9 For '09
What would you ask President-elect Obama to do On Day One?
Join the debate! From our energy crisis to the war in the Iraq, tell our next president your ideas for improving American leadership in the world.
Countdown to the Contest
Our judges have begun narrowing down ideas. In just a few days, voting will begin to select the 9 For '09!
O/D/1 Blog
- Americablog
- Atrios (Eschaton)
- Bag News Notes
- Better World Campaign
- Campus Progress
- Charging RINO
- Chris Rabb
- Climate Progress
- Crooks and Liars
- Daily Kos
- Democracy Arsenal
- Democratic Daily
- DeSmog
- Digby
- Ezra Klein
- Feministe
- Firedoglake
- Global Voices Online
- Global Health Policy Blog
- GOP.com/blog
- Gristmill
- Heritage Foundation
- Huffington Post
- Indecision 2008
- Iowa Politics
- American Prospect / MSN's Stop Global Warming
- Sisyphus Shrugged
- Kicking Ass
- Lawyers, Guns, and Money
- Left Coaster
- Majikthise
- Marc Ambinder
- Matthew Yglesias
- Max Blumenthal
- Michelle Malkin
- MyDD
- Nothing But Nets
- Oliver Willis
- Open Left
- Our Task
- Pam Spaulding
- Passport - Blake Hounshell, Foreign Policy Magazine
- Post Global
- Red State
- Republic of T - Terrence Heath
- Salon / Glenn Greenwald
- Seeing the Forest
- Talking Points Memo
- TPM Cafe
- Talk Left
- Taylor Marsh
- The Carpetbagger Report - Steve Benen
- The Caucus
- The Fix
- The Intersection
- The Moderate Voice - Joe Gandelman
- The Note
- The Notion
- The People Speak
- The Plank - The New Republic
- The Swamp
- The Washington Note
- Think Progress
- Timbuktu Chronicles - Emeka Okafor
- Tom Watson
- Town Hall
- Tree Hugger - Jasmin Chua
- United Nations Good Works
- UN Dispatch
- Voices without Votes
- War and Piece
- Washington Monthly
- World Changing - Alex Steffen, Emily Gertz
Bloggers
Poll
Popular Tags
Remembering Sergio Vieiro de Mello
Five years ago today an explosive laden truck pulled rammed into the Baghdad headquarters of the United Nations killing 22 people, including the head of mission Sergio Vieira de Mello.
Sergio was a legend at the United Nations. His extraordinary talents as a peacemaker and diplomat touched the lives of millions of people around the world. Early in his career, he single handily negotiated (with the Khmer Rouge) for the repatriation of thousands of Cambodian refugees. From 1999 to 2002 he oversaw the building-from-scratch of the newest country on earth, East Timor. His great success at nation building led Secretary General Kofi Annan to appoint him as head of mission in Iraq where he would apply his gifts as a peacemaker, humanitarian and troubleshooter to the world's most complex conflict. Sadly, a terrorist's bomb took his life only a few months into his mission. Iraq descended into chaos not long thereafter.
Sergio may be gone, but his legacy lives on. The Pulitzer Prize winning author Samantha Power wrote a book about him this year. An HBO documentary and a feature film (by the director of Hotel Rwanda) are both on the way. And now, there is a new blog on the block to keep Sergio's vision of peacemaking fresh and build a movement for a smart foreign policy built upon the values he embodied as an international civil servant.
Chasing the Flame blog (which shares the title of Power's book) is written by Sergio's friends, admirers, and assorted foreign policy experts. Annick Stevenson, Sergio's former spokesperson, opens the blog.
Imagine a world in which everybody would speak to his/her neighbor, would listen to his/her views and would try to understand them, would, more generally, always wish to know the will of others before deciding, would negotiate before envisaging any military reaction, would never ever view war as the solution to any conflict whatever the reasons may be...A world in which war would become impossible because it would too difficult to think of killing someone you share so much with. This world existed. It was in the mind of Sergio Vieira de Mello. This is how he conceived it and lived it, as much as he could, or at least as a matter of principle.
Add Chasing the Flame to your blogrolls and RSS feeds. Sergio's vision of diplomacy and constructive dialogue is as urgent and relevant to American foreign policy as it ever was.
(Image credit: SergioVM Foundation Cross posted on UN Dispatch )








Post new comment