At the March 25 board meeting of the United Nations Association-USA Wisconsin Division, those in attendance engaged in a vigorous and thought-provoking discussion about the implications of UN and US military intervention in Libya.
We resolved to continue the dialogue here, and hope that others will join in, too.
This newly-created blog will serve as a forum for discussion of international justice issues related to the UN, and US foreign policy. We'll also link to other related sites, and be place where you can find out about upcoming speakers and other events.
For right now, please consider weighing in on the situation in Libya. Did the potential humanitarian concern about the slaughter of innocents justify this action? Was the reaction too little, too late? Does this represent a third front in the U.S.'s misguided attempts to achieve its foreign policy goals in this part of the world?
And in the bigger picture: why didn't US and other world diplomats anticipate the pro-democracy uprisings now occurring all across North African and the Middle East? Is U.S. foreign policy equipped to support these nascent movements, even if they may be hostile and resentful of past U.S. foreign policy? How is Barack Obama behaving differently than his predecessors (most notably G.W. Bush) in both the tenor of his remarks, and his actions?
Please join in our conversation by commenting below. First time visitors to blogspot or blogger may need to complete a brief registration process by following the prompts.
UNA-WI board members have suggested the following links:
"Libya Intervention Threatens the Arab Spring," article by Phyllis Bennis on anti-war.com