When you say they must abadon all official positions outside of their United Regions office, does that apply to a position in another organization, for example, would a Representative in the United Regions need to resign a Cabinet position in The North Pacific or does it only apply with the United Regions itself?
No, it applies for all positions in NationStates (that the UR can find out about). There's no harm in a cabinet member being an ambassador, but not a representative.
I don't mean to lecture, but that is a stupid policy... Deleting accounts is not a good idea.
It really depends on the extent to which you wish to control your forum. Sometimes it can be an excellent policy. You aren't familiar with the incident, but a member who was disgruntled by a string of peacekeeping missions sabotaged our forums and I was just barely able to transfer and rewrite the content. We created that new provision to make sure that the ability to delete accounts (in case of the discovery of a spy) was available and you have to understand that activity needs to be protected in an organization that suddenly went very inactive (granted, it hasn't done much good recently, but it is absolutely necessary to keep a steady ambassador and a link with your member region, so no dormant accounts can be allowed).
If there is no time limit, then how do you determine whether or not the General Assembly has achieved a seventy-percent supermajority? For example, several regions and their ambassadors could simply not vote and claim they are still thinking it over, effectively stalling a vote indefinitely.
"If the GA is not able to achieve a seventy-percent majority vote, the poll shall then be determined by simple majority." That provision protects against what you're talking about. Within the boundaries of law, the SG has the power to determine when the conversion from 70% majority to simple majority takes place, if people stall or are indifferent/inactive.
. . . two unfriendly regions could both be in the United Regions, one on the Security Council and another not on the Security Council and the one on the Council could manipulate intelligence against the one not on the Council. Moreover, this creates a division between those regions who do receive access and those who don't.
No manipulation is possible, since the law protects against SICUR spying on member regions. As to creating divisions, we've never really had that problem. When we were really active, there were never any complaints about the power system -- I guess it's because everyone saw the bigger picture; those are the kind of people I want in the organization. To be honest, they had a HUGE amount of confidence in me and what I said went (even though I almost always turned it over to the GA for purposes of fairness). So I never really had to deal with internal strife.
Do you define defense, invasion, and/or liberation?
No, and that was purposeful. We make it clear that we don't accept invaders (and we accept the standard definition, although it's mostly determined by circumstance), but setting hard lines could create internal strife and if we accidentally fall into the sniping camp of organized defenders, we could get a lot of regions turning us down because of our "defender" status. That's what we are, but we don't usually go by that name -- we're just PC.
Requiring a vote for the use of unrepresented military seems unnecessarily bueracratic and may tie up resources.
Well, the point was to keep every Tom, Dick and Harry from running around with a UR flag (even though they're UR members, the UR may not approve of their flag and name being used for this or that mission). Only a small group of regions (the permanent URSC members) have that authority, and they have it because they've proven themselves worthy of it, really. Because that is a very weak premise, I decided to cut down the powers of the Security Council from what they were originally (and what they are in the real UN).
What if the Security Council takes too long to make a decision, tying up resources? How are field commanders appointed? Do field commanders change with new missions?
They won't, because if Permanent Number 1 picks a commander and Permanent Number 2 disagrees, the unspoken authority of the Secretary General allows him/her to step in and help them decide. Again, I never had to deal with animosity and/or internal disagreements. And as to field commanders changing, it's an unspoken policy at the UR that they should rotate regularly, which is what we did, to maintain fairness and make sure no one feels left out. So field commanders can be chosen from a 200-member region one day and an active three-member one the next.
One of the central (and probably dangerous) policies was that small regions need to be given lots of attention and treated as equally important. I was always disgruntled with people who didn't want to join my old regions because they were brand new.