Credit the Serbian People, Not NATO
As in 1989, it was not the military prowess of the western alliance bringing freedom to an Eastern European country, but the power of nonviolent action by the subjugated peoples themselves.
Huntington Guides Vajpayee in Washington
Global poverty today is no longer a legacy of the past; the new global poverty is not only the direct consequence of globalization, but an integral part of it.
Clinton’s Failure In The Mideast Crisis
The United States should certainly maintain its commitment to Israelâs legitimate security needs. What needs to be questioned is the Clinton administrationâs support for Israelâs ongoing occupation and its violations of basic human rights.
Clinton Needs to Take Firm Stand to Insure Peace
If there is to be peace in the Middle East, the United States must exercise some “tough love.”
Star Wars II: Don’t Delay It, Kill It
President Clinton’s September 1st decision to delay deployment of the Pentagon’s proposed National Missile Defense (NMD) system is an example of good policy and good politics.
Real Reform at the UN
Despite years of UN-bashing in Washington, the global organization remains one of the most popular institutions among U.S. voters.
Executive Excess 2000
The seventh annual CEO compensation survey.
Campaign 2000: Why is Military Spending Not an Issue?
The U.S. must recognize that preventive actions — diplomacy, contributing to global economic development, promoting political and religious freedom — that get to the root causes of conflict are the long-term paths to global peace and stability.
And the Next President of… Texas
One progressive’s recount of the Republican National Convention.
Camp David II: Clinton Should Pressure Israel, As Carter Did
It is highly unlikely that the upcoming summit between the United States, Israel, and Palestine at Camp David will the kind of positive results that came from the 1978 summit between the United States, Israel, and Egypt.
Ross Gelbspan on Global Warming
What is news is that the heating of our atmosphere has propelled our climate into a new state of instability.
A World Awash in Weaponry
Late last month, President Clinton announced the Defense Trade Security Initiative, the most significant loosening of arms-export controls since the end of the Cold War.
U.S. Policy Toward Jerusalem: Clinton’s Shift To The Right
The problem with Clinton’s view of Jerusalem is ultimately not a bias towards Israel, but a direct challenge to the authority of the United Nations and some of the most basic tenets of international law.
Moderate or Militant: Will the Real Dick Cheney Please Stand Up?
Before we can gauge how Cheney might perform as vice president, we will need a much more vigorous and detailed foreign policy debate than either Al Gore or George Bush have offered thus far.
The U.S. Must Pressure Israel to Compromise
As the Clinton Administration pushes for a high-level resumption of final status talks between Israelis and Palestinians, we are again hearing the mantra that both sides need to compromise, both sides cannot have everything they want and other familiar ex
Assad’s Mixed Legacy
The desire to maintain a course independent of overbearing Western influence, the insistence on having the Golan returned and a desire to maintain greater social equality than found elsewhere in the Arab world goes far beyond the late president.
Into the Quagmire: Colombia and the War on Drugs
We need to shift the policy debate in Colombia so that politicians in Washington begin to feel that they can get more support by developing effective alternatives.
Nationalist Ideologies and Misperceptions in India-U.S. Relations
The United States has an unprecedented opportunity today to play a constructive role in resolving South Asias chronic and expensive rivalry.
Don’t Strengthen the WTO by Admitting China
It is unfortunate that the first major post-Seattle legislative battle is over China and the WTO
Chad-Cameroon Pipeline
Chevron’s alleged human rights abuses in the Niger Delta and involvement in the Chad-Cameroon pipeline consortium highlights the need for the World Bank to screen for human rights abuses when it makes loans or investments.
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