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Russia's Mines Remain a Minefield
May 12, 2010 2 min. read

As Russia replayed its glorious WWII past in Red Square, a darker history repeated itself just miles away. “The Russian Prime Minister has called for tougher safety measures after one of the country’s worst mine accidents in a generation” reads the lead paragraph of a BBC article entitled “Russia’s Mine Safety Woes. The article appears […]

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Victory At All Costs
May 9, 2010 6 min. read

Today is Victory Day. I remember eating dinner at my grandparents’ austere Voronezh apartment as a kid with real silver silverwave, butter knives with hollow bulbous handles and faded ornate monograms featuring a giant, unslavic letter: W. It was ‘trophy’ silver my grandfather brought back from Berlin 65 years ago. A long time, but not […]

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Afghanistan: Topography Map
May 9, 2010 1 min. read
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Below you will find a topographic map of Afghanistan and its neighbors. The dense colors of the map showcase the high elevation and dry climate of the country and contrast greatly with southeastern Pakistan. Check out the full size of this map and others at www.afghan-web.com.

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The Ticktock of the Clock
May 7, 2010 5 min. read

When President Obama announced that he was sending an additional 30,000 American troops to work under Gen. McChrystal’s leadership in Afghanistan, his very next sentence stated that US forces would be starting a withdrawal 18 months later on July 2011. I was critical of this at the time and still am. The US and the […]

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Stalinism, Suppressed Writers, and Double Standards
May 6, 2010 4 min. read

The way journalism is treated in today’s Russia, perhaps it is not surprising that one of its greatest practitioners continues to linger in obscurity decades after his death. Yet The Guardian’s Luke Harding sees the hand of a new Stalinism behind the contemporary unpopularity of Vasily Grossman, the legendary war reporter and novelist whose Tolstoian […]

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Saving Russia From Terrorist-Loving Journalists
May 6, 2010 1 min. read

Russian journalists are used to being kicked when they’re down. But new proposed legislation could go much further by basically branding the country’s  already curbed, cowed and embattled reporters accessories to terrorists. According to the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers, The proposal, which was presented to the country’s lower parliament, the State Duma, […]

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Luzh-Zilla! How the Moscow Mayor's Development Plan Could Wreak Havoc On Two Continents
May 5, 2010 3 min. read

Looks like Hugo Chavez’s fabled sense of smell has finally deserted him. How else to explain the Venezuelan leader’s puzzling decision to take lessons in socialist town planning from Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov. True, Luzhkov can boast of his victorious controversial Gen Plan, a 15 year development blueprint for Moscow, which was passed today (using […]

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Going Gaga in Farah Province
May 3, 2010 1 min. read

A soldier’s life should include some down time where he/she can let loose. Well, some American servicemen in Farah province showed that they would use their down time to ‘get down’. Check out this video of these eight tough soldiers performing Lady Gaga’s ‘Telephone’:

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Negotiating with the Taliban: What Do Americans Think?
April 28, 2010 4 min. read

The always provocative Ahmed Rashid has another worthwhile column in the Washington Post about the US and Karzai government negotiating with the Taliban that tangentially brought up an interesting issue: How would American voters react to American talks with the Taliban? This is obviously an important factor as there will inevitably be some form of […]

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Putinism: Burnt by the Box Office?
April 27, 2010 4 min. read

All is not lost in Russia. Though deprived of meaningful political democracy, its citizens can still vote with their wallets and cinema tickets. And their hearty rejection of “Burnt by the Sun 2”, Russia’s most expensive movie showed more than mere disgust at the laughably bad WWII ‘epic’ or the bloated vanity of its sycophant […]

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Afghanistan-India: A Growing Relationship?
April 22, 2010 1 min. read

Manasi Kulkarni (Kakatkar) has a very informative piece on FPA’s India blog about India’s growing role in Afghanistan. Here is a piece: The meeting between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Obama on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit last week, seems to have produced positive results for India. The US ambassador to India, […]

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Is Latvia the EU's Israel?
April 21, 2010 3 min. read

They were born and live in a small, prosperous and democratic country. Yet that country refuses to give them citizenship rights because they happen to share an ethnicity with its large and authoritarian Eastern neighbour, which has invaded it in the past. Aggrieved at such discrimination, they see their cries fall on deaf ears among […]

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