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The fight against terrorism is no closer to success today than it was a decade ago when, in the wake of the September 11 terror attacks, President George W. Bush declared a Global War on Terrorism.
The United States will begin to abandon Afghanistan yet again in July 2011, and it will not bode well for the war on terrorism.
It is not too late for the president to recognize the psychological aspect of the surge and state clearly that he will settle for nothing less than victory; until he does, U.S. servicemen on the front lines will pay the price.
A review of Stephen Kinzer's book Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq.
The New Deal failed to reduce unemployment, and the policies of the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress since the financial crisis look to be a repeat performance.
Despite the fiasco of the Iraq war, only neoconservatism offers a strategy for victory against Islamist terrorism.
Gradually lowering greenhouse gas emissions would be worthwhile were all states to join in the effort, but absent such strong, broad-based action, countries should explore other means of limiting harm from climate change.
The foreign policy community can learn some lessons from the blogosphere.



