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Nations that indulge in the "global zero" utopia do not make the world more idealistic and may help bring about the very evils they are trying to eliminate.
Even though it currently looks like a daunting and risky prospect, the ultimate objective must be a unified, democratic, market-oriented Korea that is allied with the United States.
The Second World War, which so many on the Left worked to avoid in the 1930s, was ironically the very instrument by which Britain was transformed in directions they had long wished: the dismantling of empire, the embrace of economic planning, and a vast expansion of the welfare state.
While Americans concentrate on domestic issues, there are real threats to U.S. security that need to be addressed.
North Korea's nuclear weapons program is a challenge that can be best managed by an approach involving all countries in Northeast Asia and the United States.
Once again, the question: Is Pat Buchanan a smart cookie or a crackpot?
Review of Troubled Tiger by Mark Clifford.
Though China appears to have halted its proliferation activities, those activities suggest a more casual attitude towards nuclear weapons than one of abhorrence. Indeed, actions speak louder than words. That Beijing proliferated nuclear technology, materials, and know-how-and to relatively unstable regimes that may be less cautious about using nuclear weapons-is worrying.





