Foreign Policy Blogs

Regions

The Hawk Some Didn't See Coming

The Hawk Some Didn't See Coming

Zainab Jeewanjee addresses the idea that President Obama is “changing tones” on foreign policy. An article in DAWN news suggests he is not living up to expectations on his foreign policy to Pakistan. Jeewanjee explains that he however is. Hawkishness on his part was promised from the onset of his campaign trail.

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Iran’s Internal Nuclear Option

Disappointment over the Islamic Republic’s intransigence in its nuclear policy has given further credence to Western suspicions that Iran may be buying time to develop a nuclear military capability to blackmail regional states of the Persian Gulf and/or Israel. But at present, Iran’s deeply paranoid and insecure leadership is contemplating its other nuclear option: this […]

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Garment Workers Riot in Dhaka: Background and Consequences

There was a rush of rioting today in the garment factory district of Dhaka earlier this morning.  Following an unfortunate accident where a garment factory worker was run over by a speeding bus, factory workers were reported to have torched 15 vehicles, while vandalizing 50 other vehicles.   Over 200 riot policemen responded to the […]

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"Principles of US Engagement in the Asia-Pacific"

Kurt Campbell, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last Friday. His words offer up a broad assessment of the regional challenges confronting the US and adumbrate, in broad strokes, the “principles of US engagement in the Asia-Pacific.” In one revealing passage, Campbell states, “the […]

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Upcoming Events

If you’re in D.C. in the next few weeks, there are a couple of Israel-related events you could find interesting. On Feb. 1, the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting is sponsoring a human rights film festival at the Georgetown University Law Center. Of note is: “Jerusalem: War in My Land” by Arturo Perez, Jr., winner […]

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War Dance

Sean Patrick Murphy of the FPA’s Global Film Blog has posted another review of an African-themed film. His latest post looks at the 2007 film War Dance, which tells the story of internally displaced Ugandan children who make their way to a national music festival. He gives it two thumbs up.

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Liberia Surfs

I usually have mixed reactions to the bulk of travel articles on Africa, which too often tend to re-enforce various stereotypes and present cardboard views of the continent (does the world really need another breathless travel section article on safaris in Kanya, Tanzania, or South Africa?). But this Helene Cooper piece on surfing in Liberia […]

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Scare Tactics

I am not certain if the decision of a British company to market “stab-proof vests” for those folks planning on attending this year’s World Cup in South Africa qualifies as racist or merely as run-of-the-mill fear mongering. I suspect that making a distinction would not be worth anyone’s time. I suppose it is best not […]

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Al-Qaeda Spreading; U.S. hemorrhaging money

In a Congressional Research Service report published on 09/28/2009, If the current administration’s FY2010 war request is approved and enacted, Total war-related funding would reach $1.08 trillion since 2001, including $ 748 billion for Iraq, $ 300 billion for Afghanistan, $ 29 billion for enhanced security and $ 5 billion that cannot be allocated. This […]

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Santa Muerte

She drinks tequila, smokes pot, and is worshipped by perhaps two million throughout Mexico. Santa Muerte, or Saint Death, is showing some wear from her years of hard living: instead of the angelic likening usually afforded to saints, her depiction is a hooded skeleton, often accompanied by a globe and scythe. The message of her […]

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CIA Factbook Draws Chavez's Ire

President Hugo Chávez is a fan of some books, and an opponent of others. In April of last year he made a very public presentation of Eduardo Galleano’s Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent, gifting it to President Barack Obama at the Summit of the Americas. On the […]

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Recent Coverage of Better International Business in Bangladesh

I’d like to alert you, my readers to two recent pieces published in the British media on better business and economic growth in Bangladesh.  The first is a piece published by BBC 4, In Business.   A story of a garment factory in Bangladesh resurrected under pressure, shows the ways and means of becoming an […]

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Are Central Asian governments creating extremism?

Danish journalist Michael Andersen argues yes. His new documentary, available via youtube, here: Documentary His interview can be found on ferghana.ru’s website, http://enews.ferghana.ru/article.php?id=2604 Radio Liberty comments here on official Islam. Overall, I agree with Andersen. He can be reached at [email protected]

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Iran Is One of the Worst Human Rights Offenders

Iran Is One of the Worst Human Rights Offenders

Source AP At the World Report 2010 conference in Dubai on Sunday the Human Rights Watch unveiled its report regarding the top human rights violators of 2009, Iran was among the countries named as the worst offenders. The Human Rights Watch named a number of key developments in Iran over the past year that were […]

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Changing Media

The newspaper business in the United States is widely regarded as terminally ill. Or, at the bare minimum, in need of major re-constructive surgery. That phenomenon isn’t limited to U.S. media. The major Israeli daily Maariv is seeking investors to fund the publication to keep it alive. Most Israelis read either Yediot Achronot (Ynet) or Maariv. Haaretz […]

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