The current issue of Newsweek has an interesting commentary titled, “As Economies Sink, Religious Radicals Suffer Setbacks.” Apparently, the financial crisis is killing the prospects for more political Islam. The examples given are from: Turkey, Indonesia, Iran, and Lebanon. In Turkey, the AKP has lost support after focusing on Islamist platforms instead of Turkish economic […]
Today is Yom HaShoah, the Jewish holiday commemorating the victims of the Holocaust. It’s particularly appropriate to take a moment to remember those victims this year; the day before Yom HaShoah, a UN Conference allowed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to deliver an address vehemently critical of Israel and which, in its original draft, referred to the Holocaust […]
Representatives of several leading Western countries walked out of a U.N. conference on racism in Switzerland yesterday when the president of Iran continued the same vitriol leveled at Israel at the previous conference. This report from The Washington Post has the details on the proceedings: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad argued before a U.N. anti-racism conference […]
Central Asia has taken center stage this week in series of military maneuveres and developments. In a broad way, these developments can be seen as evidence of larger posturing between Russia (and to a lesser extent, China) on one hand and NATO and the US on the other. First, on Saturday, China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan […]
Shanghai, often recognized for its free-market tendencies and environmental leadership, is introducing China’s first municipal trading mechanism as a means to curb pollution. Last Friday, in advance of a major carbon trade industry event taking place in Beijing this week, word began surfacing in the Chinese media that Shanghai plans to pilot an emissions trading […]
JPMorgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon, in a 1Q Report letter to shareholders, blamed the economic crisis on the Iraq war and investor freed. Interestingly, culpability by Wall Street risk-taking, accounting tricks, insolvent balance sheets, deregulation, toxic assets, short-selling, corporate welfare, ‘self-regulatory’ schemes and other financial industry misdeed was conspicuously missing from Mr. Dimon’s analysis.
In order to demonstrate the country’s responsible and “peaceful rise” and protect its interests abroad, China has increased its participation in United Nations peacekeeping efforts. Last week, the International Crisis Group released a report detailing China’s growing role in UN peacekeeping. “China now has over 2,000 peacekeepers serving in ten UN peacekeeping operations, making it […]
Slumdog Millionaire has been the media buzz again today, but this time the hype isn’t over the film or the portrayal of life in India’s slums, but of allegations of the trafficking of one of the films child stars. At the center of all the hype was 9 year-old, Rubina Ali, as stories flooded across […]
I wrote last week about the difficulties in prosecuting pirates, even high-profile ones, and the increase in pirate attacks after the Navy Seals’ awesome and heroic rescue of the Maersk Alabama. As Eugene Kontorovich notes, the surviving Maersk Alabama pirate will be tried in New York. Other pirates detained by the German navy are suing […]
Joeseph Stiglitz, a highly regarded former chief economist of the World Bank and Nobel laureate in global economics, says the Obama administration’s plan to fix the U.S. banking crisis is destined to fail because the programs have been designed to coddle Wall Street rather than creating a viable 21st century financial system.
“All the ingredients they have so far are weak, and there are several missing ingredients,” Stiglitz said in an interview. The people who designed the plans are “either in the pocket of the banks or they’re incompetent.”
I was skimming the Huffington Post this morning and found this interesting blog post by Kenneth Wollack, president of the National Democratic Institute, promoting a new era of American public diplomacy. In light of my recent post about Web 2.0 efforts in this area, I was struck by this comment: In today’s interdependent world, where […]
It is from here, in this giant glass building in Brussels, with its intricate halls, winding corridors and twenty odd languages that the European Commission is reaffirming its aid commitments to developing countries amid the financial crisis. Heavy machinery is pounding away outside, the subway is under renovation, and those who enter the adjoining International […]
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