Click on the photo to launch the 5 minute audio-photo slide. Testimonies…in their own words. Yesterday I met two Iranian political refugees. Their relatives are at Camp Ashraf, a refugee camp north of Baghdad with around 3500 Iranians. At the end of July, Iraqi security forces entered the camp and beat the residents. Eleven died […]
The political tone of U.S. coverage in the London Financial Times usually falls somewhere between that of The Washington Post and The New York Times – that is to say mainstream Democratic tending to liberal. Most of the analysts the paper quotes are from Democratic or liberal institutions and it often knocks conservative viewpoints. So […]
Stories of soldiers murdering civilians, illegal wiretapping, targeted killings of indigenous people, assassinations of labor rights activists and other human rights abuses are troubling, but not troubling enough for the US State Department. Last week the State Department certified Colombia as complying with basic human rights requirements, a necessary condition for releasing the remainder of […]
Wu Bangguo, the head of China’s Congress, is enjoying a warm welcome in Washington. He met with President Obama, calling for closer economic ties, and attended a dinner on Thursday evening hosted in his honor. Secretary of State Clinton said, as she has done several times before, that “building a strong relationship with China is […]
Washington said that it would accept Tehran’s offer of comprehensive talks, even though Iran continues to refuse to negotiate over its nuclear program. The chess move – a strategy designed to force Iran to talk seriously or encourage rising powers to place greater pressure on Tehran to curb its hostile actions – was announced as […]
40,000. There are now over 40,000 Japanese over the age of 100. The number is staggering and an impressive display of the high level of public health, but it also points to Japan’s aging and shrinking population and a looming demographic crisis. Graphic from Reuters. Hat tip from FP Passport.
I wrote recently about some solid policy analysis that would move the US off its massive dependency on coal for electricity toward a greater reliance on natural gas – until renewables fully kick into their potential. (Limitless, not incidentally.) A few days after my post, there was a depressing article in the “NY Times” about […]
W.B. Yeats penned one of his most celebrated works at end of first the World War. The Second Coming drew allusions to a world that had lost hope, to an existential crisis into the human condition where a destroyed landscape had been littered with so many bodies – all for a few yards of dirt […]
I wanted tp cross-post today, DC takes on Human Trafficking and wins!, as the event is such a great example on how cities and communities across the country can really take a stand against Human Trafficking/Modern Slavery and make it a fun event for all ages! As the Washington Nationals and Philadelphia Phillies prepared to […]
We were over in Europe in the summer of 2003, just a few days after the heat wave broke. It was plenty hot even then. In this article from the “FT” from last weekend, the experience of the proprietors of a famous French vineyard, returning early from their holiday, is recalled. “Instead of rows of […]
Nilson Teixeira ([email protected]) and his team at CreditSuisse Brazil, one of the formidable analytical teams among Brazil’s brokerage firms, today published a comprehensive 170 page guide to the Brazilian economy. Timely, given that the world’s eighth largest economy is now one to be watched, invested in, and profited from. CSFB says this guide is good for […]
Christopher Dickey is an award-winning author and Paris Bureau Chief and Middle East Regional Editor for Newsweek Magazine. His most recent book, Securing the City, was published in February 2009. Mr. Dickey’s Shadowland column, about counter-terrorism, espionage and the Middle East, appears weekly on Newsweek Online. His newest book is a rare inside look at […]
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