Foreign Policy Blogs

Rising Powers

Netanyahu Speech: Coarse but Airs Israel’s Point of View

Netanyahu Speech:  Coarse but Airs Israel’s Point of View

Netanyahu basically said in his speech, Here is our position; now come to us. He has adopted the Arab strategy: stake out a hard line and let others begin concessions. Netanyahu has stood up to Barack Obama, maybe not the last foreign leader to do so. […]

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BRIC by BRIC

BRIC by BRIC

The leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China will meet this Tuesday in Yekaterinburg, Russia for the first official BRIC summit. The emerging markets are looking for greater global clout. During the gathering, the BRIC leaders are set to discuss the economic downturn, possible reforms for international financial institutions and long-term options for a new […]

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Does the Election in Iran Matter?

Does the Election in Iran Matter?

Iran is ruled by a small group of clerics, desperate to stay in power. They have opened enough avenues of expression to channel social pressures. This give-and-take can become a game of chicken that the authoritarians in the end ultimately lose. […]

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Money vs. Human Rights

Money vs. Human Rights

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was criticized by some members of the human rights community when she said that pressing China on human rights “can’t interfere with the global economic crisis, the global climate change crisis and the security crisis.” Clinton made her comments in February before arriving in China to foster warmer ties […]

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Singh Praises

Singh Praises

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has an ambitious 100-day plan. Jason Overdorf and Sudip Mazumdar detail Singh’s bold domestic agenda in the current issue of Newsweek International. The “surprisingly decisive victory” for the Congress Party and Singh in last month’s election has raised expectations for India to realize its potential. While the leaders still face […]

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Rating Agencies: Are Status-quo Powers’ AAA Ratings Vulnerable?

Rating Agencies:  Are Status-quo Powers’ AAA Ratings Vulnerable?

The U.S. and its allies in Europe are undergoing exactly what Paul Kennedy warned against over twenty years ago in his book, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. Sovereign financial solvency is the foundation on which military and political power can be projected, and this foundation crumbles when governments ignore deteriorating finances. Governments today must act quickly to cut deficits, once signs of a durable recovery are clear.

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Mutual Indispensability

Leslie Gelb, president emeritus at the Council on Foreign Relations and author of Power Rules: How Common Sense Can Rescue Foreign Policy, argues that even though the United States is the world’s “indispensable leader” it cannot dictate solutions to global ills. The US lacks the power to act alone. America needs the support of some […]

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Wishful Thinking for Putin?

Wishful Thinking for Putin?

Today Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin announced that Russia would give up all of its nuclear weapons if other nations that held them did the same thing (ie. the US and others).  Putin was at a joint news conference with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier who had been urging Moscow to cultivate more positive relations […]

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Russia and US grow closer?

Russia and US grow closer?

Today US Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced in a Senate Appropriations Defense subcommittee hearing that Russia has come around to share the same feelings as the US about the urgency of the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program.  Gates explained that in a previous meeting with the then-president and now current Russian Prime Minister Vladimir […]

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Number of the Week: 2,000

Number of the Week: 2,000

2,000. The United States spends nearly $2,000 a person on defense and accounts for over 40 percent of global military expenditure. Yesterday, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute released its annual yearbook on arms and international security. Worldwide defense spending reached $1.46 trillion in 2008, up four percent from 2007 and 45 percent since 1999. […]

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Empire at Home, Superpower Abroad?

Empire at Home, Superpower Abroad?

China’s burgeoning economic growth over the past several decades has been concentrated in the east. Western China is relatively poor and inaccessible and a large proportion of ethnic minorities reside in Tibet, Xinjiang and other western areas. Two recent articles in The New York Times highlight China’s west. Last week, an English version of a […]

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Iran’s Foreign Policy

Iran’s Foreign Policy

Foreign policy is surprisingly becoming a large factor in Iran’s upcoming presidential elections. Iranians go to the polls on Friday and will choose among the incumbent, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and his three challengers. Former prime minister Mir Hussein Moussavi is perceived to be Mr. Ahmadinejad’s strongest opponent. Last week, in a nationally televised debate Mr. […]

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From BRIC to BIC…or even IC??

From BRIC to BIC…or even IC??

Brazil is looking better than Russia these days. Its economy is more market-oriented and better structured. Its exports are much more diversified. Its domestic market is stronger, as are its banks.

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Exporting Authoritarianism

Exporting Authoritarianism

Are new forms of authoritarian governments undermining democracy within and beyond their borders? Are geopolitically important countries – including China, Iran, Pakistan, Russia and Venezuela – challenging democratic development and threatening the emergence of an international order based on open societies and human rights? A new report by Freedom House, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and […]

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Europe’s Elections – Indifference and the Democratic Deficit

Europe’s Elections – Indifference and the Democratic Deficit

Voting for the European Parliament began today in Britain and the Netherlands. Over the next four days, more than 375 million people in 27 countries are eligible to cast a ballot. Despite the importance of the parliament, most analysts fear turnout will be low.  Voting numbers have fallen as the European Union has expanded and […]

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