Restoring the Brand
April 18, 2008 3 min. read

We may be witnessing the most unusual overseas public affairs climate for the United States in the modern era. One the one hand, public opinion regarding the United States is as low as at any time since the beginning of modern polling. On the other, there appears to be an unprecedented level of international interest […]

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If You Build It, The Diplomats Will Come
April 18, 2008 4 min. read

Just as the brand new US Embassy in Iraq has finally been cleared to open for business, bad news from HR. “The State Department is warning U.S. diplomats they may be forced to serve in Iraq next year and says it will soon start identifying prime candidates for jobs at the Baghdad embassy and outlying […]

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Plus ça change, …
April 17, 2008 2 min. read

… plus c’est la meme chose.  Well, much to probably nobody's surprise, the present President of the United States has once again distinguished himself by being just about the only top political leader in the industrialized democracies who doesn't subscribe to the belief that climate change is upon us, will overwhelm us if we don't […]

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Climate Change, Australian Drought, and Food Prices
April 17, 2008 1 min. read

There's a good, if somewhat long, article in the New York Times today about the fall of Australian rice production due to drought, and the effects that has had on world food prices. This is turning into an increasingly scary problem, and every major news outlet has covered examples of the scariness like the Haiti […]

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Serbia could "do better" on war crimes fugitives
April 17, 2008 1 min. read

The incoming chief war crimes prosecutor for the United Nations, Serge Brammertz, said Thursday Serbia could do a lot better with its cooperation with the Hague, specifically in bringing war crimes suspects before the court. “I particularly insisted on the search for and arrest of the remaining fugitives,” he said. “It is crucial that they […]

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Is There Rule of Law for Women and Girls?
April 17, 2008 3 min. read

Earlier this month in a recent op-ed for the Washington post, Council on Foreign Affairs writer Michael J. Gerson asked, “What does rule of law can mean for women and children in Africa?” His answer, Justice for the Poorest . is what the International Justice Mission (IJM) hopes and works for. 'the founder of IJM, […]

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Advising the US Credibility Problem
April 16, 2008 4 min. read

Last week American Abroad Media the American University, and WAMU (the Washington, DC NPR radio affiliate) arranged a match-up between the three US Presidential campaigns’ foreign policy advisors. Up for debate: The United States’ standing in the world. More specifically, how would each advisor's boss raise the US image out of the doldrums if he […]

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Sexist Fundraising
April 16, 2008 2 min. read

Last week the Guardian ran an opinion piece by Julie Bindel on the use of female nudity to raise money for charities and causes. I have to admit that I hadn't noticed this trend, but Bindel provides enough examples to demonstrate that it does indeed exist. It seems to me that she describes two fundamentally […]

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Tax Breaks, Finally, for Renewables
April 15, 2008 2 min. read

Energy Boost is the title of the article from yesterday in the "Washington Post."  The Senate has agreed to " extend solar and wind energy tax breaks as part of a housing bill that is likely to win approval in the House."  This article keys in on some businesses that are happy about the tax […]

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Former FRY prosector details atrocity in new book
April 15, 2008 5 min. read

Carla Del Ponte, the former chief prosecutor at the war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, says in her new book that ethnic Serbs were taken from their homes and swifted to Albania to harvest and sell their organs.  Among the allegations are testimony from the book's co-author, Chuck Sudetic, that evidence found in one […]

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The Future of the Foreign Service
April 15, 2008 4 min. read

The Kojo Nnamdi show, an NPR station based in Washington, DC, hosted a group of foreign policy experts and practitioners in a discussion about the future of the US Foreign Service (FS). (Listen to the show). All of Kojo's guests pointed out that the central barrier to a bright future for the FS was the […]

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Mixed Signals Between the United States and Iran
April 14, 2008 2 min. read

Former Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering tells the Independent the United States and Iran have been holding back channel talks over its nuclear program for several years. Last month Pickering, along with William Leurs and James Walsh, authored an editorial in the International Herald Tribune regarding stagnation in the United States' policy towards Iran. They […]

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