Foreign Policy
Magazine | Mainstream
Foreign Policy is a bimonthly American magazine founded in 1970 by Samuel P. Huntington and Warren Demian Manshel. Under the stewardship of editor in chief Moises Naim, Foreign Policy evolved from an academic quarterly in the 1990s to a bimonthly glossy, winning the 2009, 2007, and 2003 National Magazine Award for General Excellence. It is published by The Washington Post Company in Washington, D.C., USA. Its topics include global politics, economics, integration and ideas. On September 29, 2008, The Washington Post Company announced that they had purchased Foreign Policy for an ... More » (Source: Wikipedia)
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The Case for Humility in Afghanistan
The United States has two compelling interests at issue in the Afghan conflict. One is the ongoing, increasingly successful but incomplete effort to reduce the threat posed by ...via Foreign Policy -
What are the odds that Obama's Iran talks will succeed?
How should we measure success in the talks with Iran that begin today? I propose the following sliding scale.Posted by Derek Hawkins -
Think Again: Palestine
The idea of "economic peace" suggests an economic conflict, and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is certainly not that. Although economic issues do figure into Palestinian ...via Tom Friedman -
Regime Change Is Dead. Long Live Regime Change.
It would be tragic if the United States bolstered the staying power of Iran's dictatorship just when so many Iranians appear prepared to risk everything to be rid of it.via Tom Friedman -
George Will is wrong about Afghanistan
(Blog Post) The problem in Afghanistan is not that a counterinsurgency strategy has failed, but that is hasn't really ever been tried. There are risks with either strategy, be it ... -
The Tough Questions Nobody Wants to Ask About Afghanistan
For instance, few questions have been asked about the consequences or the morality of the United States urging Pakistan to displace two million in the Swat Valley in order to ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
Iran: What now?
Three Middle East experts weigh in on the situation in Iran, and what the United States should do about it.Posted by Derek Hawkins -
Why Iran '09 Could Be Like Florida '00
Americans can be forgiven for being a bit confused about the upcoming Iranian elections. While four years ago Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called Iran a "totalitarian" ...via Foreign Policy -
What Muslim World?
Even before U.S. President Barack Obama utters a word of his long-anticipated June 4 address to "the Muslim world," there is already a problem with the rhetoric. As well ...Posted by Derek Hawkins -
It's time to get ruthless in Pakistan
In short, Pakistan in 2009 is looking more and more like Iran thirty years earlier, when the seemingly impregnable Shah fell in the face of hostile demonstrations and a ...Posted by Derek Hawkins
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Turkey's Guilty Conscience
One of the world's thorniest historical conflicts is on the verge of being solved. But long-term peace between Turkey and Armenia might be as hard to achieve as a lasting ...via Tom Friedman -
Deciphering the attack on Pakistan’s Army headquarters
The Pakistani Army's track record is not enviable. Its disastrous interferences in political affairs and pursuance of illegitimate foreign policy goals through non-state ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
The Eight Years’ War
Eight years on, we are still betwixt and between when it comes to defining our objectives for Afghanistan. This conundrum is not due to mission creep or waffling, but rather ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
Pakistan's new crisis of democracy
(Blog Post) Some of what is happening in Pakistan is surely the usual Kabuki theater, but there could be real consequences for U.S. goals in the region. As Imtiaz Gul warned last week on ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
Tom Coburn picks on political science
(Blog Post) OK, dear readers, I want you to close your eyes and imagine a world in which your entire knowledge of political behavior emanated only from CNN, pollsters, pundits, ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
Four Reasons for Optimism in Pakistan
... few observers seem to have noticed that, over the last five months or so, Pakistan has made an astonishing turnaround. In fact, it's time for cautious optimism about my ...Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
Afghan Elections: Bad And Ugly
While the fact that the elections were held is a positive development, the end result is likely to lack legitimacy. President Hamid Karzai probably gained more than 50 percent ...Posted by Derek Hawkins -
The Afghan election roundup
Incumbent Afghan president Hamid Karzai has won 72 percent of the vote from last Thursday's presidential election, compared to 23 percent for his nearest competitor, Abdullah ...Posted by Derek Hawkins -
Voting Day in Afghanistan
(Photo) Afghans went to the polls to elect a president. Despite the milestone achievement, though, the country still has a long war ahead.Posted by Kaizar Campwala -
The AfPak Channel
More recently, a Pew survey revealed that only 9 percent of Pakistanis think of the U.S. as a partner, with 64 percent considering it an enemy. A Gallup/Al-Jazeera poll showed ...Posted by Joey Baker
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