Just as President George W.
The second of the "grand coalitions" has entered the fray to contest the direction of foreign policy under the Bush Administration...
Magazine editorials like to present a simple world of good and evil, of right and wrong.
In deciding what to write for this week's column, I decided that now is not the time to re-invent the wheel, and that some of the points I raised in an article appearing in this fall's The National Interest need to be reiterated.
To sum up, recovery is coming to the eurozone, but Germany will be a drag on this process.
By now it is apparent that a significant change has occurred in the view taken of American power.
It may seem strange for a weekly that focuses on foreign policy to devote attention to what many would consider to be a domestic event--the forthcoming recall election in California.
The durability of the American triumph in Iraq will presumably depend on factors more political and diplomatic than strictly military.
The shortage of gas in the United States is now officially recognized.
The most appropriate metaphor for comparing Europe and America, for those who insist on them, has nothing to do with planets.