Opinion / Negotiation Technique

EU Budget: That Chinese Alarm Clock

I haven’t ever published here before the full text of my legendary Chinese Alarm-Clock email about the then EU Budget negotiations that was leaked in late 2005 by someone senior (in the Treasury?) to the Sunday Times and caused a vast furore in Poland. It was a spoof speaking note […]

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G20 Summit: Putin, Sanctions and Ukraine

The G20 Summit in Australia ends. The assembled leaders start the long flights home. The results are in the communique, a classic example of a dull, badly written, important text: We have agreed on a set of voluntary leading practices to promote and prioritise quality investment, particularly in infrastructure. To […]

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When Borders Melt

My latest piece for DIPLOMAT wonders what happens when international borders start to melt: … some people think that borders are less and less important. This in turn seems to signify politically (or even morally) that within the European Union so-called nation states are less and less important. As perhaps […]

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Canada (and UK) – not Intimidated by Islamist Murder?

Greetings. Long time no blog. I have been racing around the planet and just don’t feel like opining from a weary hotel bedroom. My peregrinations have included the IAEA in Vienna to deliver with other colleagues a senior leadership course; Astana in Kazakhstan, for a speechwriting course for top Kazakh officials, […]

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Are We Negotiating with ISIS?

Here’s my latest piece at PunditWire, looking at President Obama’s UN speech (both substance and technique) and what it says about negotiating: Even the President of the United States drifts into the tritest clichés on such occasions: We come together at a crossroads between war and peace; between disorder and […]

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President Obama Clarity Watch

Mulling over my latest piece for PunditWire I started to look at one of President Obama’s rhetorical tics: his use of the word ‘clear’. Take, for example, his 10 September statement on US policy towards ISIL/ISIS. Three hits! Now let’s make two things clear:  ISIL is not “Islamic.” Our objective is […]

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Assange and ‘Diplomatic Asylum’

A reader has sent me this fascinating email with many points of historical interest (reproduced with his permission) on the general subject of ‘diplomatic asylum’ (and the Assange case): Dear Charles  I’m a retired DS officer, who follows your website with interest.  I enjoy what you say and how you […]

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Putin, Ukraine, Bosnia, Macbeth

My latest Telegraph piece on Ukraine is up on the DT website: Russia’s “principled demands” are unchanged: that Ukraine stay independent of all “blocs”; that eastern areas of Ukraine get radical autonomy allowing them to have special economic relations with Russia; and that Ukraine kisses goodbye to Crimea. A settlement […]

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Assange the Transformer: can he become an Ecuador Diplomat?

Diligent readers will remember that now and then I argue with Brian Barder, another former Ambassador turned energetic contrarian. The Assange Saga in its early days gave one such exchange, where we disagreed over how far if at all the UK government might be within its rights to enter the […]

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The Case against Israel

One reader approves of my Warsi letter piece for the Telegraph: Thank you for your excellent piece on Baroness Warsi’s resignation letter. It is profoundly depressing to find such poor literacy and reasoning skills in anyone, let alone a senior government minister. What the country needs is government that is […]

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