Morning multilateralism, June 5
Vladimir Putin arrives in Beijing for Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting. Plus, Russia warns that UN Human Rights Council actions may help trigger outside intervention in Syria. Emergency call: G7 finance ministers speak this morning about the Eurozone crisis. Exit strategy: NATO strikes transit deals as it prepares for Afghanistan drawdown. International Atomic Energy Agency chief ...
Vladimir Putin arrives in Beijing for Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting. Plus, Russia warns that UN Human Rights Council actions may help trigger outside intervention in Syria.
Vladimir Putin arrives in Beijing for Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting. Plus, Russia warns that UN Human Rights Council actions may help trigger outside intervention in Syria.
Emergency call: G7 finance ministers speak this morning about the Eurozone crisis.
Exit strategy: NATO strikes transit deals as it prepares for Afghanistan drawdown.
International Atomic Energy Agency chief worries that Iran is destroying evidence at critical site.
Prodded by the UN and African Union, Sudan and South Sudan start new round of security talks. Plus, outgoing ICC prosecutor tells states to get creative about isolating Sudan’s president.
World Bank chief economist Justin Lin leaves post, likely headed back to China.
European Commission chastises new Serbian president for denying that the Srebrenica massacre constituted genocide.
In the run-up to an Organization of American States meeting, Bolivia spars with Chile over sea access.
Canada tweaks its negotiating position in advance of global arms trade treaty negotiations.
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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