Paul Wells: It’s possible to admire Bob Rae’s contribution to Canadian public life and, at the same time, to notice that other countries normally send people with far more diplomatic experience to the UN
Tag Archives: United Nations
The UN Security Council rout: Canada’s (at the) back!
Paul Wells: Believing a win at the UN would fall from the heavens on Trudeau because he wasn’t Harper was an expression of the narcissism and shallowness that have characterized this government during much of its time in office
Where has the UN been during the coronavirus pandemic?
Sergio Marchi: The coronavirus represents the largest challenge the world has seen since the UN was founded, other than World War II, yet it has fostered little international cooperation
United Nations delegates think Donald Trump is funny—despite themselves
Trump claimed that ‘humanity is better’ thanks to him. In a body that sustains itself on problems it never solves, that’s cause for nervous laughter
Why Canada will lead the charge on the UN’s global refugee plan
Op-ed: The UN’s global compact on refugees could be a game-changer—and Canada is well-placed to help make it a reality, say two cabinet ministers and a UN official
The UN meets the Trump doctrine: blow everything up
Terry Glavin: There is a lot wrong with the UN Human Rights Council, but the United States’ abdication of its UN leadership role serves no one
Canada’s peacekeeping mission to Mali could become a new Afghanistan
Opinion: There is no peace to keep in Mali, and the UN mission there has become a deadly quagmire—one that Canada might be wise to just avoid
On peacekeeping, Canada is failing the global community
Opinion: Canada’s levels of global military contribution are at their lowest point since 1956—and conditions suggest that may not change soon
As a refugee crisis unfolds, Central America needs Canada’s help
Opinion: The worsening circumstances for desperate people in countries like Honduras demand Canada’s attention
Does Ontario’s Black Youth Action Plan do enough?
Opinion: The Ontario government’s plan to invest in Black youth is a good first step—but it still fails to untangle many of the wider systemic issues at play