Defense & Security

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Barack Obama: Naif or Visionary?
July 5, 2009 7 min. read

Disarmament doesn’t usher in a safer world, arming with the right armaments, defensive armaments, does. […]

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BRICs in Africa
July 2, 2009 1 min. read

Demonstrating their global reach, Brazil, Russia, India and China are improving ties with Africa. The BRICs are looking to gain influence, friends, access to raw materials and export markets. Standard Bank of South Africa is publishing a “BRIC in Africa” series focusing on the new players in Africa (the initial report was released in May […]

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Aging Powers
July 1, 2009 1 min. read

The Economist developed a multimedia feature about the rich world’s rapidly aging population and the anticipated economic consequences. “At present, the developed countries on average have about four people of working age for every person over 65. But by 2050 this will have come down to only two workers for every pensioner.” With people living […]

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What to do with the dollar?
June 29, 2009 2 min. read

Today the American Dollar was met with both encouraging and potentially disheartening news.  First, the Dollar rose against the Australian Dollar, Swiss Franc and Yen as China announced that the USD will continue to remain the world’s leading trade currency.  In addition, Beijing said it will not make changes to its foreign-exchange reserves.  This comes […]

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Diplomacy with a Thugocracy
June 29, 2009 3 min. read

Despite the disputed election results and events of the last two weeks, diplomacy remains America’s best option with Iran. In some of his strongest words about Iran’s government, President Obama said on Friday that “there is no doubt that any direct dialogue or diplomacy with Iran is going to be affected by the events of […]

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Russia’s Road Ahead
June 29, 2009 2 min. read

Thomas Friedman, a columnist for The New York Times, argues in his latest op-ed that Russia has wasted the financial crisis. “Oil prices rebounded from $30 to $70 a barrel too quickly, so the pressure for Russia to really reform and diversify its economy is off,” writes Mr. Friedman. “The struggle for Russia’s post-Communist economic […]

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Rising Health Problems and Alcohol in Russia
June 26, 2009 1 min. read

Whether or not Russia is a rising power (and it’s been suffering on the economic front lately), it certainly does have a national drinking problem.  The British medical journal The Lancet produced a study on worldwide use of alcohol and its relationship to cause of death.  It discovered a sobering statistic: that 1 in every […]

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OECD Economic Outlook: Should we still trust economists?
June 24, 2009 8 min. read

  Why should we trust them?  Economists in think tanks the world over got it wrong before this crisis.  Now, many of them point to the “Black Swan” event, the large-impact, hard-to-predict rare event, to explain away their flawed work and keep their jobs.  Yet the data were there – reversion of U.S. households to […]

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Decoupling Debate
June 24, 2009 3 min. read

The Great Recession was supposed to be the death of the decoupling debate. The theory that emerging markets were no longer dependent on developed countries for growth – and in some way insulated from the financial troubles in the West – was discredited as no one was left untouched by the economic crisis. Arvind Subramanian, […]

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The iBRIC
June 24, 2009 1 min. read

Who should be included in the group of the world’s biggest emerging markets? Sure, the grouping could be the BRIC, BIC or even IC, but maybe it should be the iBRIC. According to a report in Bloomberg News, Morgan Stanley believes Indonesia should be included in the so-called BRIC countries along with Brazil, Russia, India […]

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Rethinking Asia’s Rise
June 23, 2009 2 min. read

Is the global balance of power shifting from West to East? Minxin Pei, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, argues in the latest issue of Foreign Policy that the hype about America’s decline and Asia’s rise is premature. Think Again: Asia’s Rise challenges the basic assumptions made about Asia’s emergence as a […]

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China and Russia – Friends or Foes?
June 19, 2009 2 min. read

China-Russia relations have markedly improved since the collapse of the Soviet Union, but potential problems between the neighboring giants loom on the horizon. David Shambaugh, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and director of the China Policy Program at George Washington University, published an opinion piece this week in The New York Times saying that […]

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