Washington, London and Dublin all declare that the peace process must continue--no matter how many people get killed. Gerry Adams completely agrees.
It's a mistake, argues Fareed Zakaria, to conflate constitutional liberalism with democracy. It's a mistake, says Thomas Carothers, to exaggerate the extent to which that mistake actually characterizes U.S. policy.
Eric Hobsbawm's autobiography is a most revealing book--wittingly and otherwise. He turns out to have been a most catholic fellow.
Andrew Bacevich's American Empire is really two books in one: one quite good, the other quite inexplicable.
The Russian revolution of the nineties brought economic phantasmagoria, not reform. The leadership's hands are dirty, and so are the West's.
Three distinct schools of thought shape the debate on how America should best pursue its post-Cold War interests in the world.
A portrait of a dedicated senator and steadfast cold warrior.
A "new history" of the Third Reich fails to understand the true nature of the regime.
Counting the victims of communism obfuscates more than it clarifies.
Despite protestations to the contrary, Reagan did have a grand strategy.