Morning multilateralism, Nov. 17
Please, take our money: The EU presses a reluctant Dublin to accept aid. The IMF confirms that it’s now consulting with Ireland. Meanwhile, the Fund reshuffles the basket of currencies that make up its phantom money. Nigeria reports to the Security Council on possibly illegal Iranian arms shipment. Plus, the Council talks Sudan in a ...
Please, take our money: The EU presses a reluctant Dublin to accept aid. The IMF confirms that it's now consulting with Ireland. Meanwhile, the Fund reshuffles the basket of currencies that make up its phantom money.
Please, take our money: The EU presses a reluctant Dublin to accept aid. The IMF confirms that it’s now consulting with Ireland. Meanwhile, the Fund reshuffles the basket of currencies that make up its phantom money.
Nigeria reports to the Security Council on possibly illegal Iranian arms shipment. Plus, the Council talks Sudan in a special, foreign-minister level session.
With the British and Dutch skeptical, internal EU budget talks are stuck. Plus, is the budget fight really about taming the bumptious EU parliament?
A Q&A on the upcoming climate change talks in Cancun.
Afghanistan is a "trap," says new French defence minister on eve of Libson summit.
Russia’s talking again about an international tribunal for Somali pirates.
Costa Rica wants the Organization of American States to pressure Nicaragua on border dispute.
The World Bank and the Gates Foundation team up to research how the world’s poor save and spend money.
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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