Diplomacy and International Institutions

International Organizations

  • World Trade Organization (WTO)
    A Reset of the World Trade Organization's Appellate Body
    The Trump administration has destroyed the World Trade Organization’s Appellate Body, much to the dismay of those needing the certainty of a rules-based trading system. Three reforms could get it back on track.
  • West Africa
    Envoy for West Africa and the Sahel Delivers Grim Message to UNSC
    On Monday, December 16, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, special representative and head of the UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS) delivered a grim message to the UN Security Council. He characterized West Africa as “shaken by unprecedented violence,” involving terrorism, organized crime, and intercommunal violence. He made specific reference to al-Qaeda’s explotiation of local circumstances to spread extremism, including conflicts over land and water use. He also noted the consequences of climate change on agriculture and the livestock industry in the region. Chambas told the Security Council that the region continues to need donor and technical assistance, but he also emphasized the region’s need for law-enforcement and security assistance. He cited the need for international coordination to respond to illicit trade, especially in arms. A lawyer and diplomat from Ghana, Chambas has been in his current position since 2014. He has had a long and distinguished career in West Africa, including holding the presidency of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission, as secretary general of the African, Caribbean, and Pacific Group of States, and as head of the Joint United Nations–African Union Mission to Darfur. He is a highly distinguished international civil servant who speaks with special credibility on West African affairs. Hence the importance of his latest statement to the UN Security Council. For the United States and some other donor countries, security and law-enforcement assistance can be difficult because of the region’s weak governance and corruption. But Chambas was clear that addressing governance, partly through achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, is crucial to ending the violence facing West Africa. This is primarily the responsibility of the African states in question, though friends of the regional can help on the margins.
  • Human Trafficking
    The Security Implications of Human Trafficking
    Human trafficking can fuel conflict, drive displacement, and undercut the ability of international institutions to promote stability. The United States should work to disrupt and dismantle the criminal networks and terrorist groups that exploit conflict-related human trafficking, while prioritizing the prevention and prosecution of and protection from human trafficking in conflict contexts.