To succeed in its global game against China, the U.S. must recognize the importance of economics in any nation’s foreign policy stance.
To succeed in its global game against China, the U.S. must recognize the importance of economics in any nation’s foreign policy stance.
Recently, two major developments in Somalia and Djibouti have attracted international media attention. John Kerry became the first U.S. Secretary of State to visit Mogadishu, while China has negotiated the construction of a military base in the strategic port of Djibouti.
If the reality comes anywhere close to matching the hype, then the speeding of Russia’s national decline and the revival of America’s ideological authority will be among the transformative effects As an earlier post suggested, the dramatic rise in U.S. natural gas production is one large reason why fears about America’s strategic decline may well […]