Foreign Policy Blogs

Law and Security Strategy

New York Times on Taliban Peace Pessimism

As a follow-up to my piece from last week about reasons to be pessimistic about success in peace talks with the Taliban, read today’s New York Times article on the topic.  This sentence about the Taliban negotiators really says it all: The identities of the Taliban leaders are being withheld by The New York Times […]

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Why Talks With The Taliban Will Fail

The effort to reach a political accommodation with the Taliban is underway.  Unfortunately, though, signs indicate that the endeavor will fail.  We can learn some valuable lessons from the Soviet effort of the 1908’s.  In 1987, Soviet Colonel Dmitry Timofeevich Yazov wrote a letter to the USSR’s Defense Minister criticizing, among other things, Afghanistan’s “national […]

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"Without time, without patience, it is impossible."

The above words were spoken by Brigadier General Carmelo Burgio, the Italian officer responsible for developing the Afghan police force, as The New York Times reported yesterday.  Recruiting is going well, if we just focus on the numbers.  The target size for the Afghan National Army for October 2010 – 134,000 – was reached in […]

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Obama The Machevil

Over at Parabasis, where I used to post periodically, friend of mine, Isaac Butler, has an interesting post about Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part I that is extremely relevant to modern events.  Isaac writes that at the heart of the play lives a Machiavellian lesson: The thing is, Shakespeare uses all sorts of means– including his […]

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Getting 527-ed

Let’s say a guy is asked publicly whether he condemns a certain terrible thing.  But the guy doesn’t want to publicly condemn this thing.  So to evade the question, he instead condemns the entire category of things into which this specific thing belongs. Is there a name for this? This is what Ahmadinejad did on […]

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The Rule Of Law?

There was an interesting development yesterday in the case of Ahmed Ghailani, who the U.S. has brought to court for his participation in the 1998 bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.  Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that the court would not accept testimony from the U.S.’s key witness because the U.S. learned about this witness through coerced […]

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"No viable state if there is no water"

As the Israeli-Palestinian conflict trucks along, we shouldn’t forget about an important issue that often gets overshadowed: water.  Here’s a story from the PBS Newshour last night: Israel is taking water from beneath Palestinian land.  But also, Israel is more industrialized than the Palestinian territories so it needs more water, Israel claims, and much water […]

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The Strategic Value Of Clean Energy

Recently, Robert Gates spoke of the danger of the existing divide between the military and the civilian population of America.  He said: There is a risk over time of developing a cadre of military leaders that politically, culturally, and geographically have less and less in common with the people they have sworn to defend. Today, […]

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Yikes!

I know that election-wise, most Americans are focused on the 2010 midterms, but one American is already focused on 2012: John “International-Law-Is-Not-Law” Bolton… While Bolton argues that international institutions are ineffective and threatening to U.S. interests, let Anne-Marie Slaughter give you the other side of the debate, as she explains how constraints can actually serve […]

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The Threat Of The Vote?

Here’s an interesting idea from Robert Wright, writing in The New York Times.  The Palestinians should give up on negotiations, reject violence, and begin peaceful demonstrations asserting that they should be given the right to vote in Israel.  This movement would “gain immediate international support” and in “Europe and the United States, leftists would agitate […]

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Big Babies

Why do countries act like big babies? I bring this up in reaction to the U.S.’s walkout during Ahmadinejad’s UN speech last week.  Now I know, he was suggesting that the U.S. government’s explanation of 9/11 might be inaccurate, and many Americans may view this as “hateful and offensive,” as Obama said.  But Ahmadinejad was […]

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That False ICC Narrative

This time it comes from John Bolton, who writes: One of Obama’s clearest aims in advancing “global governance” is drawing the United States ever more deeply into the International Criminal Court (ICC).  Secretary Clinton lamented last year, as a “great regret,” that “we are not yet a signatory” to the treaty creating the ICC.  In […]

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Why Do Wars Occur?

Considering that war is perhaps the most horrific aspect of human society, one might think we’d some idea of why it happens.  We’ve given it an honest effort.  Much ink has been spilled and html text typed to attempt to get to the bottom of it.  And there have been some valuable efforts, Stephen Van […]

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Generalissimo Francisco Franco Is Still Dead

And likewise, the Iraq War is still not over.  Earlier this week, reports came out about the first U.S. combat operation since U.S. combat operations in Iraq ended.  Such stories will continue, even after the withdrawal of the remaining so-called “advise-and-assist brigades” in 2011.  As the New York Times reported last month, in 2011, the […]

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Nuclear Liability

As William Sweet of FPA Arms Control and Proliferation noted last week,  India’s parliament approved a key portion of the U.S.-India nuclear pact but altered the deal to leave open the possibility of holding nuclear suppliers liable for damages resulting from accidents.  This was the Bhopal tragedy rearing its ugly head, as Sweet notes. This […]

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