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The Intervention Calculation: Mali
May 28, 2013 5 min. read

Brussels was the scene of an international donor conference last week to pledge €340 million in support of stabilizing Mali. The conference comes after a recent United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution calling for a 12,600-strong peacekeeping force in Mali and offers a significant lesson in the intervention calculations at work in the U.N. The […]

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FPA’s Must Reads (May 17-24)
May 24, 2013 3 min. read

  Russian Spy Games By Edward Lucas Foreign Affairs The Cold War may have officially ended and the rest may be the new policy, but Russia and the U.S. are still adversaries, says Lucas. While Ryan Fogle’s, the 29-year-old third secretary at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, gamble may seem absurd, the extraordinary thing about […]

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FPA’s Must Reads (May 10-17)
May 17, 2013 3 min. read

Each week the editors at FPA choose five must reads from around the web and five of the best of ForeignPolicyBlogs.com. So if you’re looking for reading for the weekend, we’ve got you covered.

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How many times can the game change?
May 16, 2013 5 min. read

In January 1864, some strangely dressed men with odd accents arrived in the camp of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, whose troops had been reeling from shortages of arms and supplies. They demonstrate a new weapon – an amazingly high powered accurate “repeater” rifle – and offer it to Lee. He accepts. And the arming […]

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Online Magazine Determined to Change Middle East Coverage
May 15, 2013 1 min. read

Like a Silicon Valley tech upstart company that has shaken the status and market share of technology giants, Your Middle East, an online magazine with offices in Europe and the Middle East,  is bent on transforming the Middle East coverage in the media and, as a result, disrupting the way giants of mainstream media deliver news and […]

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Surprises in the Benghazi Talking Points
May 14, 2013 6 min. read

  On Friday, ABC News published all 11 versions of the Benghazi talking points that were written by the CIA at the request of Congress and used by Ambassador Susan Rice on several TV talk shows on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. It was widely reported for months that the original talking points had been edited […]

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Weighing Afghan Experience, Civil-Military Relations Debate Continues
May 14, 2013 6 min. read

Can military and civilians successfully collaborate in conflict zones? This has been an open question for decades, but especially recently in Iraq and Afghanistan, where new approaches and the length of the conflicts provide a wealth of experience to examine. Current and potential insurgencies from Central Asia to Africa in which outside forces may intervene […]

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The Arab Spring: Conspiracy Theory or National Will
May 11, 2013 11 min. read

  Editor’s Note: Fadi F. Elhusseini is a Political and Media Counselor at the Embassy of Palestine in Turkey. He is an Associate Research Fellow (ESRC) at the Institute for Middle East Studies- Canada. He served as the Director of the Bureau of Palestinian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and as a media adviser at the Palestinian Presidency. Mr. Elhusseini was the […]

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FPA’s Must Reads (May 3 to May 10)
May 10, 2013 3 min. read

Each week the editors at FPA choose five must reads from around the web and five of the best of ForeignPolicyBlogs.com

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ICC Rift with Africa Growing in Pursuit of Kenyatta
May 10, 2013 6 min. read

On Saturday, March 9, 2013, Uhuru Kenyatta, Kenya’s richest man and son of the country’s founding president won the presidential election of Kenya and prepared to take the highest office in the nation. However, amid the success of achieving such a high rank ucertainty loomed. This is because Kenyatta was indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) […]

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Rich Africa? Poor Africa? Yes.
May 8, 2013 3 min. read

[Image from 99 FM] The current issue of Foreign Affairs has an article, “Africa’s Economic Boom: Why the Pessimists and the Optimists are Both Right,” by Shantayanan Devarajan and Wolfgang Fengler. The subtitle might seem squishy, an attempt at split-the-difference equanimity so popular among the scolding centrists and graduate seminar participants amongst us. But sometimes […]

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The Politics of Guantánamo
May 8, 2013 7 min. read

A hunger strike by prisoners and President Obama’s remarks at a press conference last week have revived interest in the question of Guantánamo, the U.S. naval base in Cuba where 166 men (down from the original 779) have been held for up to eleven years in connection with the war on terrorism. Guantánamo (its nickname, […]

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