Mikhail Gorbachev
China Also Rises
Piers Brendon
| Oct 20, 2010
Will China seek revenge for its century of humiliation at the hands of the West?
A Realist Rally
Leslie H. Gelb
| Sep 03, 2008
As featured in the IHT: Realism can lead the way out of our foreign-policy shambles. But first the camp’s heavyweights need to bridge the partisan
Breaking More Naan with Delhi
Karl F. Inderfurth
Bruce Riedel
| Nov 01, 2007
The U.S.-India relationship has remained uncannily consistent. How to move ahead on this positive track.
Beyond American Hegemony
Michael Lind
| May 01, 2007
The United States should abandon its futile attempt to secure global hegemony in favor of a concert-of-power foreign-policy strategy.
Revolt of the Maccabees
Robert Doran
| Sep 01, 2006
The Biblical account tells a cautionary tale for Mid-East policy today—to those reading between the lines.
Jihad, Unintended
Dimitri K. Simes
| Dec 01, 2005
To err is human. Not to learn from one's mistakes--and to jeopardize the nation's security in the process--is unforgivable.
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Commentary
Why Reform Eludes China
Jonathan Levine
| Jan 17, 2013
Inertia has become the name of the game.
What's Next for Medvedev?
Matthew Rojansky
| Oct 03, 2011
A look at what becomes of a liberal ex-president in a decidedly illiberal state like Russia.
Urge Restraint with Restraint
Dimitri K. Simes
| Mar 01, 2011
Gorbachev’s experience should sound a cautionary note for other authoritarian regimes now under pressure.
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Blogs
Newt Gingrich's Preposterous Remarks About Palestinians
Jacob Heilbrunn
| Dec 11, 2011
Gingrich can call himself a Reaganite all he wants, but it's false branding.
The Battle of the Bridge
Paul R. Pillar
| Dec 28, 2010
Despite good intentions, there are limits to cooperation between academics and policy makers. It's time to cool the verbal warfare.
North Korea's New Young Eun
Jacob Heilbrunn
| Sep 28, 2010
Books & Reviews
America Under the Caesars
Michael Lind
| Jun 28, 2010
Anti-interventionists allege our leaders traded a strong, austere republic for a weak and sprawling empire predicated on a military might that could not match our own ambitions. This narrative negates real threats and real victories.
Remember Prussia?
William Anthony Hay
| Aug 29, 2007
The improbable ascent, sudden collapse and subsequent re-imagination of Prussia.
Who Won the War?
Geoffrey Smith
| Mar 01, 2005
In the Cold War, Reagan overreached--and hit the mark.
More Books & Reviews
The Lede
A Foreign Policy of Mission Creep
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