Well, obviously the UN needs to be destroyed, but the problem is that nobody has dealt with series bilateral diplomacy in a long time. Ever since the institution of the League of Nations there's been an unfortunate trend towards the centralization of the diplomatic process and the creation of a bureaucracy of diplomats owing allegiance to no State, but rather to some idealized concept. This has caused many problems for the world as they pursue certain aims of their own in the diplomatic system rather than the aims of the respective States. This system needs to be ended, and the steps taken so far have at least been partially effective in negating it, which is better than nothing.Darth Wong wrote:This bit about "gathering support from other nations" is a very nicely worded way of describing their position of "we'll do whatever we want, and if you don't agree with us then fuck you". Their attitude toward the international community was PRECISELY the same as their attitude toward the UN.
The problem is that there's nobody alive today with any experience in how to work in a non-UN world. Basically, you have to re-learn the traditional diplomatic processes, which should be in theory more successful for the States involved in them. However, hostility from the diplomats who have been raised in the UN idealism, and general leftist hostility due to their wedding to the ideal of the UN utopianism, combined with the simple reality of that inexperience, has created some serious problems. The negotiations with Turkey were an example of this--we quite simply blundered like stuck pigs when trying to get the basing rights there. The idea has been right, but the execution has been in many cases, bluntly, horribly flawed, and I'd say this was inevitable; it's horribly flawed because nobody has tried to play this game in a long time.