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Reasonable people can disagree about whether the United States should resume using enhanced interrogation techniques (as it appears it will if a Republican assumes the presidency in January 2013). But we should at least debate this proposition based on facts.
We have seen what nearly two decades of timid, supine humanitarian aid has brought the North Korean people: food insecurity without end. Isn't it time to fashion an aid program as if the North Korean people really mattered?
The loss of expertise, insight and institutional memory--not to mention fundamental decency--that comes with the departures is painful to those of us who care about Congress.
A United States infused with humility works right up until we, and others, need real protection.
Saddam's punishment was a rare instance of just deserts.
Too often, new U.S. administrations assume that the fault for failed diplomacy lies more with their predecessors than with their adversary.
Marc Thiessen's book, Courting Disaster, is the most detailed and comprehensive brief of the CIA terrorist detention and interrogation program to date.
Remarks from AEI forum with Sam Rainsy, opposition leader from Cambodia, at 4/9/2003 event.





