Morning multilateralism, May 25
Ban Ki-moon states the obvious: there’s no plan B for Syria. UN human rights chief gets another term; no cheers from the U.S. Congress. Sandstorm in Baghdad extends P5+1 talks with Iran–but can’t obscure divisions. In Geneva, India’s human rights record goes under the microscope. On surprise visit to Afghanistan, French president Francois Hollande stands ...
Ban Ki-moon states the obvious: there's no plan B for Syria.
Ban Ki-moon states the obvious: there’s no plan B for Syria.
UN human rights chief gets another term; no cheers from the U.S. Congress.
Sandstorm in Baghdad extends P5+1 talks with Iran–but can’t obscure divisions.
In Geneva, India’s human rights record goes under the microscope.
On surprise visit to Afghanistan, French president Francois Hollande stands by plan to withdraw combat troops from NATO mission.
At the World Trade Organization, European Union tussle with Argentina escalates. Plus, Senate Democrat wants more transparency on Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations.
In Cambodia, ASEAN ministers meet with their "plus three" dialogue partners (Japan, China, and Korea).
"People’s summit" planned alongside Rio+20 earth summit.
New World Bank report shows that the export market is a tough place for newcomers.
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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