You are here

Feed aggregator

A China Policy for the Next Administration

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:46
"Everybody talks about it, but nobody does anything about it." The old saw about the weather might well be applied to America's China policy. After the dramatic events of 1971-73 which initiated the long overdue process of "normalization" of relations between the United States and the People's Republic of China, the past three years have witnessed a lull in the relationship. At the start of President Richard Nixon's second term, the establishment of formal diplomatic relations was expected before the 1976 presidential election. The Sino-American joint communiqué of February 22, 1973, authorizing the parties to open liaison offices in each other's capital, and the termination of American military operations in Vietnam in early 1973 seemed to clear the path for a serious effort at normalization.

The Strategy of Terrorism

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:43
A history of terrorism from the Middle Ages onward, with analysis of terrorist strategies--and how governments can defeat them.

Can the United Nations Be Revived?

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:39
Twenty-five years after the League of Nations was born a successor organization was being formed at San Francisco. This fate, at least, has been spared the United Nations. The United Nations is not dead. But it certainly is ill. It is suffering, even supporters admit, from "a crisis of confidence," a "decline in credibility," and "creeping irrelevance." However we define it, the fact is that the world organization is being increasingly bypassed by its members as they confront the central problems of the time.

Asia After Viet Nam

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:37
The Vietnam war has for so long dominated the U.S. field of vision that it has missed profound developments in the rest of Asia.

Human Rights Treaties: Why is the U.S. Stalling?

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:37
Twenty years of effort by the United Nations to give vitality and concrete form to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights will be celebrated in 1968, designated by the General Assembly as International Human Rights Year. From 1945 to 1948 the United States delegation led the movement for the enactment of the Declaration as the embodiment of basic democratic political ideas. But since then, while the United Nations has been struggling to establish global norms of conduct, the United States has been the chief laggard in translating them into international law. At the present time the U.S. Senate has yet to ratify a single human rights treaty.

To Intervene or Not to Intervene

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:37
There is nothing new in the contemporary doctrine opposing intervention or in the pragmatic use of intervention on behalf of individual nations' interests.

THE SOUTH WEST AFRICA CASE: WHAT HAPPENED?

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:36
The United Nations and South Africa are in dispute over which country governs a piece of formerly German-occupied territory known as South West Africa.

WHICH WAY EUROPE?

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:35
What is the destiny of the Europe of the Six? What should be its aim? Should it be content with economic integration and remain what the Gaullists contemptuously call a mere Europe des Marchands, sheltered under the American umbrella? Or should it aspire to become a power in its own right, a self-reliant Europe enjoying the status of "equal partner" with the United States, as the late President Kennedy, with unprecedented generosity, exhorted it to do? The debate on these questions now in progress throughout the Europe of the Six has been forced on its members by the American invitation to switch over to a somewhat doubtful form of Atlantic integration-the Multilateral Nuclear Force.

Toward a World Policy for South Africa

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:33
In the Security Council on August 7 the United States voted for a ban on the shipment of arms to the South African Government, and in the course of the debate the American representative announced that the United States would suspend all arms shipments at the end of the year. Since South Africa has in the past found it difficult to obtain licenses for the purchase of American arms, this decision represented only a small shift in policy. But as the vote was taken under African pressure, and as it separated the United States from Britain and France (which abstained), the shift was significant; for it showed that when faced with a choice, the United States is more prepared than before to take a stand against apartheid.

The Arab Refugees: A Changing Problem

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:33
The Arab refugee problem is no longer the principal obstacle to peace between Israel and the Arab states. This was indicated in the recent United Nations Palestine debate. Concern of most Arab speakers about the refugees was secondary to their fear of the Zionist enclave in the Arab "heartland."

Law and the Quarantine of Cuba

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:33
The Soviet missiles in Cuba were a threat to the security of the United States and the Western Hemisphere. As such they endangered the peace of the world. The action undertaken against this threat carried its own dangers. But as President Kennedy said on October 22, "the greatest danger of all would be to do nothing."

Cooperation in Outer Space

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:33
ON September 25 of last year, President Kennedy laid before the 16th General Assembly a four-point program of space coöperation under United Nations auspices. The program called for a régime of law and order in outer space; the promotion of scientific coöperation and the exchange of information; a world-wide undertaking in weather forecasting and weather research; and international coöperation in the establishment of a global system of communication satellites. As a result of this initiative, an effort in outer space coöperation is now under way. The President's program was incorporated in a resolution adopted unanimously by the 16th General Assembly on December 20, 1961. The United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space has finally begun its work-with the Soviet Union on board.

The Underdeveloped and the Overdeveloped

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:32
We need to develop a new framework within which to meet people's basic needs and all world-relevant needs, i.e. for transportation, communications, currency, the allocation of medical supplies, and so on

Measuring the Marshall Plan

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:31
Not available.

The Sources of Soviet Conduct

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 28/01/2009 - 22:31
Soviet pressure against the free institutions of the Western world is something that can be contained by the adroit and vigilant application of counterforce

The Logic of Zero

Foreign Affairs - Sat, 01/11/2008 - 05:00

U.S. nuclear weapons were born nearly 65 years ago with the purpose of winning a worldwide war against Nazi Germany and imperial Japan. They grew up to deter a massive Soviet army that threatened to invade and dominate all of Europe. With the disappearance of that threat almost 20 years ago, nuclear weapons entered middle age in search of a new mission—a search that continues to this day. Some suggest nuclear weapons are necessary to deter, or even preempt, the proliferation of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction. Others believe they are needed to destroy deeply buried, hardened targets in hostile states. But the reality is that only one real purpose remains for U.S. nuclear weapons: to prevent the use of nuclear weapons by others.


Read More

July/August 2008

Foreign Affairs - Sun, 01/06/2008 - 06:00

May/June 2008

Foreign Affairs - Sat, 03/05/2008 - 06:00

Situation Iran Irak

Aumilitaire.com - Fri, 11/04/2008 - 13:03
Au début des années 70, l’Iran et l’Irak sont les deux puissances proéminentes du Moyen-Orient . Elles sont soutenues respectivement par les Etats-Unis et l’Union Soviétique mais malgré certains différents territoriaux. il n’est pas envisageable pour l’Irak d’attaquer l’Iran qui dispose d’une armée massivement supérieure en hommes et en équipement. Désireux de régler leurs différents ...
Categories: Défense

Pages