Power and protocol
A wag once said that the United Nations runs on "protocol, alcohol, and Geritol." The first of that troika has been at issue as the world body puzzles out how to formally interact with the European Union. The particular issue is whether EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton will have speaking rights at the UN ...
A wag once said that the United Nations runs on "protocol, alcohol, and Geritol." The first of that troika has been at issue as the world body puzzles out how to formally interact with the European Union. The particular issue is whether EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton will have speaking rights at the UN General Assembly meetings this fall:
A wag once said that the United Nations runs on "protocol, alcohol, and Geritol." The first of that troika has been at issue as the world body puzzles out how to formally interact with the European Union. The particular issue is whether EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton will have speaking rights at the UN General Assembly meetings this fall:
Thus far, the EU has only had observer status at the UN. With the Lisbon Treaty, however, and the election of a permanent Council president and High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the EU’s position at the UN appears to urgently require an upgrade.
Because she isn’t technically a foreign minister, Ashton wasn’t granted full speaking rights at the recent UN conference on Pakistan. She’s asked the Secretary General to clear up the matter tout de suite.
Update: I just spoke with an EU official who explained that a resolution may be tabled at the UN on or about September 9 to grant the EU full speaking rights. The official indicated that no final decision has been made on advancing the resolution, however, because of uncertainty about how the vote would turn out. The principal obstacle appears to be concern about precedent among some UN members. Having granted the EU full rights, could the UN then deny them to the African Union, ASEAN, the Organization of American States, etc.?
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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