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President Obama's speech on Afghanistan has left supporters and opponents alike wondering if he has a strategy there at all -- or is just trying to split the difference between fighting and abandoning an unpopular war.
The story of how the rhythms, tenor, and characteristics of the Sino-American relationship began is recalled in vivid detail and with characteristic eloquence by Kissinger in his new book, On China.
The appointment of Thomas Donilon to be the new national-security adviser should be final proof that America's foreign policy is in crisis.
The Obama administration is welcoming China's presumptive next leader, Xi Jinping. But how can it make good policy when the strategy is a mess?
A new book on the foreign policy of former president Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger lacks depth and thoughtfulness.
Conrad Black has written an impressive and profound book about the the most embattled and tenacious of American presidents: Richard Nixon.
President Obama's speech in Oslo makes sound arguments about the need to use force at times for the purpose of maintaining peace. The problem is, his examples are either simply wrong or, at best, dubious.
We think 2010 has been a tumultuous political year, but it has been a gentile tea party compared to 1968, the year that brought Richard Nixon and Daniel Patrick Moynihan together.





