Medvedev establishes environmental buffer zone around Wrangel Island
January 5, 2013 5 min. read

On December 27, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev signed a decree creating a new buffer zone around Wrangel Island in the Arctic. Wrangel Island and nearby Herald Island have enjoyed environmental protection since 1976, when the USSR declared them to be state nature reserves (zapovednik, in Russian). Wrangel and Herald Islands are the only parts […]

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Pakistan: Will Doctrinal Shifts Lead to Changes toward India?
January 5, 2013 5 min. read

According to new media reports (here and here), the Pakistani army has revised its doctrinal handbook to give priority to the country’s burgeoning internal security challenges.  The change appears, at least on the surface, to represent a fundamental shift away from the “India-centric” orientation that General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the powerful army chief, has long […]

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The Bahá’ís in Iran Are Systematically Abused
January 4, 2013 5 min. read

On Wednesday, January 2, the U.S. House of Representatives, in a unanimous resolution, condemned the leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran for its systematic abuse of Iran’s Bahá’í minority. Resolution 134, or H. Res. 134, “calls on President Obama and Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, “to immediately condemn the Government of Iran’s continued violation […]

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Welcome, Comrade Depardieu!
January 3, 2013 3 min. read

As a third of young Russian graduates consider fleeing Russia for better opportunities abroad, Putin has received a welcome boost to his deadly whataboutist arsenal. An enormous, large-nosed, drunk boost. Its name? Depardieu. He may not look like Dean Reed, but hey, it’s the best we can do for now. ‘Maybe some of our misguided hipsters […]

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A Critical Look at Iran’s Out-of-Country Voting Program
January 3, 2013 5 min. read

The upcoming presidential elections in Iran is scheduled for June 14, 2013. Iran’s 2009 presidential election was fraught with accusations of fraud and irregularities. While the elections inside Iran received significant international media attention, the results of Iran’s out-of-country voting (external vote) in 2009 did not receive a well-deserved scrutiny. With Iran’s preparations to hold […]

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Likud Openly Trying to Kill the Two-State Solution
January 3, 2013 3 min. read

Anyone trying to justify that Likud sincerely wants two states for two peoples, Israel for the Jews and Palestine for the Palestinians, is lying through their teeth. Several senior Likud ministers who attended the Jerusalem conference “Application of Israeli Sovereignty of Judea and Samaria” on Tuesday night openly called for the annexation of the West […]

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More trouble for Shell in Alaska as oil rig runs aground
January 2, 2013 6 min. read

2013 has not gotten off to an auspicious start for Shell. Its oil rig, the Kulluk, has run aground with hundreds of thousands of gallons of fuel and oil on board. On Monday night, two of Shell’s ships, the Aiviq and the Alert, were towing the Kulluk near the coast of Kodiak Island in southern Alaska […]

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Putin orders 2013 to begin
January 1, 2013 2 min. read
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How you usher in the new year says a lot about a country. In the capital of capitalism, Americans huddle amidst the neon billboards of Times Square; according to wine-growing tradition, the Spanish eat a dozen grapes; Italians tuck into a stuffed pig trotter accompanied by lentils, symbols of good fortune and prosperity reflecting the […]

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Cuba, Chavez, and the Turn of the New Year
January 1, 2013 4 min. read

Fidel Castro’s long-declining health and the high average age of his successors are well-worn topics in Cuba discussions. As we turn the page on 2012, Cuba watchers and Cubans alike are now discussing the health of the leader of a different country: Venezuela. Hugo Chávez recently suffered still new complications from his cancer surgery, and […]

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The Year of the Dragon
December 31, 2012 5 min. read

The year 2012 was for Beijing a year to display its dragon-like qualities of authority, dignity, and honor. The dragon is also the symbol of the emperor, so it may have been auspicious for a new leader to be chosen during November’s meeting of the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China. While […]

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Secretary Kerry and the Eurozone
December 29, 2012 5 min. read

President Obama’s actual nomination of Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) to be the next Secretary of State seems certain to succeed where mere discussion of other nominees – U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice for State and former Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) for Defense – quickly met with serious criticism. In its endorsement of his nomination, The Washington […]

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Will the “China Rising” Narrative run into the Reform Blues?
December 28, 2012 2 min. read

A post earlier this month noted how well-connected state-owned enterprises in China were stymieing key economic reforms advocated by outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao and questioned whether the country’s new leader, Xi Jinping, would do any better given that the country’s 145,000 state-run companies are a gold mine of wealth and privilege for rent-seeking Communist Party […]

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