#intervention

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U.S. Intelligence squared live debate: Does humanitarian Intervention do more harm than good?
March 9, 2018 1 min. read

Live now from the Brussels Forum: A debate on the motion “Humanitarian Intervention Does More Harm Than Good” Doctors Without Borders’ co-founder Bernard Kouchner, also the former French Minister of Health and Humanitarian Affairs, and State and Defense Departments alum Kori Schake will defend the military’s role in halting human rights abuses. They are opposed […]

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Who’s Who in Yemen
June 1, 2015 11 min. read

Yemen had drawn little attention in the United States, or in many other parts of the world, until recent events thrust it into the headlines.

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Crimea: The Alsace-Lorraine of the Black Sea
March 4, 2014 10 min. read

  This past weekend, Russian marines in unmarked uniforms (or possibly, but less likely, private contractors paid by Russia) seized the airports of Crimea, allowing Russian planes to fly troops into that autonomous region of Ukraine while large-scale Russian military maneuvers to the north distracted the Ukrainian army. The quick and somewhat stealthy action permitted […]

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Syria, Intelligence, and the Reasons for War
September 10, 2013 9 min. read

Discussions of possible intervention in Syria, like the run-up to the Iraq War, have focused on the nature of the available intelligence. The intelligence task in Syria is fundamentally different from the one in Iraq—and actually much easier—and getting the facts right is certainly worth the effort. Still, the emphasis on intelligence is unusual in […]

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Moral Obscenities and American Hypocrisy
September 3, 2013 4 min. read

As I watched Secretary of State John Kerry stand before the lectern last Monday afternoon and give an impassioned speech decrying the use of chemical weapons in Syria, I was briefly transported back in time to about two years ago. I was in the Vietnamese town of Gia Nghia in the province of Dak Nong, […]

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Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria
June 26, 2013 5 min. read

Last week I asked, among other things, how people could expect outside intervention to bring peace and stability to Syria given the experience of Afghanistan and Iraq. That calls for some elaboration. There have been instances in which outside forces have brought stability to a postconflict situation. The successful instances tend not to attract fewer […]

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Obama’s Decision to Arm Syria’s Rebels
June 17, 2013 13 min. read

More than two years after the beginning of the Syrian rebellion, the Obama administration reported on Thursday, June 13, that it would begin supplying small arms and ammunition to rebels fighting the Syrian government. Proposals for more direct intervention, such as the establishment of a no-fly zone, were rejected, at least for the time being. […]

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What is burning on that anniversary cake?
April 1, 2013 5 min. read

Anniversaries are dangerous days.  There is often a flash of attention, lots of words and supposedly deep thought and meaningful promises. Then the sun goes down, and life goes on as before. The world often notes an anniversary without real thought or determination on how to take the steps needed to make it meaningful. As […]

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Great Decisions 2013: The Intervention Calculation
February 20, 2013 6 min. read

The U.S. conducted airstrikes against Serbian forces in 1994 and 1999, and against Libyan troops in 2011, to reduce threats of genocide and humanitarian disaster. But the sole superpower sat idle in 1994 while hundreds of thousands were slaughtered across Rwanda and bodies floated down river past horrified neighbors. Just what criteria the U.S. has […]

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The Return of the Russian-Georgian War
August 20, 2012 10 min. read

Four years after the Russian-Georgian war of 2008, the event is back in the news, in Russia if not here. Moreover, it appears to be tied to a power struggle, and the news also resurrects old questions about exactly how that war started. Understanding the precise order of events is key to understanding the war, […]

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Obama Administration Weighs Options in Syria
March 9, 2012 4 min. read

With pressure rising to undertake some sort of action to assist the besieged rebels in Libya, the Obama administration has begun drawing up options. It appears that no final decision has been made as of yet. So far, the options do not include the use of military force, the establishment of a no-fly zone, or […]

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Why Syria Is Not Libya
March 1, 2012 8 min. read

Many commentators have raised the apparent inconsistency between the Obama administration’s participation in a multilateral intervention in Libya’s civil war and the lack of any comparable undertaking—so far, at least—in Syria. Inconsistency in international relations is nothing new (or necessarily alarming), yet the issue is worth examining. While there are striking similarities, especially on a […]

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