Talks With Iran Failed
January 26, 2011 3 min. read

So talks with Iran failed last weekend.  And as the New York Times piece on the subject suggests, they fell apart for the very reason I noted in my 2010 Year in Review post: the collision of the UN Charter and the NPT.  According to the Times: Mr. Jalili consistently demanded that first the six […]

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Hezbollah Nominates New Lebanese Prime Minister
January 25, 2011 1 min. read

In an atmosphere of reconciliation and peaceful transition, but with a backdrop of tires burning in the streets of Beirut, a new prime minister has been nominated in Lebanon. Najib Mikati was prime minister for a few months in 2005, and he is Lebanon’s richest man. Mikati’s first speech struck a conciliatory tone: “My hand […]

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Deconstructing New START
January 24, 2011 3 min. read

As the Duma, Russia’s Parliament, debates New START ratification, one thing is clear: the treaty doesn’t legally restrict U.S. missile defense options.  Another thing is clear: Russia will probably withdraw from the treaty if the U.S. deploys a missile defense system that significantly reduces the effectiveness of Russia’s strategic deterrent.  As Kostantin Kosachyev, head of […]

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Getting Latin America Wrong Again!
January 23, 2011 3 min. read

The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new lands but seeing with new eyes. Marcel Proust Why do American foreign policy decision makers and diplomats continue to misjudge the political character of Latin America and the Caribbean? Our understanding (really our misunderstanding) of the socio-political landscape of this region traps us into supporting […]

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Gas, Renewables and Fracking
January 23, 2011 4 min. read

(Here’s a great graphic from DOE’s Energy Information Administration that shows how we deploy energy in the US.  Gas is a big factor.) I caught this comprehensive but succinct item at the NYT recently:  Time to Tap the Bounty of U.S. Natural Gas.  It lays out the fact of the astonishing ballooning of new, proven […]

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Lebanon's Developing Crisis
January 23, 2011 2 min. read

A view over Beirut After the Lebanese government collapsed last week, many feared that the conflicted society might descend once again into violence. That danger appears to have passed, and Lebanese leaders have been quick to reassure the international community that the crisis would be resolved peacefully. However, the process of forming a new government is […]

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The Continuance of Rape Warfare
January 23, 2011 3 min. read

In modern combat the atrocities of rape and mutilation, have become all too common strategic tools of warfare.The use of rape as a weapon is one of the most violent and humiliating offenses inflicted on the enemy, the brutalization of rape permanently scars the victim’s mind, soul and often body. The World Health Organization (WHO) […]

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AU sets 5-year goal for African food security
January 23, 2011 3 min. read

African Union (AU) chair Bingu wa Mutharika announced a plan to make Africa food secure in the next five years, according to IRIN. The plan, detailed in a document entitled The African Food Basket, “Requires countries to allocate a substantial portion of their budget to agriculture, provide farming input subsidies, and make available affordable information […]

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Lester Brown: Food crisis 2011 is here
January 23, 2011 3 min. read

Are rising global food prices here to stay?  Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute thinks so, and warns that things will only get worse in the face of climate change, increasing population, water scarcity, and soil erosion. In “The Great Food Crisis of 2011” published in Foreign Policy Magazine, Brown argued the difference between […]

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GailForce: China – Human Rights and National Security Policy
January 22, 2011 8 min. read

Like many Americans I watched the visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao this week with great interest. My original intent had been to focus on defense related issues like China’s rising Pacific naval presence and their relations with North Korea; but an item in the 20 January issue of the Washington Post unexpectedly caught my […]

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The Insider and the Rebel: Walter Lippmann, I.F. Stone and American Journalism
January 22, 2011 11 min. read

by Myra MacPherson The contrasting legacies of two 20th-century American journalists, now long dead, remain fascinating. Walter Lippmann and I.F. Stone are dynamic examples of opposing approaches to journalism. Lippmann the insider, fancied the fine life of being “inside” to a degree unthinkable for most journalists. He wrote speeches for U.S. presidents. When he visited […]

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Do Your Part to Have an Untainted Valentine's
January 22, 2011 6 min. read

As the new year is falls into place the next big spending holiday lies right around the corner, Valentines Day, the day which is to give symbolic measure to love.  Millions of couples are looking for that perfect token to show how they feel for their special someone.  While the day may not be  exchanging […]

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