Foreign Policy Blogs

U.S. Foreign Policy

U.S. Endures Deadly Month

U.S. Endures Deadly Month

As this last day of the month unfolds I think we can be forgiven for being a bit distracted as a country. An earthquake hit the East Coast, and while not unprecedented, it was certainly jarring for many people. And then Hurricane Irene battered and drenched the coast with millions of people still feeling the […]

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“If You Are Not Part of the Solution…” – Why UN Peacekeeping Needs an Overhaul

“If You Are Not Part of the Solution…” – Why UN Peacekeeping Needs an Overhaul

It is often said that peacekeeping is a growth industry. However, this should never preclude the United Nations from finding a better way to do business. Since 1948, the UN has established 64 peacekeeping operations with undoubtedly more planned for the future, as nation-states such as Sudan convulse in and out of civil war. Currently, […]

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U.S. Leaving and Staying in Afghanistan?

U.S. Leaving and Staying in Afghanistan?

In physics a quantum state is indeterminate until observed. This is known as the Heisenberg uncertainty principle and well illustrated by the famous “Schrödinger’s Cat” example in which the cat is both dead and alive at the same time. It’s very rare to find examples of such non-intuitive “both at the same time” situations in […]

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U.S. Famine Aid Continues

U.S. Famine Aid Continues

As the civil war in Libya dominates news headlines this week, the State Department reminds us that U.S. efforts to fight famine in the Horn of Africa continue even as the media focus has shifted away. How is the U.S. responding to the famine crisis? Secretary Clinton explained the U.S. response in remarks to the […]

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U.S. Calls on Assad to Step Down

U.S. Calls on Assad to Step Down

We seem to have entered into a new era of the U.S. role in the world in which we take it upon ourselves to determine which world leaders are fit to serve and invite those unworthy to step down from power. We did this recently with our formerly good friend Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and […]

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“If I Can’t Have You the Way I Want You, I Quit”

“If I Can’t Have You the Way I Want You, I Quit”

While the world’s focus was turned on America’s debt fiasco, over the past few weeks the sun has begun to shine from behind the clouds that have hovered over the Korean peninsula for the last year. On July 29, Special Representative for North Korean Policy, Stephen W. Bosworth, briefed the press on the conclusion of […]

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U.S. Honors War Dead

U.S. Honors War Dead

President Obama traveled to Dover Air Force Base today to honor the 22 Navy SEALs, three Air Force personnel, and five-member Army air crew killed in the attack on the Chinook helicopter in Afghanistan this past weekend. As the LA Times reports: Obama led a delegation of administration and military officials to  salute the remains […]

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U.S. Aid Threatened by Budget Cuts?

U.S. Aid Threatened by Budget Cuts?

As the U.S. debt crisis moves from the summer to the fall with the convening of the Congressional “super-committee,” it’s clear that everything will be on the chopping block, including one of the most important expressions of the U.S. role in the world: foreign aid. U.S. foreign aid is an interesting topic due to common […]

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U.S. Debt Deal Approved

U.S. Debt Deal Approved

The U.S. Senate passed the debt deal compromise today, ending this period of uncertainty about the fiscal future of America. If you are wondering what the rest of the world is making of this spectacle, this report in The New York Times offers some perspective from Europe and Asia: Political brinkmanship in Washington, pushing the […]

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U.S. Aids Famine Relief Effort

U.S. Aids Famine Relief Effort

There are so many events competing for our attention right now, there’s the debt crisis, the Norway attacks and a foiled attack here at home, it’s easy to get distracted. There’s another event unfolding in Africa, a humanitarian tragedy brought on by the perfect storm of drought and civil war.  Even amid all the other […]

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Links from Around the Web: Egypt

Coca-Cola Commercial – Lyrics: We have sworn to erase the impossible/ It should be hope, or no other alternative/ No matter how long they say the night is/ There is no sleep, when it is time for seriousness/ Make tomorrow better, with your hands, you will defy the clouds/ Make tomorrow better, the sun rises […]

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The World Is Watching

The World Is Watching

President Obama appealed to the American people last night in a televised national address asking them to support a “balanced” plan to avoid imminent financial default. Declaring that the “the world is watching,” Obama called for compromise between the Democrats and Republicans to maintain U.S. credit worthiness and global standing. There can be no doubt […]

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Rock the Casbah: Rage, Rap & Revolution

Robin Wright of the US Institute of Peace has a new book on the role of culture in both reflecting and inspiring this year’s uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa. Rock the Casbah, released earlier this month by Simon & Schuster,  “chronicles the new order being shaped by youth inspired revolts toppling leaders, clerics repudiating […]

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Aid Britannia: Aspirations vs. Politics

Aid Britannia: Aspirations vs. Politics

 The Economist recently ran an article that highlights the tension between spending on foreign assistance and domestic political support for it.  Prime Minister David Cameron, who ran on a platform supporting more aid and has insulated it from the cuts he has levied on almost every other part of government, is the latest to find […]

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Captain America Saves the Day

Captain America Saves the Day

Yes, this is a blog post about the new Captain America film, and I know you wouldn’t expect a post about a summer movie on Foreign Policy Association’s blog network, but please, bear with me. And no, this is not a movie review. For that, please read A. O. Scott’s review in The New York […]

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