This book is remarkable for the access its author had to its primary subject—Kofi Annan—and laudable for its on-the-ground accounts of various instances of diplomatic negotiation and bureaucratic intrigue, much of which is revealed to be quite byzantine.
Reading in 2024, I was struck by how little I’d credited the U.N.’s role in the postwar (or at least post-regime-change) rebuilding of Afghanistan and Iraq. Credit James Traub for attempting a much more nuanced account of the U.N.’s work than the American media is wont to provide. (And this was especially the case during the period of his reporting.)
Accounts of interventions in Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone, and Sudan (among others) are illuminating, and at times, maddening in considering the U.N.’s inability to act in a timely or effective manner.
Much of the book is concerned with the U.N.’s relationship with its primary patron, the U.S., and the questions of “reform” that dogged the U.N. throughout Annan’s tenure.
The book does feel a bit disjointed at times, probably as a result of being compiled largely from separate magazine pieces. The order of events isn’t always chronological. Also, with Traub making no attempt to hide either his presence in the narrative or his point of view, the book is tendentious and even self-indulgent at times. (Chapter 23, “Model U.N.,” should have been excised altogether, which would have helped trim the book’s excessive length.)
All-in-all, this book has a number of flaws, but provides a valuable window into an institution and its chief spokesman at a pivotal time in modern history.