Morning multilateralism, Oct. 15
As referendum approaches, U.N. peacekeepers in Sudan will be moved to the north-south border. Ahem: U.N. official reminds the United States that it still hasn’t paid all its bills. Blame America: Did the United States undermine Canada’s Security Council bid? Will Ecuador return to the "guilty" IMF for new loans? All signs point to NATO ...
As referendum approaches, U.N. peacekeepers in Sudan will be moved to the north-south border.
As referendum approaches, U.N. peacekeepers in Sudan will be moved to the north-south border.
Ahem: U.N. official reminds the United States that it still hasn’t paid all its bills.
Blame America: Did the United States undermine Canada’s Security Council bid?
Will Ecuador return to the "guilty" IMF for new loans?
All signs point to NATO joining U.S. missile defense plan.
Britain assures the United States that it’s committed to NATO, defense cuts notwithstanding.
Fat chance: Turkish lawyers try to interest the International Criminal Court in the flotilla incident.
The U.S. and the African Union talk about maritime piracy.
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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