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Chinese strategists are thinking how to win a nuclear war. What is the U.S. doing?
There are arguments to be made as to why an Israeli strike now on Iran’s nuclear program would be ill conceived. There are even arguments to be made for a containment regime. I may not agree with those arguments, but they represent a point of view grounded in an honest assessment of reality.
A leak from the Obama administration in Saturday's Washington Post suggests that the President will know in advance should Iran decide to create a nuclear weapon. AEI foreign and defense policy expert Danielle Pletka reviews the facts that dismantle the administration's false assertion.
For all the public wrangling we are seeing over the super committee — mostly centered on tax reform and revenues as a key component of a compromise — the big issue facing policymakers in the coming years is health care costs.
We are scholars and analysts who support school choice in some fashion, though we have varied perspectives regarding the optimal nature, extent, and design of choice-based arrangements. Choice's track record so far is promising and provides support for continuing expansion of school choice policies.
Even the most prominent critiques of teacher preparation typically seem to presume that teacher recruitment--whether it incorporates clinical preparation or what not--ought to be geared toward new college graduates gearing up for the same old jobs. There are smarter, better ways to approach the challenge at hand.
The United States will certainly debate the issue about whether the plot can be blamed on the Iranian government as a whole, or whether it can simply be dismissed as the desperate act of rogue elements among Iran’s competing power centers.
It is clear that there is no legitimate basis for the proposed expensing of employee stock options.








