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Diplomacy & Crisis News

Changing North Korea

Foreign Affairs - Tue, 20/10/2009 - 22:46
By exposing them to the truth about their impoverishment and about the prosperity of their South Korean cousins, the United States can encourage North Koreans to change the regime in Pyongyang.

Copenhagen’s Inconvenient Truth

Foreign Affairs - Wed, 19/08/2009 - 19:34
The Copenhagen conference won't solve the problem of climate change once and for all. Rather than aiming for a broad international treaty, negotiators should strengthen existing national policies and seek targeted emissions cuts in both rich nations and the developing world.

Deng Undone

Foreign Affairs - Tue, 14/04/2009 - 17:50
Driven by a near obsession with economic growth, Beijing has extended the state’s reach into the economy. Instead of urging the Chinese government to resume extensive market reforms, Washington should encourage it to focus on a narrow range of feasible measures.

The Five-Day War

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 05/02/2009 - 21:59
The August war over South Ossetia has rekindled a superpower rivalry and showed the West that Moscow no longer heeds multilateral institutions.

A Partnership of Equals

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 05/02/2009 - 21:58
Beijing is shirking its responsibilities to the global economy. To encourage better behavior, Washington should offer to share global economic leadership.

A Strategic Economic Engagement

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:18
The prosperity of the United States and China depends on helping China further integrate into the global economic system.

Can the War on Terror Be Won?

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:16
It can, but only if U.S. officials start to think clearly about what success in the war on terror would actually look like. Victory will come only when Washington succeeds in discrediting the terrorists' ideology and undermining their support. These achievements, in turn, will require accepting that the terrorist threat can never be eradicated completely and that acting as though it can will only make it worse.

Al Qaeda Strikes Back

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:15
By rushing into Iraq instead of finishing off the hunt for Osama bin Laden, Washington has unwittingly helped its enemies: al Qaeda has more bases, more partners, and more followers today than it did on the eve of 9/11. Now the group is working to set up networks in the Middle East and Africa -- and may even try to lure the United States into a war with Iran. Washington must focus on attacking al Qaeda's leaders and ideas and altering the local conditions in which they thrive. This article appears in the Foreign Affairs eBook, "The U.S. vs. al Qaeda: A History of the War on Terror." Now available for purchase.

Saving Afghanistan

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:15
With the Taliban resurgent, reconstruction faltering, and opium poppy cultivation at an all-time high, Afghanistan is at risk of collapsing into chaos. If Washington wants to save the international effort there, it must increase its commitment to the area and rethink its strategy—especially its approach to Pakistan, which continues to give sanctuary to insurgents on its tribal frontier.

Is There Still a Terrorist Threat?

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:13
Despite all the ominous warnings of wily terrorists and imminent attacks, there has been neither a successful strike nor a close call in the United States since 9/11. The reasonable—but rarely heard—explanation is that there are no terrorists within the United States, and few have the means or the inclination to strike from abroad.

Empire Falls

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:13
Two new books attempt to explain U.S. power and policy in imperial terms. Unfortunately for their authors, the United States neither has nor is an empire.

Present at the Stagnation

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:13
In China's Trapped Transition, Minxin Pei attempts to solve the puzzle of China's present -- and figure out its future.

A Benign Revolution

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:13
In Defense of Hugo Chávez Bernardo Alvarez Herrera

Is Washington Losing Latin America?

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:12
For nearly a decade, U.S. policy toward Latin America has been narrowly focused on a handful of issues, such as China's growing influence in the region and the power of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. Latin Americans want economic ties with the United States but feel slighted by Washington and uneasy about the U.S. role in the world. The costs of the estrangement will be high for both sides.

Preparing for the Next Pandemic

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:10
If an influenza pandemic struck today, borders would close, the global economy would shut down, international vaccine supplies and health-care systems would be overwhelmed, and panic would reign. To limit the fallout, the industrialized world must create a detailed response strategy involving the public and private sectors.

The Law of War in the War on Terror

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:07
The Bush administration has literalized its "war" on terrorism, dissolving the legal boundaries between what a government can do in peacetime and what's allowed in war. This move may have made it easier for Washington to detain or kill suspects, but it has also threatened basic due process rights, thereby endangering us all. This article appears in the Foreign Affairs eBook, "The U.S. vs. al Qaeda: A History of the War on Terror." Now available for purchase.

China’s New Diplomacy

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:06
China has begun to embrace regional and global institutions it once shunned and take on the responsibilities that come with great-power status.

China Takes Off

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:06
China has achieved stunning economic progress since the 1970s, thanks to aggressive liberalization, a commitment to exporting high-tech goods, and a massive injection of foreign investment. Although this unprecedented success is understandably unnerving to China's neighbors and trading partners, it should not be cause for worry; China, the United States, and the rest of the world still have lots of business to do.

The Forgotten Relationship

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:05
The September 11 attacks led the United States to replace its previous engaged and enlightened approach to Latin American relations with a total focus on security matters. This pullback has undermined recent regional progress on economic reform and democratization. To meet the pressing challenges ahead, Latin America needs the United States to be a committed partner.

Promoting Democracy and Fighting Terror

Foreign Affairs - Thu, 29/01/2009 - 01:05
During the war on terrorism, George W. Bush has shown a split personality on the promotion of democracy abroad. Bush the realist seeks warm ties with dictators who may help in the fight against al Qaeda, while Bush the neo-Reaganite proclaims that democracy is the only true solution to terror. How the administration resolves this tension will define the future of U.S. foreign policy.

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