High Time to End the American Hustle of Afghanistan
February 20, 2014 4 min. read

By Sarwar Kashmeri It is time to stop pretending that a residual American military presence in Afghanistan can make any difference to the future of that ancient and troubled land. The future of Afghanistan will be determined, as it has always been, by the Afghans, at their own pace and in conjunction with the countries […]

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Walling off the internet: how should the U.S. respond?
February 18, 2014 4 min. read

Angela Merkel wants to wall off European data from the NSA.  If ever there was evidence of dysfunction in the free world, this is it.  The technical foolhardiness of the idea, which the Financial Times noted in its report, makes the initiative more likely to launch a war of words than truly divide the internet.  […]

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Climate Change: Fragile States Spillage
February 18, 2014 7 min. read

  “The physical features of the Somali country are much the same wherever the traveler may land. Bereft of all vegetation but a few scattered thorn- bushes bristling like hedgehogs, it is destitute of wealth and forbidding in aspect. The fine sand is driven by rainless storms into innumerable drifts. All the world seems ablaze; […]

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GailForce: Latest Information from the Military on Its Cyberspace Operations Part Two
February 17, 2014 7 min. read

Around this time every year the intelligence community gives a worldwide threat overview to Congress.  As part of this process, they publish an unclassified Worldwide Threat Assessment that is available to the public.  For the second year in a row, they identified cyber as the number one national security threat. “Several critical governmental, commercial, and […]

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Gasoline prices and energy security at stake in U.S. oil export debate
February 17, 2014 5 min. read

One of the year’s most urgent policy questions—whether or not the U.S. should export oil–is finally garnering attention in Washington as both sides of the U.S. oil export debate make their case. The United States began safeguarding domestically produced oil after the 1973 Arab oil embargo, which caused supply disruptions and price spikes in the […]

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The Mykonos Case: U.S. Federal Bar to Present Historic Awards to German Colleagues
February 14, 2014 3 min. read

In 1997, after trial proceedings lasting over three years, Berlin’s High Criminal Court convicted four individuals of murdering Iranian dissidents in a Berlin restaurant—and more significantly—explicitly found the murders were ordered at the highest levels of government in Tehran. The historic judgment culminated in an unprecedented diplomatic shift between Iran and Europe: Every EU member […]

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GailForce: Latest Information from the Military on Its Cyberspace Operations Part One
February 12, 2014 7 min. read

Last week I attended the Cyberspace Symposium 2014 in Colorado Springs.  The topic was:  Managing Cyber Chaos:  Integrating education, industry and government into the anarchy of the virtual world.  I thought it was an excellent venue and provided great insight into what approaches the military is taking toward cyberspace and why. I know for a […]

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Pakistan or “the country in question”?
February 11, 2014 3 min. read

On Monday, February 10, the Associated Press broke a story that the Obama administration is mulling over potentially conducting a drone strike on a U.S. citizen in an unidentified country who is allegedly plotting terrorist attacks. The AP notes that it withheld the name of the country “because officials said publishing it could interrupt ongoing […]

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How to track U.S. drone strikes from a mobile device
February 10, 2014 2 min. read

Persistence proved to be a winning strategy for one app developer this weekend. Metadata+, data artist Josh Begley’s iOS app that presents “real-time updates on national security,” was approved and released by Apple. The app, formerly known as Drones+, had been rejected by Apple several times prior to its release. In one rejection letter, Apple noted […]

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Ilan Solot on Turkey
February 10, 2014 2 min. read

Hosted by Sarwar Kashmeri, the Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions podcast series will headline issues together with the leaders whose decisions today will mold the foreign policy of tomorrow. Each podcast will tackle a different Great Decisions topic in the 2014 series, a list of which can be found here. The Great Decisions podcasts can also be found […]

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Europe Debates its Future Climate Targets
February 7, 2014 9 min. read

The countries of the European Union tend to be viewed as the main advocates at the national level for developing a more comprehensive and binding global plan to tackle climate change. As the EU pushes forward, other nations have been stuck in neutral or have been retrenching. With the European economy continuously struggling to pick […]

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To close its energy gap, Africa should think clean
February 6, 2014 6 min. read

For a continent determined to close its energy gap, Africa is poised to turn away from fossil fuel production and potentially bring clean energy to nearly 600 million people lacking electricity. Vaccines unable to be stored without refrigeration, students closing their books after dark, and smoke-filled homes thanks to wood or coal burning devices are […]

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