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The waves of change are indeed sweeping across the shores of the Middle East and North Africa. However, the Islamist regime in Iran is better geared to suppressing internal dissent than other regional autocracies and, therefore, has better prospects of surviving the crisis--for now at least.
It is too early to tell whether the revolutions sweeping across the Arab world will prove the long awaited "third wave of democratization." It is clear, however, that no regional regime is immune to their impact, not even the self-proclaimed vanguard of permanent world revolutions, the Islamist regime in Tehran.
The London bombings look like the work of a network that is losing its effectiveness, cohesion, and some of its ideological attractiveness to radical Muslims in the West and worldwide.
It is time for Americansactively toopposeauthoritarian regimes such as that of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.
At AEI's Annual Dinner on February 10, political essayist Charles Krauthammer delivers a speech on U.S. foreign policy for the twenty-first century.
Review of The Monument: Art and Vulgarity in Saddam Hussein's Iraq, by Kanan Makiya.
If we continue on this "easy" path, we will only guarantee that Abu Musab al Zarqawi's name will endure.
Bringing down Saddam Hussein is essential to destroying his regime.




