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Publications

David Eisenhower

Editor’s Column Summer 2002

July 1, 2002

Practically from the moment President Bush identified the “axis of evil,” the war on terrorism began to encounter complications. In hindsight, President Bush’s State of the Union address on January 29 marks a kind of high water mark of...

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Jacques deLisle

Varieties of Sovereignty and China: Challenges and Opportunities in the Cross-Strait Relationship

July 1, 2002

On December 17, 2001, the Foreign Policy Research Institute held a day-long conference to address the question of sovereignty in PRC-Taiwan relations and the economic, political, legal, and international relations issues affecting the prospects for addressing or resolving it....

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Michael P. Noonan

Re-Mapping U.S. Defense Policy

June 17, 2002

Even though embroiled in a global war against terrorism, the United States continues to view and conceptualize the world along Cold War lines. This is particularly the case in the realm of military organization. Today, the Department of Defense...

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Trudy Kuehner

Teaching Geography and Geopolitics

May 20, 2002

Why Geography Matters Walter McDougall, Chairman of FPRI’s History Institute and professor of international relations at the University of Pennsylvania, opened the conference by recalling his own sadness upon realizing his students’ ignorance of geography. Students are often unable to...

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Asaf Romirowsky

Israel’s Military Dilemma

May 13, 2002

Israel’s strategy formulation for its military reaction to the Al Aksa intifada begun by the Palestinians in Fall 2000 was profoundly affected by the Israeli Defense Forces’ experience in occupying parts of Lebanon from 1982 to 2000. Even before...

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Harvey Sicherman

Next Steps in the Middle East

May 1, 2002

The American war against terrorists and the states harboring them achieved a notable victory in Afghanistan. A politically isolated Taliban-al Qaeda regime was overthrown by an American-led coalition (notably Pakistan and Russia) that used primarily American and local forces....

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Michael Radu

Comrade Mugabe’s “State of Disaster”

May 1, 2002

With famine now threatening the country, Robert Mugabe’s regime in Zimbabwe has declared a state of disaster. Considering that Mugabe is the main reason for the disaster, there is a tragic irony in his implicit admission of the calamity...

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Robert Strausz-Hupé

The New Protracted Conflict

April 5, 2002

Robert Strausz-Hupé, founder of the Foreign Policy Research Institute and first editor of Orbis, passed away on February 24, 2002 at the age of 98. He completed this document— his last— in December 2001; it is the introduction to...

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Michael P. Noonan, The Hon. John Hillen

The Promise of Decisive Action

April 1, 2002

The attacks of September 11 tragically reawakened the United States to the fact that the world is a hazardous place deserving renewed vigilance and a proactive foreign policy. Not only must the United States combat the threat of global...

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Harvey Sicherman

Finding a Foreign Policy

April 1, 2002

The events of September 11, 2001, transformed George W. Bush’s presidency and with it American foreign policy. Within weeks, the president and Secretary of State Colin Powell organized an international coalition to wage war on “a radical network of...

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