became a clerk in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In 1944, after obtaining his law degree, he entered Peru's highly-regarded diplomatic corps. Initially posted as first secretary in Peru's Paris embassy, Pérez de Cuéllar became a member of his country's delegation to the first session of the United Nation's General Assembly in 1946.
Later he served as first secretary to Peru's diplomatic missions in Great Britain, Bolivia, and Brazil. In 1961 he returned home to fill a series of administrative posts within the foreign ministry and to teach at the Diplomatic Academy of Peru. He also authored two texts on international law and diplomacy. Following a two-year assignment as ambassador to Switzerland, Pérez de Cuéllar was named secretary general of the Ministry of Foreign Relations. When Peru established formal ties with the Soviet Union in 1969, the veteran diplomat became Lima's first ambassador to Moscow. Two years later Pérez de Cuéllar led Peru's permanent delegation to the United Nations, a post he retained until 1975. He served as president of the U. N. Security Council in 1974.
Appreciating the Peruvian's talents, U. N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim dispatched him to Cyprus in 1975 to defuse the explosive dispute between the Greek and Turkish elements. Although he did not resolve the deeply-rooted problems on that troubled island, Pérez de Cuéllar persuaded the two sides to begin negotiations. Again in 1981 Waldheim called him away from the Peruvian embassy in Caracas, Venezuela, to serve as the Secretary General's personal representative in calming a crisis between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
In October of that year, Lima named him ambassador to Brazil. In a patently political effort to embarrass the president, however, the Peruvian Congress blocked the confirmation of Pérez de Cuéllar and several other ambassadorial nominees. Peru's most distinguished and visible diplomat resigned from the foreign service in protest. His vindication came quickly. In the closing weeks of 1981, as Waldheim's term drew to a close, politicking began for the election of a new secretary general for the United Nations. The procedure involved nomination by the 15-member Security Council, each of whose five permanent representatives (the U. S. , Soviet Union, Britain, France, and China) had an absolute veto. Formal election of the nominee by the General Assembly had, in the past, been automatic. Austrian Kurt Waldheim, standing for a third term, had the unenthusiastic support of the Western powers and the Soviet Union. The Chinese, however, insisted that a new leader be chosen from the less-developed countries of the Third World and endorsed the popular Tanzanian foreign minister, Salim Ahmed Salim. Waldheim and Salim ultimately withdrew from the deadlocked contest, and nine new candidates entered the fray. Among this group Javier Pérez de Cuéllar alone proved acceptable to the superpowers. The Western nations had no serious objections to him.
He had won the respect of the Soviets during his ambassadorship in Moscow. Pérez de Cuéllar benefited from Peru's 20-year "independent" foreign policy and its more recent leadership role among the less-developed nations. The secret balloting produced ten positive and one negative vote for the Peruvian diplomat; the Soviet Union and three other members of the Security Council abstained. On December 15, the General Assembly approved the new secretary general by acclamation, and Javier Pérez de Cuéllar was ceremoniously installed for a five-year term on the first day of 1982.
The long-time rivalry between East and West, the more recent tensions between North and South (the developed and less-developed countries), and myriad regional conflicts threatened the survival of the U. N. Its inability to bring peace to the Middle East, Central America, and other troubled regions suggested that the organization had failed to achieve its primary objective. As many new Third World nations swelled the body to 160 members, the increasingly radical complexion of the United Nations soured the U. S. and its Western allies. The failure to agree upon a declaration of past accomplishments and future objectives during the October 1985 40th anniversary celebration seemed indicative of the body's factional paralysis.
He had not campaigned for his post and declared his intention not to seek reelection. Pérez de Cuéllar admitted that the U. N. had serious defects and labored with limited success to reform and revitalize the organization. He placed special emphasis on enhancing the independence, efficiency, and morale of U. N. employees and on depoliticizing its subsidiary agencies to regain broad support for their work.
Toward the end of his first term, the five permanent members of the Security Council asked Pérez de Cuéllar to accept a second five-year appointment. His acceptance indicated good recovery from a quadruple heart-bypass operation in mid-1986. He was succeeded on January 2, 1992 by Egyptian diplomat Boutros Boutros-Ghali.
(El judío internacional es un libro del empresario estadou...)
( Javier Perez de Cuellar served as the Secretary General...)
With the perspective of a Third World man, Pérez de Cuéllar frequently pointed to the organization's successes in promoting economic development, health, and education. Reflecting his Western cultural heritage, the Secretary General urged member states to strengthen the rule of law in an increasingly anarchic world and to restore civility to international life. And as the elected representative of five billion people, he often spoke as an international every-man, voicing concern about world hunger and disease, abuses of human rights, the "scourge of war, " and the ultimate threat of nuclear catastrophe.
Quotations: He asserted that the U. N. was "the most authentic expression of the international community in all its diversity".
He is also a member of the Club de Madrid, a group of more than 100 former Presidents and Prime Ministers of democratic countries, which works to strengthen democracy worldwide.
He was a man of aristocratic lineage.
A consummate diplomat, Pérez de Cuéllar was noted for his quiet, self-effacing personality, his Old-World charm and gentility, and his skill in working effectively with discordant factions. The tall, distinguished-looking man seemed to have been born in a conservative, pin-striped suit-the uniform of his profession. He spoke English and French in addition to his native Spanish.
In 1944 he married his first wife, Yvette Roberts (died Lisbon, 2013). From his first marriage, he has a son, Francisco, born in Paris, and a daughter, Agueda Cristina, born in London. Later he married Marcela Temple Seminario (1933–2013), with whom he had no children.