Morning multilateralism
The jostling for top posts in the EU’s new diplomatic service is well underway. France bristles at EU criticism of its Roma policy. IMF warns Greece to collect more taxes as its economy contracts. Meanwhile, Krugman finds some evidence that the IMF is sane. In China, the head of the World Bank says that stronger ...
The jostling for top posts in the EU’s new diplomatic service is well underway.
France bristles at EU criticism of its Roma policy.
IMF warns Greece to collect more taxes as its economy contracts. Meanwhile, Krugman finds some evidence that the IMF is sane.
In China, the head of the World Bank says that stronger yuan would be "appropriate."
The United States’ man at NATO wants the alliance to be "more capable of operating over great distances."
Ban Ki-Moon defends U.N. poverty agreement against charges that it’s long on rhetoric and thin on implementation.
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
More from Foreign Policy

Can Russia Get Used to Being China’s Little Brother?
The power dynamic between Beijing and Moscow has switched dramatically.

Xi and Putin Have the Most Consequential Undeclared Alliance in the World
It’s become more important than Washington’s official alliances today.

It’s a New Great Game. Again.
Across Central Asia, Russia’s brand is tainted by Ukraine, China’s got challenges, and Washington senses another opening.

Iraqi Kurdistan’s House of Cards Is Collapsing
The region once seemed a bright spot in the disorder unleashed by U.S. regime change. Today, things look bleak.