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Outer space has become the next frontier for American national security and business. But instead of advancing American primacy in this realm, the Obama administration has wrongly decided not only to follow a European Union draft “code of conduct” regulating outer space, but also to circumvent the Senate’s central constitutional role in making treaties.
As President Obama prepares to meet other G-20 leaders in Cannes later this week, he previewed his pitch with an op-ed in the Financial Times. It read a bit like a half-time locker room pep talk to a team that had gotten knocked around on the field.
China's recent exercise of power has been more hard than soft, so it seems Beijing is neither "biding its time" nor rising peacefully.
The United States has no choice but to become more involved in conflicts abroad. Given the crisis in the Middle East and disaster in Japan, cutting defense and military spending is the last thing America should be doing.
A book review of Robert Lieber's, The American Era: Power and Strategy for the 21st Century.
John Podhoretz will deliver the November 2011 Bradley Lecture at AEI.
Most countries celebrated this month's slaying of Osama bin Laden as an unadulterated good, but two of them are reacting with ambivalence. China and Pakistan have found the death of the al Qaeda leader an opportune time to solidify a relationship that has a distinct anti-American odor.
Remaining silent is not neutral; it is casting a vote for the status quo, including the primacy of the supreme leader and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.






