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The FPA’s Must Reads (October 12 – October 18)
October 18, 2013 2 min. read

The Russia Left Behind By Ellen Barry The New York Times Through a string of narratives about towns and villages stretching between Moscow and St. Petersburg, Barry captures the deterioration of small-town Russia and explores how these towns — while not very far from the Kremlin’s reach — are worryingly far from modernity. The War […]

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Congress Models Itself on the Cuban Missile Crisis
October 16, 2013 12 min. read

The politics of the U.S. Congress can be harsh, but we do not usually associate it with the adversarial bargaining of international relations theory, much less with the tactics of “brinkmanship,” as Secretary of State John Foster Dulles used to call it. Times have changed. What we have been seeing in Washington these past few […]

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Israeli Aid to Syria
October 13, 2013 3 min. read

The Syrian conflict has displaced in excess of 6.5 million people over the past two years, and tragically ended the lives of more than 100,000 others. As fighting continues, the international community seems numb to reports of chemical attacks, bomb explosions, and other horrific events that unfold almost daily. However, amidst headlines that highlight the […]

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The FPA’s Must Reads (October 5 – October 11)
October 11, 2013 2 min. read

‘We Knew They Were Coming’ By Colum Lynch Foreign Policy Through a detailed account of what information the U.N. held prior to al-Shabab’s June attack on the U.N. in Mogadishu, Lynch examines the importance of better preparation and to what extent future attentiveness could minimize the vulnerabilities that organizations such as the U.N. increasingly face. […]

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A Middle East Hat Trick for the President?
October 7, 2013 4 min. read

  By Sarwar Kashmeri  The three most dangerous issues that confront U.S. national interests in the Middle East, President Obama pointed out in his Sept. 23, 2013, speech at the United Nations, are Syria’s civil war, the nuclear stand-off with Iran, and resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. With this week’s agreement to begin direct negotiations […]

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The FPA’s Must Reads (September 28-October 4)
October 4, 2013 2 min. read

The Inside Story Of One Website’s Defense of Assad By Rosie Gray and Jessica Testa Buzzfeed On August 29, Mint Press News broke the story that Syrian rebels were behind chemical attacks and Russia’s foreign minister, Syrian and Iranian state media, all catapulted it to international attention. Gray and Testa explore the murky political ties […]

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Syria’s Chemical Weapons and the World’s “Red Line”
October 3, 2013 4 min. read

By Aryeh Neier A little discussed but important element of the Security Council resolution on Syria’s chemical weapons is a provision for “accountability” for those responsible for the August 21 poison gas attack that killed more than a thousand non-combatants. Previously, Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had called for a separate investigation of responsibility for […]

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The FPA’s Must Reads (9/20-27)
September 27, 2013 3 min. read

The Iron Pipe of Swedish Neo-Fascism By Daniel Strand Vice Once a political outlier, the Sweden Democrats have elevated themselves to be the third largest party in the country. Yet, given Sweden’s affluence and a lack of a promenant radical right-wing movement in the 20th century, the Sweden Dems xenophonic and nationalist agenda may seem […]

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Stopping terrorist attacks starts at home
September 27, 2013 5 min. read

On Sept. 20, 2013, the world watched the gruesome ordeal unfold in Kenya as a platoon of terrorists from the Somali militia group al-Shabab stormed the Westgate Mall in a posh neighborhood in the capital of Nairobi. As of today, nearly 70 people have been confirmed dead in the four-day siege and the death toll is […]

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Battling Extreme Poverty in Bangladesh Part 2: Is Bangladesh on the Right Path?
September 25, 2013 11 min. read

  As the target year for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MGDs) draws closer, the international community has been reflecting on the development successes and failures of the past decades.[i] When it comes to poverty reduction, countries that can be labeled as success cases have followed one of two paths. Some owe their success to […]

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It’s almost the same old story….
September 23, 2013 5 min. read

It is a shame that Vladimir Putin could not acquire the girth of predecessor Boris Yeltsin. Then it would make it even more appropriate that he is channeling the role of Senior Ferrari in the real life Syria-version of the film Casablanca. In Casablanca, robust Sydney Greenstreet deftly played Senior Ferrari. His character was the […]

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The FPA’s Must Reads (September 13-20)
September 21, 2013 3 min. read

Why is Zambia So Poor? By Michael Hobbes Pacific Standard Zambia doesn’t face the same structural challenges associated with poor states — it has no dictator, no child soldiers, no celebrity adoptions. Yet many of its citizens live on less than a one dollar a day, not to mention 40 percent don’t have access to […]

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