Caucasus Year in Review, Part II: Azerbaijan
December 8, 2011 7 min. read

For Azerbaijan’s political and human rights landscape, 2011 was a year of tumult, small triumphs, and anguish. I’ve written a great deal on topics this year such as the arrests and imprisonment of Jabbar Savalan and Bakhtiar Hajiyev, the opposition protests in February through mid-June, and the tragic death of Rafiq Tagi, stabbed to death […]

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Live Webcast of ElBaradei Keynote Speech on Egypt and Arab Spring
December 8, 2011 1 min. read

Live webcast speech by Dr. Mohammed ElBaradei, the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Saturday, December 10th from 2:45-3:30pm Central European Time (CET). Dr. ElBaradei will be delivering a highly anticipated keynote at the Cisco Public Services Summit on the topic of “Egypt’s March Towards Democracy.”  Dr. ElBaradei will speak for 20 minutes and then take questions from […]

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China’s Soft Power in Southeast Asia
December 7, 2011 5 min. read

There are two types of power evident in the study of international relations: hard power and soft power. The former is coercive, and is associated with a state’s use of military force or economic pressure in order to maximize its interests. Hard power is advocated by those who believe that relative gains are the most […]

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Blood Cotton From Uzbekistan
December 7, 2011 5 min. read

As I’ve written on the subject before, Uzbekistan is one of the worst human rights offenders out there. Recent news of child labor during this fall’s cotton harvesting season once again put the country into the international spotlight drawing sharp criticism by human rights activists. Meanwhile, in the same vein, Bell Pottinger Group’s dealings with […]

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President Romney is Going to Israel!
December 7, 2011 5 min. read

Republican candidate for President, Mitt Romney, said this week that if he becomes President, he will visit Israel during his first foreign trip. So he is only two elections away from those famous Israeli breakfasts and some photo ops at the Kotel with those awkward cardboard kippahs. So he has obviously earned the votes of […]

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Congressional Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation holds hearing on icebreakers
December 7, 2011 10 min. read

The Congressional Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, part of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, held a hearing on Thursday, December 1 on U.S. Coast Guard operations in the Arctic. The chief topic of concern was icebreakers. As I reported back in February, the U.S. will be without heavy icebreakers for at least two […]

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Enrique Peña Nieto’s Candidacy Shows its Vulnerabilities
December 6, 2011 3 min. read

In little over a week since officially entering Mexico’s 2012 Presidential contest, the campaign of the Institutional Revolutionary Party’s (PRI) Enrique Peña Nieto already finds itself in full damage control following an embarrassing performance by the candidate during the presentation of his new book, and disparaging comments made by the candidate’s teenage daughter. While speaking […]

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Haiti: Martelly Shifts Gear on Foreign Policy at CELAC
December 6, 2011 5 min. read

“The Venezuelan cooperation is now number one,” said President Michel Martelly shortly before boarding his plane to Caracas, land of Hugo Chavez. “It gives most grants and aids to Haiti,” added the president at Toussaint Louverture airport’s diplomatic room ahead of his first official trip to Venezuela as a member of the Community of Latin […]

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News Roundup
December 6, 2011 3 min. read

Here are a few stories that I’ve been thinking about in recent days: A new report from the Africa Center for Strategic Studies (ACSS), Africa and the Arab Spring: A New Era of Democratic Expectations, the first volume of the Africa Center’s new Special Report series, uses the Arab Spring as a lens through which […]

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If Scheherazade Had Reported on a Murder Case
December 5, 2011 5 min. read

Book Review Assassins of the Turquoise Palace by Roya Hakakian 322 pages- published by Grove Press “Number seven,” he said to the agent beside him”. These were the words uttered by Parviz Dastmalchi, a survivor of and witness to an assassination that shook Europe and the continent’s relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran. Parviz […]

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Putin Gets Stuffed (Along with his Ballots)
December 5, 2011 2 min. read

It’s not surprising that Putin lost his 2/3 majority in parliament today. Many people have turned against him and his party for many reasons: his inability to improve living standards, deal with corruption and reform the military, police, health and education systems. But perhaps most damning: his inability to get more than 50% of the […]

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Caucasus Year in Review Part I: Georgia and Armenia
December 4, 2011 7 min. read

Georgia 2011 was the year when former Parliament Speaker Nino Burjanadze put the finishing touches on her long campaign to discredit former Parliament Speaker Nino Burjanadze. Ms. Burjanadze began her re-branding effort from responsible, clear-headed opposition leader to uncompromising radical after forming her own political party in 2008. The disastrous Russo-Georgian War in the same […]

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