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As non-governmental groups are increasingly scrutinized on issues of political involvement and financial transparency, they face a tougher welcome from governments around the globe.
The United States has many alternative foreign policy instruments to utilize that are fully consistent with our national interests, leaving the International Criminal Court to the obscurity it so richly deserves.
More negotiators and mediators, more "peacekeeping" forces, more non-governmental organizations (especially of the humanitarian and human rights varieties), and more media attention are all conventionally thought to be unmitigated good things.
If real progress is to follow, the U.S. and its allies need to shed any romantic notions they have about a democratic Serbia that will prosper overnight and return effortlessly to the family of nations.
Scholars and politicians discussed how international rules such as those proposed in the Kyoto Protocol should be formulated and to what extent America should adhere to them.
Most corporate CEOs would be surprised to learn that they have something in common with former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet.
Speakers at a June 11 AEI conference considered the accelerating growth of advocacy-oriented nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in liberal democracies.
The peaceprocess is notthe central issue in the Middle East; recent events should have demonstrated that we should devote our energies to winning the war against the terror masters.



