For more than two decades now, every year around this time I become an international diplomat.
My mission? Join a team negotiating a deal with Canadians about how the two countries should divide up fishing rights in one of the most fertile offshore areas in the world, Eastern Georges Bank.
Maps show a line through Georges that doesn’t exist on the water of course. It’s the boundary between the countries, and it took the World Court in the Hague to define it after bitter disputes dating back to the 1970s. As both the US and Canada extended their control of fishing rights, a huge area – 13,000 to 18,000 nautical miles – was contested.






