Foreign Policy

Channeling Nixon Channeling Nixon

If Tricky Dick could tame the grizzled Mao, then certainly Bush could butter up Kim Jong Il with some of that frat boy charm. Who knows, Dearest Leader might even join Bush's shaky...

Jul 12, 2006 / Column / Robert Scheer

The New American Cold War The New American Cold War

The cold war never really ended: Russia's continuing instability and weapons of mass destruction, combined with Washington's triumphalist foreign policies and US/NATO military buil...

Jul 10, 2006 / Stephen F. Cohen

The American Political Tradition The American Political Tradition

American foreign policy is shaped by a myth of national righteousness. In two new books, Peter Beinart abuses history to suggest liberals embrace this myth, while Stephen Kinzer us...

Jul 10, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Andrew J. Bacevich

Say Goodbye to Bolton Say Goodbye to Bolton

Selection of a new UN Secretary General is too important to be engineered by the whims and prejudices of John Bolton. It's time for saner voices in the Administration to tell the U...

Jun 26, 2006 / Feature / Ian Williams

The New American Cold War The New American Cold War

The unfolding conflict over US plans to build missile defense components near post-Soviet Russia, in Poland and the Czech Republic, is the latest proof of the way US-Russian relati...

Jun 21, 2006 / Feature / Stephen F. Cohen

We Are the World We Are the World

When liberals and conservatives discuss the United States' role in the world, they are really talking about the narcissism of small differences. Two new books show how both sides s...

Jun 15, 2006 / Books & the Arts / David Rieff

UN to US: End the Abuse UN to US: End the Abuse

UN Deputy Secretary Mark Malloch Brown's measured reprimand of the Bush Administration was not an attack. It was a call for real US leadership instead of the bullying tactics of Jo...

Jun 8, 2006 / Feature / Ian Williams

As Others See Us As Others See Us

When a group of international journalists visited a small town in Maine, they made it clear that America's aggression in Iraq, its greed and the advance of pop culture are leading ...

Jun 5, 2006 / Column / Nicholas von Hoffman

The Insecurity State The Insecurity State

Americans are now caught in a security paradox: We expect the government to protect us, but its responses make us feel even more insecure.

May 18, 2006 / Donald W. Shriver Jr.

People Power In Nepal People Power In Nepal

The removal of the contemptuous Nepali regime was a type of "people power" absent from Asia and the rest of world for many years, opening dialogue with the Maoist rebels and creati...

May 5, 2006 / Feature / Kanak Mani Dixit

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