Foreign Policy Blogs

Defense & Security

GailForce: President Mubarak Steps Down

Been traveling this past week so have not had time to blog but wanted to do an update on Egypt.  After apparently losing the support of the military and facing continuing demonstrations, President Mubarak has stepped down and turned over all power to his Vice President, Vice President Omar Suleiman.  According to a New York […]

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Bush-bama's Egypt Policy

Some people on the right are trying to do to same thing with Egyptian democracy promotion that they’ve done with the International Criminal Court (ICC) – fallaciously argue that Obama’s policy has been drastically different than that of Bush.  From Clifford May at the National Review: …[T]he fact is that Bush did push for democratic […]

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US on Egypt: Conflicting Signals?

US on Egypt: Conflicting Signals?

  I have admired Barack Obama for some time, but since early in the 2008 Democratic primaries, I have written that his Achilles’ heel is his hubris.  It is his strength, for sure, propelling a charismatic politician with little experience (especially on foreign policy) into the White House.  But it can be his undoing.  On […]

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The Constitutional Question In Egypt

Though the Egyptian government met with some opposition leaders over the weekend, the divide between them remains large.  This is especially true when we look at how they want to deal with Egypt’s constitution.  Mubarak wants to reform the current constitution.  As he said in his Feb. 2 speech (in which he announced his decision […]

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Egypt's Criminal Status Quo: Street Says "Show Me the Money"

Egypt's Criminal Status Quo: Street Says "Show Me the Money"

The chaos in Egypt does indeed signal opportunity, but the big question is whether the Egyptian people (or their fellow protestors in neighboring countries) will end up with genuine reform or merely a different gang of corrupt officials willing to cut more (or different) people in on ‘the take.’

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The Steering Committee

Though the opposition in Egypt is frequently presented as a bottom-up movement, there is, in fact, a top-down element to it.  As the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday, the opposition is being led by a ten-person steering committee.  This committee arose from a 100-person shadow parliament established in Egypt well before the protests broke out.  […]

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GailForce: Egyptian Update

The New York Times just put out a news alert stating: “The Obama administration is discussing with Egyptian officials a proposal for President Hosni Mubarak to resign immediately, turning over power to a transitional government headed by Vice President Omar Suleiman with the support of the Egyptian military, administration officials and Arab diplomats said Thursday.” […]

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Defending Joe Lieberman

Normally I don’t bother to take the time to discuss distortions of facts that occur on cable news programs.   Such occurrences are, to me, as surprising as eating cauliflower.  But I think this one, even though it happened a couple weeks ago, is worth commenting on: Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and […]

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GailForce: Egyptian Update

Like many around the world, I’ve been mesmerized by the ongoing events in Egypt.  Some in the media are trying to tie the events to radical Islamists and terrorist groups.  I believe this is not the case and instead we are bearing witness to one of the most important civil rights movement in history.  The […]

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All Eyes On Egypt's Military

The thing to watch in Egypt is the military.  It all goes back to Crane Brinton’s observation, made in The Anatomy of Revolution, that: …it is almost safe to say that no government is likely to be overthrown until it loses the ability to make adequate use of its military and police powers.  That loss […]

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GailForce: Egypt, Human Rights and National Security Policy

Last week I blogged about Human Rights, China, and National Security Policy; in light of ongoing events in Egypt I thought  I would expand on those thoughts as applied to the Egyptian uprising.  As I write this, President Mubarak has asked his cabinet to resign and has appointed for the first time since coming into […]

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Selling Arms to China: A Bad Idea?

Over the past several weeks the debate over lifting Europe’s ban on arms sales to the PRC Government has gained momentum. Enacted following the Tienanmen Square massacre of 1989, the ban was initially effected with the concern that such arms might be turned against China’s domestic population. Most recently, however, the European Union’s nominal High […]

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My Interview With Mary Ellen O'Connell

Back in December I chose Mary Ellen O’Connell as my Person of the Year for 2010.  She’s the Robert and Marion Short Professor of Law at Notre Dame, an opponent of the CIA’s drone program, and a strong proponent of international law.  For those curious about her work and views, I recommend reading her book, […]

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The Cairo Protests

The Cairo Protests

Cairo protests (credit: twitpic/shefaa) A second day of protests swept across Egypt today. Inspired partly by a popular revolution in Tunisia, thousands of people took to the streets in Cairo, Suez, and other cities, in defiance of government threats. As many as twenty thousand gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. According to reports, four people have […]

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Talks With Iran Failed

So talks with Iran failed last weekend.  And as the New York Times piece on the subject suggests, they fell apart for the very reason I noted in my 2010 Year in Review post: the collision of the UN Charter and the NPT.  According to the Times: Mr. Jalili consistently demanded that first the six […]

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