Miguel,
Would you assume that anyone whose address allocation follow "the current address allocation policy of the IANA/InterNIC/RIPE NCC/AP-NIC" is guaranteed 100% global Internet connectivity ?
No one can assume anything in this fast moving world, but at least I assume the last A of 'IANA' means 'Authority' and not 'Anarchy'.
IANA is the *Naming and Addressing* Authority. But to the best of my knowledge the IANA's authority is not sufficient to guarantee Internet-wide connectivity.
If the aim is global connectivity there must be some common rules everybody should follow. If someone has problems with them he can try to convince the authority/community to change them, but in a civilized way, without trying to impose anything to the rest of the world.
What do you think should be covered by the "common rules everybody should follow", and who should be setting these rules ? Yakov.