Foreign Policy Blogs

Defense & Security

Castro, Goldberg and Ahmadinejad

Having already said so pretty clearly already, I saw few if any redeeming features in Jeffrey Goldberg’s treatment in The Atlantic of whether Israel might attack Iran. I’m not going to recant, but I do have to concede that the article had at least one redeeming feature after all: It got Fidel Castro’s attention and […]

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New Start Ratification

With the U.S.-Russian strategic arms limitation treaty heading for Senate debate at a time of political troubles for Obama, it’s time to be absolutely clear: The New START treaty deserves to be ratified promptly, both for its own sake and so as to clear the way for more significant arms control diplomacy. A modest agreement […]

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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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China: Would Machiavelli be proud?

China: Would Machiavelli be proud?

Machiavelli, more than any thinker in history, made his name synonymous with a type of human behavior — self-interested, cunning, ruthless.  He wrote about ancient Rome as well as Italy and the Mediterranean world of the 15th-16th centuries, extolling such leaders as Ferdinand of Aragon, the successful king of Spain who oversaw his empire’s aggrandizement, as well […]

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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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Russia: Is the Sovereign Rating Useful?

Russia: Is the Sovereign Rating Useful?

Fitch Ratings today published a press release revising the “Outlook” on its “BBB” rating of Russian government bonds to positive from stable (see a Fitch press release below).  Rating agencies – Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch – have been under fire since their high structured real estate ratings were downgraded rapidly during the recent financial […]

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Hamas and Hezbollah Using Mexican Banks to Launder Funds

According to the Washington Times (March 2009), “Hezbollah is using the same southern narcotics routes that Mexican drug kingpins do to smuggle drugs and people into the United States, reaping money to finance its operations and threatening U.S. national security, current and former U.S. law enforcement, defense and counterterrorism officials say.” Now there are more recent […]

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Indian Nuclear Deal: What Went Around Came Around

Reacting to popular dismay over the light sentences meted out to the corporate perpetrators of the Bhopal tragedy–slaps on the wrist, really–India’s parliament has voted to hold foreign suppliers of nuclear components liable for damages from a reactor accident. Normally, only the operator of a nuclear power plant is held liable, and in virtually all […]

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The Great Crash 1929

As I’ve written before, it is widely acknowledged that the economic health of the United States is a major national security concern.  For one, last year Dennis Blair, Director of National Intelligence declared that the economic crisis had become the U.S.’s “primary near-term security concern.”  I decided to read John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Great Crash […]

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GailForce: More On Afghanistan COIN Training

Been on travel so haven’t found time to Blog.  Before I hit the road, I participated in a Department of Defense sponsored Bloggers roundtable on Monday, August 23rd with Lieutenant General William Caldwell the Commander of the NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan.  It was enlightening and informative.  As discussed in previous Blogs, this training is a critical […]

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"Eight years and eight divisions"

As you undoubtedly already know, last night Obama announced the end of combat operations in Iraq: What did we accomplish?  Where are we going from here and what do we hope to continue to accomplish?  How is Iraq related to the geopolitical interests of the United States?  Many have taken the time to over the […]

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Will Israel Attack Iran? Will US?

Jeffrey Goldberg’s article in the September Atlantic, in which he argues that Israel almost inevitably will attack Iran’s nuclear facilities before next summer unless the United States does so first, has attracted excessive attention. Devoid of new information and lacking in any kind of serious military analysis, it’s a far cry from meeting the Atlantic […]

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FARC Trades Cocaine for Arms from Venezuela

There is evidence that FARC has been trading cocaine for arms brokered by Venezuelan middlemen, entrepreneurs who are, at the same time, supplying weapons to Mexico.

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How Many Chinas Are There In China?

Nine.  At least that’s what The Atlantic said last year.  In an effort to demonstrate that China is not as monolithic as it may sometimes appear, The Atlantic published an interactive map on its website dividing the People’s Republic of China into nine regions (the interactive feature doesn’t currently work correctly, but you can find […]

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Note to Calderon: Look to Venezuela and Nicaragua for Smuggled Weapons

What US policymakers also fear is that the steady sale of arms to Venezuela from Russia, Iran, China, and Cuba, and the willingness of both Venezuela (Russian and Chinese arms) and Nicaragua (US-manufactured weapons) to resell firepower to criminal or insurgent elements throughout South and Central America (Mexico being the prize) will someday allow Chavez and Ortega to realize a common dream — power over a Socialist Empire that encompasses most or all of Central and South America.

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