Bit harsh on the French. And a selective interpretation of WWII history - I like itCoito ergo sum wrote:How the French were given a permanent place in the first place is difficult to fathom. They appease Hitler in the 1930s, and roll over for him like the proverbial French whore in 1940. Most of them affirmatively sympathized with Germany, and cooperated (Vichy, e.g.) with the pogrom against the Jews. They had Germany driven out of France mainly by the efforts of the UK, US, Canada, Australia and other such countries fighting the good fight, and then they're propped back up and given a seat at the adult's table?Clinton Huxley wrote:'Tis daft - the French still having a permanent seat, ludicrous.klr wrote:That's a good summation of some of the structural problems with the UN, not to mention the balance of power being based on the state of the world back in 1945. Daft, really ...
Must've been for the wine and cheese...

Part of stacking the top table against the Russkies. and whilst the French not so poodle like to the US as the English, fundamentally they are on the same side.
The 5 will always be part of the Security Council - but the Security Council will not always be "the" decider (and stabilzer) it once was. The Countries that matter will always self-define and if we are lucky will create their own forum / commitee for decisions and debate and inactions and arguments. "The UN international stability Committee" - US / Russia / EU / China / India / Brazil / Japan as veto members. .....plus others rotating in - maybe by region? Africa / Oceania / Asia / Europe / North America / South America / Central Asia / Middle East.
Always makes me smile when folk demand Europe flex their military muscles. No sense of history - as only since WWII have us Europeans stopped killing each other on an industrial scale. and (in the main) given up the hobby of travelling long distances to kill foreigners on a large scale. We are very good at that sort of thing, it's how we got where we are. In Europe (those who didn't arrive by plane



On the Libyan thing, really a slam dunk for the West to win politically in the long term (and in our interests to intervene - it's on the EU doorstep) - not to say we won't find a way to f#ck it up again though.