Foreign Policy Blogs

Russia & Central Asia

What Do Americans Think About Obama's Afghanistan Surge?

What Do Americans Think About Obama's Afghanistan Surge?

Many polls have now been released showing Americans’ feelings toward our presence in Afghanistan and President Obama’s new surge plan. As I mentioned the day of the President’s West Point speech, Obama’s Afghanistan policy approval rating had dropped all the way to 35%, an alarmingly low number. I blamed some of this on the long […]

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What Are The People (Pundits) Saying, and What Comes Next?

It is my sadistic joy to follow political pundits on a regular basis. Sometimes I have I have to step back from laptop as the hot air can get unbearable. Their reactions to President Obama’s Afghanistan strategy, and the speech which announced it to the nation, have been something to see, I mean, read. Pundits […]

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Stalin-Bashing: The New Orientalism?

Stalin-Bashing: The New Orientalism?

I love the BBC to bits, but I have had enough. Yet another report, the second ‘profile’ in a week about the resurgence of Stalin’s legacy in the former USSR, has put my knickers in a twist. This time, we see a Stalin look-alike treated ‘like our own dear Queen’ in his hometown of Gori, […]

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First Thoughts on Obama's Afghan Speech

Just a quick word on the strategy laid out by Obama before getting to other firsthand observations of the speech. As I have written, I basically support the entire counterinsurgency ‘surge’ strategy, but find the inputting of an exit date, July 2011 presumably, to be potentially counterproductive (how can we not expect the Taliban to […]

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The Night Before the Speech

“Twas the night before Obama’s Afghanistan Strategy speech and all through the internet, not a pundit was resting, all arguing that they knew what was right.  The allies were briefed in hopes that more troops would soon be there.  Then down came Obama to West Point with sweet words of strategy.” I offer an immediate […]

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Red Square/Red River: the Soviet Spectres of Vietnam

Red Square/Red River: the Soviet Spectres of Vietnam

While readers were merrily gorging themselves on turkey dinners, FPA Russia Blog spent the past week hard at work: sniffing out traces of Soviet heritage in Hanoi, the capital of one of the world’s last remaining Socialist states. Indeed, most middle aged Hanoians speak at least some Russian, and many experience full-on Ostalgie for the […]

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Hillary and the Warlords

Hillary and the Warlords

While Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in Kabul for Karzai’s inauguration, she gave two extensive interviews; one with Kim Ghattas of the BBC and other with Mujahid Jawad of Radio Azadi. The BBC interview focused on how the US was going to effectively deal with Karzai for the next few years.  Here’s an excerpt […]

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A 'Vigorous Defense' in Britain

A 'Vigorous Defense' in Britain

The leaders of Britain’s government have been facing an increasingly skeptical citizenry in terms of the nation’s troop presence in Afghanistan, but they are fighting to keep morale and support for what they still believe is ‘the biggest source of threat to our national security’.  Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Foreign Minister David Miliband made […]

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Is Russian Cinema Dead?

Is Russian Cinema Dead?

In the 1990s, the Russian film landscape had come to resemble something straight out of Tarkovsky’s Stalker, with stray dogs wandering through Mosfilm studios in Eisenstein’s footprints and actors and directors stumbling around a menacing no man’s land in search of money and meaning. What happened before, and after, is the subject of an engrossing […]

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Who (Really) Rules the Kremlin?

Who (Really) Rules the Kremlin?

Putin, according to Forbes, which has named the Russian Prime Minister the third most powerful man on Earth, towering not only above Oprah (45) and Google CEOs Brin and Page (5) but also, conspicuously, above his own president (Medvedev, 43). Forbes goes on to declare Putin the ‘anti-Obama’, who ‘might as well be known as […]

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An Exit Strategy Before a Strategy?

An Exit Strategy Before a Strategy?

There have been growing signals, some blatant, that the Obama administration is looking for a way out of Afghanistan, even as they are still in the process of deciding on a new strategy, which is likely to involve the deployment of thousands more American and NATO troops. It of course is prudent for the US […]

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Kyrgyz President consolidates his rule via his patronage network

According to the Jamestown Foundation, on October 29, Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev promoted his son, Maksim Bakiyev, to lead the Central Agency on Development, Investment, and Innovation. This agency controls all foreign funds entering the country, along with control of major national hydroelectric and gold companies. Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s network of clients is growing stronger, to […]

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Kremlin Saves Russians from Killer Democracy

Kremlin Saves Russians from Killer Democracy

The Russian government may not have a stellar judicial record, as Khodorkovsky can confirm. Yet the fact that he is alive at all he owes to his country’s even worse democratic record. You see, whereas “a recent survey shows around two thirds of Russians support the death penalty”, Medvedev and the Kremlin apparat are committed […]

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Happy Veteran's Day

Happy Veteran's Day

Happy Veteran’s Day! In honor of all American vets, and the foreign vets who have fought by our side in many wars, especially in Afghanistan, I would like to highlight President Obama’s Ft. Hood Memorial speech. Obama’s Memorial speech was one of his best and he really touched on why/how special the US military has […]

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Why I Didn't Celebrate the Fall of the Berlin Wall

Why I Didn't Celebrate the Fall of the Berlin Wall

Don’t get me wrong: I cried as much as anyone when I watched the BBC 9 o’clock newscast from November 9, 1989. In fact, it was precisely the raw human solidarity behind those unforgettable scenes that exposed the farcical, hypocritical and self-serving nature of the official commemorations marking the fall of the wall tonight. Merkel, […]

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