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The Quadrennial Defense Review and budget proposal suggest that the Obama administration wants to limit future American military "adventurism" by limiting our capabilities.
Despite these criticisms, the book can be a useful read. For those who agree that Obama should have done more to extend a hand of friendship to Tehran, it will be a satisfying exercise in self-affirmation.
Iran is now closer than ever to obtaining deliverable nuclear weapons. What are the options available to our next president in thisvolatile situation?
John Pomfret's front page article in the Washington Post on the Obama administration's arm twisting of the Dalai Lama is further reason to doubt that the president's "strategic reassurance" policy is anything but a policy of appeasing the PRC.
Less than one-third of the American public says it considers Iraq an immediate threat.
The Iraqi government has finally started attacking illegal military groups within the country.
Kim Jong Il and his cronies want nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them.
It's been coming for a long time: the idea that fixing Iraq is the Iraqis' problem, not ours--that we've done all we can and now it's up to them.




