Bureaucracy, Knowledge and Traffic Congestion in Bangladesh
May 14, 2010 3 min. read

This is a bit like sampling I suspect, but I happen to think that the World Bank’s blog on South Asia is magnificent.  The breadth of intellectual and informed discussion supported by logic and empirics is wonderfully awe inspiring. Well, certainly to me, if no one else.  But I’d suggest that if you read this […]

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Stocking Up for War
May 13, 2010 3 min. read

Alright. I admit it. I probably sound like Dick Cheney on the verge of the Iraq invasion with the amount of war foreshadowing that I’ve referenced repeatedly in recent posts. But, that won’t stop me. I write what I see. Both Iran and Israel are stocking their arsenals to prepare for a head-on collision, with […]

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The FPA Goes European: How Many Countries Can One Trillion Save?
May 13, 2010 4 min. read

The FPA has gone European over the last while as several blogs addressed the issue of the Greek Tragedy and focused on Europe in concert with a talk by French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde as she addressed the 2nd annual Global Financial Forum, sponsored by the FPA, Chatham House and British-American Business, on global financial regulation […]

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The US and Post-Cold War, Post-9/11 Africa Policy
May 13, 2010 1 min. read

My colleague Kimberley Curtis at the FPA Human Rights Blog has an important post, “Saying enough is enough,” on the implications of House of Representatives passing the Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act. Also check out Texas in Africa’s take on her attendance at a Town Hall meeting hosted by the government […]

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Points For Creativity . . .
May 13, 2010 1 min. read

I leave this without remark because some things simply defy commentary.

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From Tough Love to Bear Hugs
May 13, 2010 3 min. read

It wasn’t long ago I wrote a piece titled ‘Obama-Karzai: Fighting Alone in a Locked Room‘ and now look at where we are….hugs and kisses of the political flavor are all the rage. The Obama administration has literally and figuratively rolled out the red carpet for Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his entourage and relations […]

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Sudan's Dubious Election
May 13, 2010 1 min. read

No surprise alert: The Atlanta-based Carter Center has raised “serious questions about the accuracy of [Sudan’s] election results.”

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The Consequences of Bangladesh's Power Crisis
May 13, 2010 3 min. read

I’ve been writing on Bangladesh’s power and water crisis. Admittedly I’ve been playing catch-up, because the story has been written up in The Daily Star and other news outlets. Nevertheless, it’s not a story that has reached an international audience, principally because the story, though a milling centipede does not have legs. No one has […]

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Medvedev's Mideast Muscle
May 12, 2010 2 min. read

As Nadia Petrova threw Serena Williams out of the Madrid Open, President Medvedev made his own powerplay in the Middle East by delivering landmark nuclear pacts with Turkey and Syria. As a result, Russia may begin building nuclear power plants in the two countries. Certainly, America is feeling diplomatically outflanked, but is there any real […]

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Recovering the US-Japan Alliance?
May 12, 2010 1 min. read

An approaching deadline doesn’t permit me time to pick this apart, so I’ll leave that to you. A 12 Step Recovery Plan for the US-Japan Alliance by Michael Green and Nick Szechenyi of the CSIS Japan Chair: 1) Don’t give up on Futenma (Yet.) 2) Call a Time Out if the Deal Collapses 3) Damage […]

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SAARC III – Challenges and Prospects
May 12, 2010 5 min. read

South Asia is seen as a geo-strategic, geo-economic unit by some and a single civilizational whole by others. The program of regional cooperation was expected to benefit immensely from the historical and cultural ties connecting people across national borders in South Asia. Such assessments created positive possibilities regarding cooperation in the region. Despite differences over […]

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Leading Up to the World Cup
May 12, 2010 1 min. read

Mexico notched a ho-hum 1-0 victory over Senegal on Monday night. Afterward, a Mexican TV commentator said the game, played at Chicago’s Soldier Field, “was embarrassing.” The good news is the squad playing in South Africa in a month’s time is likely to start only a few of players from Monday night’s starting line-up. Luckily, […]

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