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The Obama administration’s recent focus on finding a compromise to allow the Iranian regime to maintain some enrichment capabilities “for peaceful purposes” distracts from the underlying nuclear threat at hand.
China's recent exercise of power has been more hard than soft, so it seems Beijing is neither "biding its time" nor rising peacefully.
Corazon Aquino will not only be remembered as the tough "housewife" who forced a dictator, Ferdinand Marcos, to leave office after his attempt to steal an election, but she also deserves to be remembered as the leader of the first "People Power" revolution.
For several weeks now it’s been clear that Putin won’t attend this month’s NATO summit in Chicago. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen recently spoke with Russia’s new/old president and explained that it’s “not possible and not practical” for Putin to participate because of his “busy domestic calendar.”
As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton heads to China this week for yearly strategic consultations, a daring bid for political asylum has highlighted the seething dissent beneath China’s surface stability.
There can be neither a settlement onWMDs nor demobilization of theNorth Koreanmilitary until and unlessNorth Koreanormalizes relations with South Korea.
Talks aimed at resolving the Iranian nuclear weapons threat will again resume this Friday. In Seoul late last month, the President reminded Iran that it must act with “‘urgency.” “There is time to solve this diplomatically,” Obama enthused. “It is always my preference to solve these issues diplomatically. But time is short.”
Experience gained from communist Poland, terror-sponsoring Libya, and apartheid-ruled South Africa offer valuable lessons for fostering greater freedom in Iran, Syria, and Saudi Arabia.






