Morning multilateralism, Nov. 10
World Bank president expands on the role for gold. Security Council finally ready to release report on North Korean technology exports. Some excerpts here. Plus, Abbas wants Council meeting on Israeli settlements. Don’t forget Bosnia: A warning that the Balkans could disrupt EU and NATO festivities this month. Forward or backward? ASEAN welcomes Myanmar’s elections ...
World Bank president expands on the role for gold.
World Bank president expands on the role for gold.
Security Council finally ready to release report on North Korean technology exports. Some excerpts here. Plus, Abbas wants Council meeting on Israeli settlements.
Don’t forget Bosnia: A warning that the Balkans could disrupt EU and NATO festivities this month.
Forward or backward? ASEAN welcomes Myanmar’s elections as a "significant step."
Gutsy: Spanish warship on EU mission attacked by Somali pirates.
European auto industry emitting less CO2, says the EU.
Portugal struggles to keep the "IMF scenario" at bay.
Russia ready to open transit routes for Afghanistan-bound NATO vehicles.
With NATO summit around the corner, a pessimistic look at European military spending.
Are Germany and the United States drifting apart as the G-20 approaches?
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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