It's much ado about nothing--many of the root servers already reside outside of the US, and domain names are doled out by ICANN. Hint: The I stands for International. The US has not had 'unilateral control' of the Internet for years (i.e. when it stopped being a DoD project). Keep in mind the World Wide Web, which many think of as the "Internet", is a European invention. It appears many nations favor moving ICANN to UN control which, honestly, shouldn't make any difference in the internationalization of the Internet, except perhaps to break it. The US is taking a 'it's not broke, don't fix it' attitude.