As turmoil sweeps across Eurasia, don’t forget Egypt. Its politics are in turmoil, its economy is sickly, and no one seems to want to accept responsibility for fixing these problems.
China’s restive Xinjiang province has long been a place of ethnic tension and separatist sentiment. Now, there’s been a vicious terror attack on bystanders in a busy train station in the city of Kunming, and authorities are saying terrorists from Xinjiang are responsible. Kunming is hundreds of miles away from Xinjiang. Is the remote province’s unrest moving eastward?
Europe’s industrial titans are decrying the continent’s green-over-growth energy policies. By choosing to see cheap energy and a healthy environment as mutually exclusive goals, Europe is hamstringing its own economic recovery and doing nothing for the planet.
Blinking Red: Crisis and Compromise in American Intelligence after 9/11 by Michael Allen Potomac Books, 2013, 256 pp., $29.95 “T he road to real intelligence reform is littered with the carcasses of forgotten studies and ignored reports.”1 When Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chairman Richard Shelby wrote those words in December 2002, the United States was […]
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