Individual Freedom, Liberty, Due Process, Equal Protection Under the Law, Freedom of Speech: Are These American Values Even Under Stress?

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This USA Today editorial makes a point that I have been trying to emphasize in Washington circles: freedom, liberty and equal protection are only real if they are observed during times of high social stress. During World War II, American society interned innocent Japanese-Americans because of the fear that this U.S.

Bush Expresses Regret to Italians Over Collateral Damage: Nicola Calipari Dead, Giuliana Sgrena Wounded

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Some Italians tonight are asking if America is their friend, who needs enemies? What are these soldiers at check-points thinking? Shoot first and ask questions later? If Iraq is indeed tilting the way of democracy, then these kind of incidents are certainly going to disrupt progress.

New Nightmare: Neocon Chieftain Paul Wolfowitz to Head World Bank?

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A while back, Washington Post columnist Sebastian Mallaby wrote a good piece on the qualities he thought the next World Bank president ought to have — and he disqualified a number of candidates who were in the news then. Here is my link to that discussion.

Note to Bob Kaplan: Mission Creep to Just Doing it All?

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Robert D. Kaplan, a former colleague of mine at the New America Foundation and a correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly, has an interesting and provocative piece in the New York Times this morning that basically argues that tough, fire-breathing Marines can be cuddly and do great humanitarian relief work as well.

Note to <em>TWN</em> Readers

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I am still here and getting some posts ready on Bush’s foreign policy, particularly the important trends in some key Middle East states. I have been offline for several days because of travel and because of a really nasty chest cold that has kept me down despite being in Hawaii on a work trip.

China’s Investment in Beijing-Centered 21st Century Multilateralism

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One of the mistakes of American foreign policy over the last several decades was to not heavily invest in, build, and fortify serious multilateral security and economic institutions among Asian nations. America has not really taken APEC seriously and on the security front has long chosen to rely on bilateral arrangements between the U.S.