Morning multilateralism, Oct. 26
UN peacekeeping head warns that his forces in Sudan may not be able to contain renewed north-south violence. The IMF is wary of Hungary’s new budget plans. Ban Ki-moon prods Myanmar on political prisoners as elections approach. A favorite Washington ambassador is poached by the EU’s External Action Service. Fodder for the NATO summit: Canadians ...
UN peacekeeping head warns that his forces in Sudan may not be able to contain renewed north-south violence.
UN peacekeeping head warns that his forces in Sudan may not be able to contain renewed north-south violence.
The IMF is wary of Hungary’s new budget plans.
Ban Ki-moon prods Myanmar on political prisoners as elections approach.
A favorite Washington ambassador is poached by the EU’s External Action Service.
Fodder for the NATO summit: Canadians fed up with overseas combat.
WTO chief unplugged: cooperation on trade in raw materials is "the only alternative to economic nationalism and conflict."
International Atomic Energy Agency head visits Moscow; Putin pledges closer cooperation.
Hollywood movie unlikely: An African Union soldier is killed and his body paraded in Mogadishu.
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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