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The idea that China is practicing a new form of capitalism, and may even be “doing capitalism better than America,” is reaching a fever pitch in policy and business circles.
Imagine a world where all females, in the East and the West, were treated as equals.
Developments in Turkey's foreign policy suggest that the Turkish government will pull away from Europe and the West, and instead pursue more exclusively relationships with the Middle East, Iran, Russia, and China.
As Recep Tayyip Erdogan approaches the end of his first decade of rule, the question for American and European policymakers should not be whether Turkey should join the European Union, but whether it even belongs in NATO.
Contrary to conventional wisdom in Washington, Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is not interested in preserving his country's relationship with Israel, but is determined to bolster Turkey's standing in the Arab and Muslim world's at Israel's expense.
Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak’s fall is the end of the beginning rather than the beginning of the end.
Turkish-Israeli relations all but collapsed earlier this year. Yet the current downturn in relations is made even worse by Mr. Erdogan's decision to reach out to China.
Financial capital, in a cash-dominated society, always wins over human capital.





