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Much could be done now to shift that balance against the regime--and hasten the end of Gaddafi’s massacres--without escalating foreign military involvement and perhaps even without supplying weapons to the opposition.
Since September 11, 2001, Americans have begun to face up to the growing problem of anti-Americanism throughout the Arab and Muslim world. Polls consistently indicate high levels of hostility to the United States, and the problem has only intensified since the Iraq war began. One answer to the problem has...
It is too early to tell whether the revolutions sweeping across the Arab world will prove the long awaited "third wave of democratization." It is clear, however, that no regional regime is immune to their impact, not even the self-proclaimed vanguard of permanent world revolutions, the Islamist regime in Tehran.
The debate over al-Jazeera's free speech rights versus the dangers of hate speech can occur only because it ignores the fact that Canada is an involuntary combatant in the war on terror.
The U.S. can only win this war against Islamic extremism and terror if Washington shows resolve.
Withdrawal from Iraq's cities is good politics in Washington, but when premature and done under fire it may very well condemn Iraqis to repeat their past.
Rubin reviews Scott Taylor's Among the Others: Encounters with the Forgotten Turkmen of Iraq.
Mubarak's fall will have even deeper reverberations throughout the region than Ben Ali's did. Which will be the next dominoes to drop?




