Foreign Policy Blogs

Defense & Security

Slashing the U.S. Defense Budget? Not so fast…

With the recent submission of findings by the bi-partisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform recommending a 15 percent cut in U.S. defense procurement and a 10 percent reduction in research and development, the future of American military dominance appears to be in question.  Even prior to the report’s release, the Pentagon launched a […]

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Election Problems Across Africa

Election Problems Across Africa

The day after I post something about the upcoming independence referendum in Sudan, election problems boil over in two other countries on the continent. The Guinean military has proclaimed a state of emergency following a disputed election earlier this month, and reports are emerging of a military coup in Madagascar this morning. On November 7, […]

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Save America, But How?

In your spare time, why not solve America’s greatest national security dilemma?  Courtesy of The New York Times, you can play around with ways to solve the deficit problem.  Save America from the death spiral that brought down so many empires of the past! But, as I noted last week, keep in mind Paul Krugman’s […]

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GailForce: Afghanistan Training Update Part II

With the mid term elections over, Afghanistan is once more in the news headlines.  Over the weekend Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai gave an interview to the Washington Post criticizing the NATO war strategy.  Karzai stated:  “we’d like the Afghan countryside…not to be so overwhelmed with the military presence…you can have the U.S. presence in the […]

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Smoking-Gun Analysis Links Stuxnet to Natanz

Symantec, a top cyber security firm based in Cupertino, Calif., has released a report that shows convincingly (in my opinion) that the stuxnet worm was designed specifically to disrupt uranium enrichment operations at Iran’s Natanz plant. An earlier analysis by a leading German cyber security expert, which I described in detail in an earlier post […]

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The 196th Country in the World

The 196th Country in the World

South Sudan is set to vote itself into independence. But can it get there? A number of problems confront the government of South Sudan in preparation for a January referendum on independence.Voter registration is underway, but a delay in the vote could push Africa’s largest nation back to civil war. Ban Ki-moon, the UN Secretary […]

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G-20 Blues: Don't blame US monetary policy

G-20 Blues: Don't blame US monetary policy

The prevailing view coming out of the G-20 Summit last week is that US monetary policy is as much to blame  for the precarious state of the global economy as is China’s exchange rate policy.  A deluge of dollars is causing a speculative bubble in emerging markets.  This analysis is wrong.  U.S. monetary policy should be kept just where it […]

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Redefining NATO: Preview of the Lisbon Summit

Later this week, representatives of NATO member states are scheduled to meet in Lisbon, Portugal, where they will adopt a new strategic concept – the first since 1999. On October 8th, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen spelled out the direction of the new framework document. As overarching security concerns have shifted significantly for the […]

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When is a Drug Tunnel Just a Hole in the Ground?

When is a Drug Tunnel Just a Hole in the Ground?

The discovery of a drug tunnel, no matter how long it may be or how lavishly outfitted–even the seizure of millions in coke or marijuana–means nothing, unless it leads authorities, in hot pursuit on both sides of the border, up the criminal hierarchies, to the drug lords, and their corrupt accomplices in the police, military, banks, business, and government. To everybody waiting, in Mexico and the US, for their ‘taste.’

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UN Security Council Reform? Think again.

On Tuesday, President Obama officially endorsed India’s potential bid to join the P5 with a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. While realists may view the UNSC as the only arguably substantive body within the United Nations, an article this week in Time Magazine provides excellent commentary as to precisely why India should not […]

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For Your Deficit Viewing Pleasure

Let Niall Ferguson tell you the stakes: Let Mike Mullen expand on Ferguson’s point: Let Roger Hickey tell you why the debt commission isn’t the way to go about solving the problem: Let Paul Krugman tell you why the U.S. should take a cue from St. Augustine: “Lord, give me chastity and temperance, but not […]

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How We Took Our Eyes Off Afghanistan

Last month, Gail Harris of the FPA U.S. Defense blog expressed some skepticism about the claim that the United States’ problems in Afghanistan arose because the U.S. was too focused on Iraq: Like many, I’ve wondered why we didn’t do something earlier to counter the Taliban resurgence before it got out of hand. The conventional […]

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GailForce: Update Iraqi Operation New Dawn

Been spending a lot of time blogging about Afghanistan, thought it was time to look at what’s happening in Iraq.  The impetus for me was press reports of increasing numbers of insurgent attacks against Iraqi citizens and the continued inability of Iraq to set up a functioning government in the aftermath of the March elections.  […]

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The 50-year Anglo-French Treaty: Toward a Common European Defense Force

The 50-year Anglo-French Treaty: Toward a Common European Defense Force

David Cameron and Nicholas Sarkozy this week signed a historic 50-year treaty designed to vitalize defense and security cooperation between Britain and France. As previously noted, the impetus for the treaty originates from Britain’s need to redress foreseen “structural” defense procurement shortages within the Ministry of Defence. (see: “When Great Powers Decline…” http://powerpolitics.foreignpolicyblogs.com/2010/10/27/17/) At the […]

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A Strategic Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy Priorities?

A Strategic Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy Priorities?

Mr. Obama once dubbed himself the “Pacific president”, and rightly so. Less than two years ago, the newly-incumbent Obama Administration began to evaluate its overarching national security strategy for the U.S.. Newly appointed policymakers felt that the strategic focus of the U.S., at the time, was overly biased on the Middle East. When analyzed over […]

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