Hard Containment

Our great foreign policy experiment with North Korea and its nuclear weapons program is over. For most of the past twenty years, three strands of thought about how to deal with this problem have competed for primacy. There were those who advocated energetic engagement with North Korea, forgiving their serial trespasses and being willing to […]

Patience and Resolve

It is in the best interest of China to see a nuclear-free Korean peninsula; that’s what the Chinese government should want, has wanted and still wants. The reality, however, is that the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) has already obtained nuclear weapons, as proven by its two tests, and has accumulated enough nuclear materials […]

Caution and Humility

An exercise in thinking through what ought to be the ultimate goal of U.S. policy toward Korea requires Americans to invite two handmaidens along for the effort: caution and humility. Those who would set such goals must understand that the United States does not have the power by itself to compel North Korea to reform […]

Let's Make a Deal

President George W. Bush gets little credit in Washington these days, but he did achieve one major accomplishment in Asia: He resisted pressure from the Republican Right to confront China. U.S. cooperation with China and maintenance of U.S. alliances with Japan and South Korea are the pillars of future security in Asia. Contrary to popular […]

Robust Engagement

How do we want the North Korea problem to end? The Joint Statement adopted in the Six-Party Talks in September 2005 has provided the single most comprehensive scenario to date. If everything envisioned in that statement comes to pass, we will have a world in which: North Korea has abandoned its nuclear weapons programs and […]

Know Thyself

A former President of Ecuador diagnoses Latin America’s real ailment.

Fresh Start or False Start?

The Administration has made a good beginning in recasting Western Hemisphere affairs.

Who Do You Love?

Phillip Roth and Ian McEwan on love, lust and loss.

The Accidental Narcissists

Two new books ostensibly about Israel really aren’t.

You Can Keep a Good Man Down

Warren G. Harding may have been a bounder, but he was a talented one.

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